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Clyde Cook was an American cinematographer active during Hollywood's silent era.[1]
Clyde Cook | |
---|---|
Born | Clyde Raymond Cook April 28, 1890 Pennsylvania, USA |
Died | July 22, 1936 (aged 56) Los Angeles, California, USA |
Occupation | Cinematographer |
Spouse | Isabelle Connelly |
Biography
editClyde was born in Pennsylvania to Daniel Cook and Minerva Kelts. The family later relocated to Bernalillo, New Mexico, where Clyde married his wife, Isabelle Connelly.[2] Clyde began working as a cinematographer in the earliest days of Hollywood, and racked up experience lensing films for directors like Henry MacRae, Rex Ingram, and Raymond West.
Selected filmography
edit- Bow Wow (1922)
- The Deceiver (1920)
- The Man Who Had Everything (1920)
- The Golden Trail (1920)
- A Double-Dyed Deceiver (1920)
- All Wrong (1919)
- Wife or Country (1918)
- Love's Pay Day (1918)
- Mystic Faces (1918)
- Humdrum Brown (1918)
- Up or Down? (1917)
- Broadway Arizona (1917)
- Mr. Opp (1917)
- The Show Down (1917)
- The Greater Law (1917)
- Southern Justice (1917)
- Mutiny (1917)
- God's Crucible (1917)
- The End of the Rainbow (1916)
- A Romance of Billy Goat Hill (1916)
- The Girl of Lost Lake (1916)
- Into the Primitive (1916)
References
edit- ^ Mavis, Paul (June 8, 2015). The Espionage Filmography: United States Releases, 1898 through 1999. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-0427-5.
- ^ "Miss Connelly to Wed". The Evening Herald. May 24, 1913. Retrieved July 22, 2020.