- Born
- Died
- Birth nameRobert Lee Surtees
- Robert L. Surtees began his working life as a portrait photographer and retoucher, before becoming camera assistant at Universal in 1927. He spent a lengthy apprenticeship (15 years) working under such experienced cinematographers as Hal Mohr, Joseph Ruttenberg and Gregg Toland. Between 1929 and 1930, he was seconded to the Universal studios in Berlin, subsequently spending the remainder of the decade at First National, Warner Brothers and Pathe. He settled at MGM in 1943 (remaining under contract until 1962), and soon developed a reputation as one of Hollywood's foremost lighting cameramen.
In keeping with the glamorous, lavish look of MGM product of the time, Surtees typically employed high-key lighting. This particularly suited big budget colour epics, like Quo Vadis (1951) and Ben-Hur (1959) (filmed in the large screen Camera 65 process with anamorphic lenses, which greatly enhanced colour definition and sharpness); expansive outdoor musicals like Oklahoma! (1955) (the first picture shot in 70 mm Todd-AO ultra wide- screen format); or lush, romantic period drama like Raintree County (1957). Forever at the cutting edge of technological innovation, Surtees was an extremely versatile craftsman. He excelled at every genre and photographic process, superb at shooting sweeping scenery (for example, his Technicolor lensing of King Solomon's Mines (1950)on location in Africa), or bringing the best out of his close-ups. An undoubted high point in his career would have to be the 9-minute chariot race from "Ben-Hur".
Surtees received the first of his 16 Oscar nominations for Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944) (when the studio system was at its peak), and his last - some 33 years later - for The Turning Point (1977). Testimony to his ageless endurance was being picked by director Peter Bogdanovich to shoot The Last Picture Show (1971). In the same nostalgic vein, his work on The Sting (1973), photographed in subtle sepia tones (the film was deemed by the Library of Congress as 'aesthetically significant'), contributed greatly to its winning 7 Academy Awards.- IMDb Mini Biography By: I.S.Mowis
- SpouseMaydell(? - January 5, 1985) (his death, 4 children)
- Father of Bruce Surtees
- Entered the film industry as camera assistant to Joseph Ruttenberg and Gregg Toland, etc.
- Member of A.S.C. (American Society of Cinematographers).
- Upon his death, he was cremated and his ashes were scattered over Point Lobos in Monterey, California.
- Father of Bruce Surtees; Tom Surtees; and Nancy Surtees; Grandfather of Suzanne Surtees. Former father-in-law of Judy Rucker and Carol Buby.
- [on working with Mike Nichols on "The Graduate"]: Mike was the boss. No-one was going to come onto the set and question what he did. They wouldn't dare; he wouldn't stand for it. Which was nice for me. The only man I had to please was Mike Nichols. The director runs the show. He makes the picture. You have one allegiance - not to the studio, not to the producer, but to the director, and that's it.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content