Birthday:
Birthday:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Charles Bryant Lang, Jr., A.S.C. (born March 27, 1902, Bluff, Utah – died April 3, 1998, Santa Monica, California) was an American cinematographer. Early in his career, he worked with the Akeley camera, a gyroscope-mounted "pancake" camera designed by Carl Akeley for outdoor action shots. Lang's first credits were as co-cinematographer on the silent films The Night Patrol (1926) and The Loves of Ricardo (1927). After completing Tom Sawyer for Paramount Pictures in 1930, he continued working at the studio for more than twenty years. The style of lighting he introduced in A Farewell to Arms became heavily identified with all of Paramount's films during the 1930s and 1940s, though he occasionally worked for other studios, for instance on The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947). In 1951, he began the second phase of his career, this time as a free-lance cinematographer.[1] His credits include The Big Heat (1953) with Glenn Ford and Lee Marvin, Sabrina (1954) with Humphrey Bogart and William Holden, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) with Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas, The Matchmaker (1958), Some Like It Hot (1959) with Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lemmon, The Magnificent Seven (1960) with Steve McQueen, One-Eyed Jacks (1961) with Marlon Brando, How the West Was Won (1962) in Cinerama, Charade (1963) with Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969), and Butterflies Are Free (1972). Lang received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Cinematographers in 1991, for a career which included at least 114 feature films.
Birthday: March 27, 1902
Death: April 03, 1998

March 19, 1959

October 12, 1960

July 13, 1966

October 26, 1967

December 01, 1963

March 01, 1964

September 01, 1954

November 02, 1962

November 07, 1955

June 21, 1940

July 29, 1959

August 03, 1949

August 19, 1955

February 24, 1944

June 01, 1938

August 19, 1955

March 30, 1961

November 07, 1935

May 31, 1940

January 20, 1942

May 01, 1952

October 10, 1941

November 01, 1951

November 19, 1933

August 08, 1931

March 14, 1940

June 15, 1942

July 12, 1944

December 29, 1928

August 15, 1947

April 19, 1930

August 31, 1934

October 27, 1939

November 01, 1940

August 26, 1938

February 08, 1930

December 29, 1938

June 02, 1939

March 08, 1940

November 21, 1941

April 09, 1943

November 07, 1931

December 28, 1945

December 24, 1943

December 18, 1944

June 29, 1951

December 13, 1956

July 01, 1948

October 14, 1953

November 08, 1940

August 14, 1971

August 01, 1956

December 25, 1964

December 25, 1937

December 18, 1946

November 19, 1948

October 29, 1937

May 29, 1931

April 22, 1933

April 11, 1936

October 15, 1946

August 07, 1952

December 25, 1968

March 24, 1939

March 14, 1930

July 19, 1930

January 15, 1954

July 09, 1957

November 22, 1961

December 08, 1932

May 25, 1947

October 31, 1941

August 12, 1932

February 10, 1966

July 07, 1969

September 17, 1969

January 18, 1930

June 23, 1933

January 24, 1930

January 12, 1951

November 21, 1947

August 15, 1930

December 27, 1930

December 19, 1930

January 11, 1935

January 19, 1967

November 27, 1968

November 14, 1963

August 22, 1967

June 28, 1973

February 03, 1971

December 10, 1964

December 27, 1962

June 29, 1960

November 14, 1960

December 18, 1958

November 02, 1966

February 24, 1963

December 11, 1957

November 16, 1961

July 06, 1972

July 23, 1958

December 16, 1969

June 17, 1970

May 30, 1957

August 20, 1948

November 10, 1954

October 18, 1950

March 24, 1953

March 04, 1946

November 15, 1950

November 23, 1949

April 01, 1952

November 03, 1950

August 01, 1951

August 22, 1956

July 19, 1950

March 14, 1931

July 18, 1941

September 03, 1937

January 04, 1955

February 09, 1933

April 27, 1934

March 30, 1934

September 09, 1943

October 20, 1933

July 02, 1931

February 05, 1932

March 22, 1935

March 23, 1958

April 09, 1927

March 14, 1926

September 17, 1992