Brown, Karl
BROWN, Karl
Cinematographer, Director, and Writer. Nationality: American. Born: Pennsylvania, 1897. Family: Married the actress Edna Mae Cooper, c. 1918. Career: 1912–13—laboratory assistant, then in charge of negative processing, Kinemacolor Company, New York (moved to Hollywood, 1913); 1914—first film work, as still photographer on The Spoilers; 1914–20—assistant and special effects photographer for D. W. Griffith; served in the United States Army during World War I; 1920–26—cinematographer for Paramount; 1920s—associate editor, American Cinematographer; 1927—directed first film, His Dog; then director and writer. Died: Of kidney failure in California, 25 March 1990.
Films as Cinematographer:
- 1920
The City of Masks (Heffron); The Fourteenth Man (Henabery); The Life of the Party (Henabery)
- 1921
Brewster's Millions (Henabery); The Dollar-a-Year Man (Cruze); Gasoline Gus (Cruze); The Traveling Salesman (Henabery); Crazy to Marry (Cruze)
- 1922
One Glorious Day (Cruze); Is Matrimony a Failure? (Cruze); The Dictator (Cruze); The Old Homestead (Cruze); Thirty Days (Cruze)
- 1923
The Covered Wagon (Cruze); Ruggles of Red Gap (Cruze)
- 1924
The Fighting Coward (Cruze); The Enemy Sex (Cruze); Merton of the Movies (Cruze); The City That Never Sleeps (Cruze); The Garden of Weeds (Cruze)
- 1925
The Goose Hangs High (Cruze); Welcome Home (Cruze); Marry Me (Cruze); Beggar on Horseback (Cruze); The Pony Express (Cruze)
- 1926
Mannequin (Cruze)
Films as Assistant and Special Effects Photographer:
- 1914
The Spoilers (Campbell); The Avenging Conscience (Griffith); Golden Days
- 1915
The Birth of a Nation (Griffith)
- 1916
The Mystery of the Leaping Fish (Emerson—short); Daphne and the Pirate (Cabanne); Intolerance (Griffith); The Flying Torpedo (Emerson)
- 1918
The Great Love (Griffith)
- 1919
Broken Blossoms (Griffith)
Films as Director:
- 1927
His Dog; Stark Love (+ pr + co-sc)
- 1930
Prince of Diamonds
- 1932
Flames (Fire Alarm)
- 1937
Michael O'Halloran (Any Man's Wife)
- 1938
Barefoot Boy; Numbered Woman (Private Nurse); Under the Big Top (The Circus Comes to Town)
Films as Writer:
- 1929
The Mississippi Gambler (Barker) (co)
- 1933
Fast Workers (Browning)
- 1934
Stolen Sweets (Thorpe); City Park (Thorpe); One in a Million (Strayer); The Curtain Falls (Lamont)
- 1935
The Calling of Dan Matthews (Rosen); Tarzan Escapes (McKay)
- 1936
In His Steps (Sins of the Children) (+ d); White Legion (+ d); Hearts in Bondage (Ayres)
- 1937
Join the Marines (Staub); Girl Loves Boy (Mansfield); Federal Bullets (+ d)
- 1938
Gangster's Boy (Nigh); Port of Missing Girls (+ d)
- 1939
A Woman Is the Judge (Nigh); The Man They Could Not Hang (Grinde); My Son Is Guilty (Crime's End) (Barton)
- 1940
The Man with Nine Lives (Behind the Door) (Grinde); Gangs of Chicago (Lubin); Military Academy (Lederman); Before I Hang (MacDonald); Girl from Havana (Landers)
- 1941
Mr. District Attorney (Morgan); Prairie Pioneers (Orlebeck); Rookies on Parade (Santley); I Was a Prisoner on Devil's Island (Landers); Under Fiesta Stars (McDonald); Harvard, Here I Come (Here I Come) (Landers)
- 1942
Phantom Killer (Beaudine); Hitler—Dead or Alive (Grinde)
- 1943
The Ape Man (Lock Your Doors) (Beaudine)
- 1945
The Chicago Kid (McDonald)
Publications
By BROWN: books—
With Leonard Fields, The Mississippi Gambler (novelization), New York, 1929.
Incorrigible (novel), New York, 1947.
The Cup of Trembling (novel), New York, 1953.
Adventures with D. W. Griffith, New York, 1973.
By BROWN: articles—
On D. W. Griffith in Sight and Sound (London), Summer 1973.
"Flashback: A Director's Best Friend," in American Film (Washington, D.C.), October 1982.
"Billy Bitzer: A Reminiscence," in American Cinematographer (Hollywood), November 1983.
"The Blind Leading the Blind," in American Film (Washington, D.C.), December 1984.
"Spfx 101: An Introductory Course," in American Film (Washington, D.C.), September 1985.
On BROWN: articles—
Filme Cultura (Rio de Janeiro), November-December 1969.
Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress (Washington, D.C.), Summer-Fall 1980.
Turner, George E., "A Hollywood Saga: Karl Brown," in American Cinematographer (Hollywood), October 1982.
Films in Review (New York), vol. 37, no. 4, April 1986.
Obituary, in Variety (New York), 4 April 1990.
Obituary, in American Cinematographer (Hollywood), June 1990.
* * *
Karl Brown became associated with the movies in Hollywood when both were young. Brown's credits include photographing The Covered Wagon in the early 1920s and directing Stark Love (1927), a semi-documentary shot in North Carolina; and writing scripts for Columbia and Republic Studios between 1926 and 1945. Brown's career is most memorable in his association with D. W. Griffith between 1913 and 1919.
Brown's 1973 Adventures with D. W. Griffith is one of the best sources describing Griffith's working methods. Brown began as an assistant to the cameraman Billy Bitzer, and thus learned how to operate cameras, light scenes, and keep written records of various shots. His book makes clear that he was more than simply an assistant cameraman; he was a jack-of-all-trades for the Griffith organization. Brown describes in extensive detail the planning, shooting, and post-production aspects of Griffith's three masterpieces, Birth of a Nation, Intolerance, and Broken Blossoms.
For the last film Brown was in charge of the opening sequence showing ships on the Thames seen from the Limehouse district of London. He was shown a picture and then organized a series of miniature flats, groundrows, moving boats, and a trough of water. He lit the scene so that when photographed it provided a Whistler-like illusion of a London dockside. This one example is typical of the pictorial values Griffith emphasized and which he expected from his collaborators. It also shows how good a student of both Griffith and Bitzer Brown had become.
Brown's career as author and screenwriter included work for Columbia, Republic, and a few independent producers. Most of these films are gangster pictures, courtroom dramas, military situations, or horror stories. Had not Brown had good notes and recollections and been encouraged to publish them, he would probably be almost forgotten today. It is fitting, however, that a person who spent so much time on the routine tasks of filmmaking in its early Hollywood years will now be remembered because of his thoughtful book. Now, as then, moviemaking is a collaborative effort, and while a few key individuals receive major credit, no work would succeed without the many workers who, like Brown, also make fundamental contributions.
—Floyd W. Martin