Ghislain Cloquet (18 April 1924 – 2 November 1981) was a Belgian-born French cinematographer. Cloquet was born in Antwerp, Belgium in 1924. He went to Paris to study and became a French citizen in 1940. Cloquet is known for his work with Robert Bresson, though he also collaborated with Claude Sautet, Jacques Demy, André Delvaux, Chris Marker, and Marguerite Duras. He shot Jacques Becker's last film, Le Trou, and then worked several times with Becker's son Jean, who was also Cloquet's brother-in-law. He also worked with several non-French directors, including Woody Allen (Love and Death), Arthur Penn (Four Friends) and, most notably, Roman Polanski, winning an Oscar (on his first nomination) for his work on Polanski's Tess, which he completed after the death of Geoffrey Unsworth. Cloquet married into the Becker filmmaking family (which included directors Jacques and Jean, cinematographer Étienne, and actress Françoise Fabian), when he wed Jacques Becker's daughter Sophie, then a script girl. Source: Article "Ghislain Cloquet" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Birthday: April 18, 1924
Death: November 02, 1981
March 28, 1967
October 15, 1963
December 20, 1970
December 22, 1971
September 27, 1973
October 06, 1979
June 10, 1975
March 23, 1960
January 17, 1973
January 01, 1969
May 30, 1956
January 12, 1972
October 24, 1973
April 15, 1954
February 16, 1971
September 27, 1965
November 06, 1957
May 01, 1953
January 14, 1976
September 05, 1966
October 01, 1962
March 18, 1960
January 01, 1954
January 02, 1957
May 25, 1966
October 18, 1967
September 18, 1968
September 06, 1968
January 12, 1968
August 27, 1969
August 28, 1970
January 25, 1973
April 03, 1974
September 04, 1974
April 09, 1980
November 17, 1961
September 29, 1961
February 16, 1962
February 10, 1960
December 09, 1979
June 30, 1960
March 22, 1957
December 11, 1981
March 30, 1976
November 01, 1956
July 19, 1965
March 08, 1967
April 27, 1959
March 21, 1971
January 01, 1979