Professional Motion Picture Production and Distribution NEWS
Allen Daviau to Receive ASC Lifetime Achievement Award
By ASC
posted Oct 16, 2006, 12:49
Daviau will be feted at the 21st Annual ASC Outstanding Achievement Awards on February 18, 2007, at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel.
Allen Daviau, ASC will receive the
American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Lifetime Achievement Award. The
award is presented annually to an individual who has made extraordinary and
enduring contributions to the art of filmmaking. Daviau will be feted at
the 21st Annual ASC Outstanding Achievement Awards on February 18, 2007, at
the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel.
Daviau claimed the first of his five Oscar(R) nominations in 1983 for
E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL. His other nominations were for THE COLOR PURPLE
(1986), AVALON (1991), EMPIRE OF THE SUN (1988) and BUGSY (1992). The
latter two films also took top honors at the ASC Awards, and EMPIRE OF THE
SUN won the BAFTA cinematography award, the British equivalent of an Oscar.
"Allen Daviau is still in the prime of his career, but he has already
created an innovative body of work that will stand the test of time," says
Russ Alsobrook, ASC, who chairs the organization's Awards Committee. "He is
an awe-inspiring cinematographer who has earned the admiration of
filmmakers around the world."
Daviau was born in New Orleans and raised in Los Angeles. He was a
movie fan, avid still photographer, and lit stage plays in high school.
After graduation, he worked in camera stores and labs. He saved enough
money to buy a 16 mm camera and began shooting short films, including some
for students at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA). One of
those films caught the eye of the producer of a new music program on
KHJ-TV, who offered Daviau a job.
That same producer organized a company that created pre-MTV music
videos for record companies and distributed them to local TV stations.
Daviau shot films with The Animals, Jimi Hendrix and other popular
performers. In 1967, a couple of aspiring filmmakers named Ralph Burris and
Steven Spielberg saw his work and asked for his help on a 35 mm short film.
That project led to an opportunity for Daviau to shoot AMBLIN for Spielberg
in 1968.
Daviau spent the next 10 years as a lighting effects technician on a
Roger Corman film, and shooting 16 mm industrial/educational films and 35
mm commercials. He also lensed several David Wolper documentaries,
including SAY GOODBYE, which was nominated for an Oscar in 1971. During the
mid-1970s, Daviau shot a couple of ultra low-budget, independent features.
He joined the camera guild in 1978. That gave him an opportunity to
work on mainstream films with larger budgets, beginning with a television
movie called THE BOY WHO DRANK TOO MUCH, directed by his old friend Jerry
(Jerrold) Freedman. When Freedman told Spielberg that Daviau was in the
union, Spielberg had him shoot a two-day sequence on a project.
Spielberg's next film was RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, where he met Melissa
Mathison. He told her of a long-term, science-fiction project titled NIGHT
SKIES. Together they transformed that work into E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL,
which became Daviau's first full-length feature. E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL
earned four Oscars and five additional nominations, including Best Picture.
It ranks near the top of the list of all-time hits at the boxoffice.
Daviau has subsequently compiled some 25 additional narrative credits,
including such memorable films as two segments of TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE,
THE FALCON AND THE SNOWMAN, FEARLESS and VAN HELSING. He says that his
television commercial work has given him the freedom to be patient and
discerning about choosing narrative projects.
Daviau joins a formidable group of previous recipients, including
George Folsey, ASC; Joe Biroc, ASC; Charles Lang Jr., ASC; Phil Lathrop,
ASC; Haskell Wexler, ASC; Conrad L. Hall, ASC; Gordon Willis, ASC; Sven
Nykvist, ASC; Owen Roizman, ASC; Victor J. Kemper, ASC; Vilmos Zsigmond,
ASC; William A. Fraker, ASC, BSC; Vittorio Storaro, ASC, AIC; Laszlo
Kovacs, ASC; Bill Butler, ASC; Michael Chapman, ASC; Fred Koenekamp, ASC;
and Richard Kline, ASC.
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