
Personal Info
Known For
Camera
Gender
Male
July 4, 1909
Died
May 13, 1968 (58 years old)
Chino Hills, California, USA
Also Known As
- Leslie Robert Burks
- L. Robert Burks
Robert Burks
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Burks, A.S.C. (July 4, 1909 – May 11, 1968) was an American cinematographer known for being proficient in virtually every genre and equally at home with black-and-white or color.
Burks began his career as a special effects technician in the late 1930s before becoming a director of photography in the mid-1940s. His first credit in this field was Jammin' the Blues (1944), a short film featuring leading jazz musicians of the day.
Read more
Burks collaborated with Alfred Hitchcock on twelve of the director's films. Beginning with Strangers on a Train in 1951 (which secured him an Oscar nomination) through Marnie in 1964, he shot every Hitchcock film except Psycho in 1960. Additional credits include The Fountainhead, Beyond the Forest, The Glass Menagerie, The Spirit of St. Louis, The Music Man, and A Patch of Blue.
Burks and his wife died in a house fire in 1968 in Huntington Harbor, California.
Known For
Crew

Waterhole #3
Director of Photography
1967

A Patch of Blue
Director of Photography
1965

Once a Thief
Director of Photography
1965

Marnie
Director of Photography
1964

The Birds
Director of Photography
1963

The Music Man
Director of Photography
1962

The Pleasure of His Company
Director of Photography
1961

The Great Impostor
Director of Photography
1960

The Rat Race
Director of Photography
1960

North by Northwest
Director of Photography
1959

The Black Orchid
Director of Photography
1959

Vertigo
Director of Photography
1958




