Ewald Daub

Ewald Daub (13 October 1889 – 4 November 1946) was a German cinematographer who shot more than a hundred films during his career. Daub entered the film industry during the silent era, with one of his first films being the biopic Martin Luther (1923).[1] Over the next two decades he was to work on a number of Harry Piel thrillers and Heinz Rühmann comedies. He died in 1946 following an operation.

Ewald Daub
Born13 October 1889
Died4 November 1946 (1946-11-05) (aged 57)
OccupationCinematographer
Years active1919–1946

Selected filmography

gollark: There's a RISC-V one. ESP-C3 or something.
gollark: 1. buy ESP322. load HTTP server code onto it3. configure WiFi4. you are done
gollark: Of course.
gollark: They generally run at about 10% utilization at most doing things like overly extensive self-monitoring, whatever Gitea does, and encoding outbound OIR™ audio streams.
gollark: As such, you can reduce your costs by using the osmarks.net servers, which can idle constantly while serving multiple websites at once.

References

  1. Wipfler p.210

Bibliography

  • Wipfler, Esther Pia. Martin Luther in Motion Pictures: History of a Metamorphosis. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.