
Alvin Wyckoff
Camera
Born: July 3, 1877 (80 years old)
Died: July 30, 1957
Place of birth: New York City, New York, USA
Biography
Alvin Wyckoff (July 3, 1877 – July 30, 1957) was an American cinematographer who worked on more than 80 films between 1914 and 1945. Several of Wyckoff's films had sequences filmed in the early Handschiegl Color Process, originally billed as the "DeMille-Wyckoff Process". Wyckoff also worked with DeMille to develop the Lasky-lighting technique, which made selective lighting possible. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Filmography (25)
- Male and Female (1919, ★ 6.4)
- The Golden Chance (1915, ★ 6.6)
- Forbidden Fruit (1921, ★ 6.6)
- Something to Think About (1920, ★ 6.8)
- A Romance of the Redwoods (1917, ★ 6.4)
- Old Wives for New (1918, ★ 6.5)
- Hell's Angels (1930, ★ 6.5)
- If I Had a Million (1932, ★ 6.6)
- The Whispering Chorus (1918, ★ 6.4)
- The Lucky Devil (1925, ★ 7.2)
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1910, ★ 5.4)
- Blood and Sand (1922, ★ 5.8)
- The Cheat (1915, ★ 6)
- Why Change Your Wife? (1920, ★ 5.6)
- Carmen (1915, ★ 6.1)
- The Virginian (1914, ★ 5.6)
- The Little American (1917, ★ 6.3)
- Joan the Woman (1916, ★ 5.6)
- El cautivo (1915, ★ 6)
- The Woman God Forgot (1917, ★ 5.8)
- The Girl of the Golden West (1915, ★ 5.5)
- Saturday Night (1922, ★ 5.9)
- The Lost Jungle (1934, ★ 4.3)
- It's the Old Army Game (1926, ★ 5)
- Manslaughter (1922, ★ 5.5)