Personal Info
Known For
Camera
Gender
Male
July 5, 1901
Died
February 24, 1961 (59 years old)
New York City, New York, USA
Also Known As
- Harry Wild
- Harry Wilde
Harry J. Wild
Biography
Harry J. Wild, A.S.C. (July 5, 1901 - February 24, 1961) was a film and television cinematographer. Wild worked at RKO Pictures studios from 1931 through the 1950s. In total Wild was involved in 91 major film projects and two extended television series.
In 1931, he began his career and was hired as second cameraman and operator on nine projects, most notably Fred Niblo's Young Donovan'a Kid (1931). In 1936, Wild shot his first feature, Wallace Fox's sports drama The Big Game. Two years later he shared an Academy Award nomination for the Republic Pictures film Army Girl (1938).
According to film critic Spencer Selby, Wild was a prolific film noir cinematographer, shooting 13 of them, including: Dmytryk's Murder, My Sweet (1944), Johnny Angel (1945), Nocturne (1946), the Jean Renoir-directed The Woman on the Beach (1947), They Won't Believe Me (1947), and others. He was also, in the early 1950s, Jane Russell's cinematographer; he worked on seven of her movies as an actress, three of which were released by other studios: His Kind of Woman (1951) and Son of Paleface (1952) for Paramount, and, his most widely seen movie, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) for Twentieth Century-Fox.
Known For
Crew

The Twilight Zone
Director of Photography
1959

The Conqueror
Director of Photography
1956

Underwater!
Director of Photography
1955

She Couldn't Say No
Director of Photography
1954

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Director of Photography
1953

Affair with a Stranger
Director of Photography
1953

Son of Paleface
Director of Photography
1952

Macao
Director of Photography
1952

The Las Vegas Story
Director of Photography
1952

Two Tickets to Broadway
Director of Photography
1951

His Kind of Woman
Director of Photography
1951

My Forbidden Past
Director of Photography
1951



