
Personal Info
Known For
Camera
Gender
Male
March 21, 1904
Died
June 15, 1960 (56 years old)
New York City, New York, USA
Also Known As
- Edward Cronjaeger
- Eddie Cronjager
- Ed Cronjager
Edward Cronjager
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Cronjager (March 21, 1904 – June 15, 1960) was an American cinematographer, whose career spanned from the silent era through the 1950s. He came from a family of cinematographers, with his father, uncle, and brother all working in the film industry behind the camera. His work covered over 100 films, and included projects on the small screen towards the end of his career. He filmed in both black and white and color mediums, and his work received nominations for seven Academy Awards over the span of three decades, although he never won the statue.
He was the preferred director of photography of early film star Richard Dix, and served on several Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) committees, as well as being selected by the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) to test new types of film stock. Cronjager pioneered several new techniques and types of cinematography, developing new camera angles in the 1920s, working on one of the earliest film noirs in the 1940s, and using CinemaScope in underwater photography in the 1950s.
Known For
Crew

Devil's Partner
Director of Photography
1961

The Girl in Lovers Lane
Director of Photography
1960

Beneath the 12-Mile Reef
Director of Photography
1953

Lure of the Wilderness
Director of Photography
1952

Best of the Badmen
Director of Photography
1951

The Capture
Director of Photography
1950

House by the River
Director of Photography
1950

On Our Merry Way
Director of Photography
1948

Desert Fury
Director of Photography
1947

Canyon Passage
Director of Photography
1946

The Gang's All Here
Director of Photography
1943

Heaven Can Wait
Director of Photography
1943



