Faxon M. Dean: Difference between revisions
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* ''[[Little Johnny Jones (1929 film)|Little Johnny Jones]]'' (1929) |
* ''[[Little Johnny Jones (1929 film)|Little Johnny Jones]]'' (1929) |
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* ''[[The Nevada Buckaroo]]'' (1931) |
* ''[[The Nevada Buckaroo]]'' (1931) |
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* ''Texas Pioneers'' (1932) |
* ''[[Texas Pioneers]]'' (1932) |
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* ''Crashin' Broadway'' (1932) |
* ''[[Crashin' Broadway]]'' (1932) |
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* ''[[Breed of the Border (1933 film)|Breed of the Border]]'' (1933) |
* ''[[Breed of the Border (1933 film)|Breed of the Border]]'' (1933) |
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* ''[[Diamond Trail]]'' (1933) |
* ''[[Diamond Trail]]'' (1933) |
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* ''Trailing North'' (1933) |
* ''[[Trailing North]]'' (1933) |
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* ''[[The Gallant Fool (1933 film)|The Gallant Fool]]'' (1933) |
* ''[[The Gallant Fool (1933 film)|The Gallant Fool]]'' (1933) |
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* ''[[One Year Later (film)|One Year Later]]'' (1933) |
* ''[[One Year Later (film)|One Year Later]]'' (1933) |
Revision as of 19:56, 17 October 2023
Faxon M. Dean | |
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Born | Faxon Martin Dean May 26, 1890 Guyton, Georgia, U.S. |
Died | May 25, 1965 Sunnyvale, California, U.S. | (aged 74)
Occupation | Cinematographer |
Faxon M. Dean (1890-1965) was an American cinematographer who worked in Hollywood primarily during the silent era.[1] He worked on many of director Charles Maigne's films, and was Mary Miles Minter's personal cameraman for a time.[2][3]
Biography
Faxon was born in Guyton, Georgia, on May 26, 1890. His parents were Herbert Dean and Amelia Warmsley. He married Margaret Hurley, and the pair had two children together. He got his professional career as a newspaper photographer before trying his hand as a cinematographer in 1911.[4] He was an early member of the American Society of Cinematographers.[5]
Selected filmography
- The Marcellini Millions (1917)
- A Roadside Impresario (1917)
- The Cook of Canyon Camp (1917)
- Lost in Transit (1917)
- The Countess Charming (1917)
- The Clever Mrs. Carfax (1917)
- Jules of the Strong Heart (1918)
- Rimrock Jones (1918)
- The Invisible Bond (1919)
- The Copperhead (1920)
- The Fighting Chance (1920)
- A Cumberland Romance (1920)
- Frontier of the Stars (1921)
- All Souls' Eve (1921)
- The Little Clown (1921)
- Don't Call Me Little Girl (1921)
- Moonlight and Honeysuckle (1921)
- Her Winning Way (1921)
- The Call of the North (1921)
- Her Own Money (1922)
- North of the Rio Grande (1922)
- While Satan Sleeps (1922)
- The Man Unconquerable (1922)
- The Cowboy and the Lady (1922)
- Making a Man (1922)
- The Tiger's Claw (1923)
- Sixty Cents an Hour (1923)
- A Gentleman of Leisure (1923)
- Stephen Steps Out (1923)
- The Stranger (1924)
- The Guilty One (1924)
- Tongues of Flame (1924)
- Coming Through (1925)
- Every Man's Wife (1925)
- Lord Jim (1925)
- Braveheart (1925)
- The Sporting Lover (1926)
- The False Alarm (1926)
- Fools of Fashion (1926)
- Baby Mine (1928)
- The Tragedy of Youth (1928)
- Their Hour (1928)
- The Olympic Hero (1928)
- Romance of a Rogue (1928)
- The Look Out Girl (1928)
- Jazzland (1928)
- The Tragedy of Youth (1928)
- Fast Life (1929)
- Little Johnny Jones (1929)
- The Nevada Buckaroo (1931)
- Texas Pioneers (1932)
- Crashin' Broadway (1932)
- Breed of the Border (1933)
- Diamond Trail (1933)
- Trailing North (1933)
- The Gallant Fool (1933)
- One Year Later (1933)
References
- ^ Wohl, Robert (2005). The Spectacle of Flight: Aviation and the Western Imagination, 1920–1950. Yale University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-300-10692-3.
faxon m. dean.
- ^ "Savoy Today Only". Shawnee News-Star. May 14, 1921. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
- ^ "Mary Miles Minter in 'Under the Big Top'". Salt Lake Telegram. April 29, 1921. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
- ^ "Stirring Romance Rides". The Tennessean. July 16, 1922. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
- ^ American Cinematographer. ASC Holding Corporation. 1922.