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     KARL FISCHER STRUSS, A.S.C.
Nov 30, 1886-Dec 16, 1981  95 yrs old
Cinematographer and Stereo Pictorialist

By Ray Zone

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Migrating as a still photographer to Hollywood in 1919, Struss signed on with Cecil B. DeMille as a second unit cameraman. Soon, he was filming Ben Hur (1925) with the early two-color Technicolor process and working with stars like Mary Pickford on Sparrows (1926) and Fredric March on Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932). Struss produced masterful pictorialist photography with dissolves, soft lighting effects and double exposures on Sunrise (1927) and was at the top of his craft when Mary Pickford insisted he photograph her first sound film, Coquette, in 1928. 

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Invited to join the American Society of Cinematographers and bear the distinguished letters "ASC" after his name in motion picture credits, Struss was equally at home with black-and-white or color cinematography.

 

"Cinematography in present-day dramatic films is not an end, but a means to an end, whereas the still picture is often, if not always, both the means and the end itself," wrote Struss in a 1934 issue of American Cinematographer with an article titled "Photographic Modernism and the Cinematographer." From 1920 to 1959, Struss was the cinematographer on over 135 feature films. Notable collaborations for Struss included work with D.W. Griffith on Abraham Lincoln (1930) and Charlie Chaplin on The Great Dictator (1940) and Limelight (1952).
 

When the Stereo-Realist Camera came on the market in 1947, Struss was an early enthusiast and he became one of the first members of the Stereo Division of the PSA when it was formed in 1952. Struss was also a charter member of the PSA Stereo Club of Southern California in 1956 at which time he served on the Program Committee. The veteran stereo photographer was active in many PSA, SCSC, S4C and other international stereo slide competitions until 1965.

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Struss garnered many acceptances for his stereo slides in the PSA Hollywood International Salon and numerous Honorable Mentions (HM) in PSA International Exhibitions. In the 1965 Rochester International Stereo Salon, Struss garnered acceptances, for "Anthony and Cleopatra" and "Distant Bellagio" and an HM for "Varenna Moonlight." Struss had photographed these images with his Stereo-Realist camera while working on location in Italy in 1953 and 1954, as a director of photography on four feature films, three of which were in 3-D.

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"I enjoyed working in Italy," said Struss. "the directors and I got along and I loved Rome and the people." Struss worked in Italy as a stereoscopic cinematographer on The Funniest Show on Earth (Il Piu Comico Spettacolo Del Mondo) and The Neapolitan Turk (Il Turco Napoletano), both directed by Mario Mattoli in 1953 in color and filmed with a dual 35mm system. Rustic Cavalry (Cavalleria Rusticana), was a black-and-white 3-D film starring Anthony Quinn and May Britt.. Sophia Loren had originally been cast in Rustic Cavalry but was replaced by Kerima shortly after filming began.

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One of the most noteworthy members the Stereo Division of the Photographic Society of America (PSA) and the Stereo Club of Southern California (SCSC) has ever had is Karl Struss. Most famous as the first cameraman (along with Charles Rosher) to win an Academy Award for Best Cinematography for the 1927 film Sunrise, directed by F.W. Murnau, Struss's entire life was dedicated to the craft of photography. "Struss was by temperament a pictorialist, by instinct an illusionist and by accomplishment one of the great cameramen in the floridly creative quarter century of filmmaking that followed The Birth of a Nation (1915)," writes Scott Eyman in Five American Cinematographers (Scarecrow Press: 1987).

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Born in New York in 1886, Struss studied photography with Clarence H. White and was admitted to Alfred Stieglitz's "291" photo-pictorialist group in 1909. By 1914, Struss was an accomplished pictorial photographer with his own studio who was selling work to Vogue, Vanity Fair and Harper's Bazaar magazines. "It wasn't fashion photography," said Struss, "it was pictorial photography."

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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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Oomopli Washing by Karl Struss
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2021_09_27 Academy Museum Academy Award received by Karl Struss for Sunrise by Susan Pinsk
Karl Struss Academy Award at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles
received by Karl Struss for Sunrise by Susan Pinsky
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Karl Struss in 1976 at 90 years old
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1977 LA Times Karl and Ethel Struss by Andrew Daneman-Colorized
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Karl Struss in 1976 at 90 years old
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Karl Struss (on left) in cameo from Totò 3D
the Funniest Show on Earth
1953 Toto 3D or The Funniest Show on Ear
1953 Toto 3D the Funniest Show on Earth - Karl Struss cinematographer
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Cinematographer. Struss was one of the earliest Hollywood cameramen to develop his own individual style. His moody, atmospheric visuals were best-suited to psychological dramas, though he also excelled at outdoor and glamour photography.
 
Struss and Charles Rosher shared the first Academy Award in cinematography for "Sunrise" (1927), and he received Oscar nominations for "Drums of Love" (1928), "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1931), "The Sign of the Cross" (1932), and "Aloma of the South Seas" (1941).
 
Karl Oscar Struss was born in New York City, the son of German immigrants. He initially won fame as a still photographer when Alfred Stieglitz selected his work for a 1910 exhibition and later made him a member of the "Photo-Secession" group. His dusk-lit cityscapes and nudes are still prized by collectors. In 1914 he opened a studio in Manhattan and did commercial layouts for Vogue, Vanity Fair, Harper's Bazaar, and other magazines.
 
After serving stateside in the US Army during World War I, Struss went to Hollywood in 1919 and was persuaded to move into cinematography by director Cecil B. DeMille. He went on to shoot several of D. W. Griffith's late features and was under contract to Paramount from 1931 to 1949. His 135 credits include "The Affairs of Anatol" (1921), "Ben-Hur" (1925), "Sparrows" (1926), "Abraham Lincoln" (1930), "Island of Lost Souls" (1932), "Belle of the Nineties" (1934), "The Great Dictator" (1940), "Journey Into Fear" (1942), and "Limelight" (1952).
 
Struss was an innovative technician throughout his long career. When he was 23 he invented an early soft-focus lens that became popular for fashion photography; for "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" he used infrared filters to aid Frederic March's transformation scenes.
 
He was among the first to experiment with stereoscopic photography and in the mid-1950s he made a number of
3-D features in Italy. In his penultimate film, "The Fly" (1958), Struss devised a special lens to depict the famous "fly's-eye" view of the heroine.
 
He retired from filmmaking in 1970 after a decade of work in TV commercials, though he remained an ardent still photographer until shortly before his death at 95.
 
When a journalist asked Struss what motivated his creative longevity, he replied, "I never got bored".

Bio by: Bobb Edwards

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1952 Karl Struss showed slides at Beverly Hills stereo club meeting at Romanoff's
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1955 Nov 18 Bangor, ME news clipping about 3-D movies without glasses
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Illustrations 3 by Karl Struss
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Karl Struss - by Ray Zone and Chuck Roblin, 2002
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"I made a picture (in Italy) with Sophia Loren called TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA" says Struss. "She was sensational."
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Sophia Loren and Paul Muller at Anthony and Cleopatra in 1954 Italian film
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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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Sophia Loren in 1954 Italian film TWO NIGHTS WITH CLEOPATRA 
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 Blue Interlude by Karl Struss
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Christmas Time by Karl Struss
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Father & Daughter by Karl Struss
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"I made a [2-D] picture with Sophia Loren called Two Nights With Cleopatra, (Due Notte Con Cleopatra)" said Struss. "Oh, the sets were beautiful, gorgeous, and she was sensational. But when they dubbed it into this flat English, all the atmosphere went out of it." Struss' stereo slide of "Anthony and Cleopatra" from the Rochester International Salon featured Sophia Loren in a behind-the-scenes shot that Struss had made while filming her in Italy.

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Of the three 3-D films Struss photographed in Italy, only Rustic Cavalry was released in the United States, but in 2-D. Before leaving for Italy in 1953, Struss had photographed for producer Sol Lesser in Hollywood with "Stereo Cine," a dual 35mm system, the first segment of a film called The 3-D Follies. R.M. Hayes in 3-D Movies (McFarland: 1989) calls this film "one of the great mysteries of 3-D history." 3-D Follies was apparently filmed at the RKO Studios in Eastman Color and featured an array of performers that included Milton Berle and Lili St. Cyr.

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There are several important questions that historians of Struss' work and stereoscopic cinema will ask. Was The 3-D Follies actually completed and released? Do the stereoscopic elements for Struss' three Italian feature films in 3-D still survive? And, most importantly, where are these films today?

"I never got bored," said Karl Struss. "Never wanted to photograph something differently after I'd done it.".  

 

Karl Struss passed away on December 16, 1981. "Photography was the ne plus ultra of Struss' life," writes Scott Eyman. "Whether it was the pictorial stills in which he began, cinematography, or the 3-D photography that was consuming him towards the end of his life, the challenge for Struss was always to express a mood, to tell a story through his camera, to find in nature what expressed the emotions of man."
 

Karl Struss, A.S.C. (November 30, 1886 – December 15, 1981) was an American photographer and a cinematographer of the 1900s through the 1950s. He was also one of the earliest pioneers of 3-D films. While he mostly worked on films, such as F. W. Murnau's Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans and Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator and Limelight, he was also one of the cinematographers for the television series Broken Arrow and photographed 19 episodes of My Friend Flicka.

Oxen by Karl Struss
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Open for Business by Karl Struss
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Street Urchin by Karl Struss
Tilemakers by Karl Struss
Siena Palio Celebration by Karl Struss.j
Siena Palio Celebration by Karl Struss
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