Walter Stradling

Walter Stradling (1875 – July 4, 1918) was an English-born American cinematographer of the silent era. He is best remembered for working on several well-known feature films of Mary Pickford and for the Famous Players-Lasky production company in general. He also worked on the films of Cecil B. DeMille, Sessue Hayakawa and Blanche Sweet. Stradling died relatively young at 43 in the 1918 flu pandemic. He was the uncle of the cinematographer Harry Stradling.[1]

Walter Stradling
Stradling in 1917.
Born
Walter Ernest Stradling

1875
Plymouth, Devon, England
DiedJuly 4, 1918 (aged 4243)
New York City, New York
OccupationCinematographer
Years active1914–1918

Partial filmography

gollark: ++magic reload_ext search
gollark: Oh *no*, did I forget to set max_workers?
gollark: You are doing it wrong.
gollark: It says> One of the goals of early computer scientists was to create a chess-playing machine. In 1997, Deep Blue became the first computer to beat the reigning World Champion in a match when it defeated Garry Kasparov. Today's chess engines are significantly stronger than even the best human players, and have deeply influenced the development of chess theory. so it seems like a *good* blind guess.
gollark: And the model will just blindly guess if it has to.

References

  1. Evelyn Mack Truitt, Who Was Who on Screen 3rd Edition, c.1983
    - Walter Stradling at allmovie.com database
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