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  1. Guy Green
    British director, cinematographer, camera operator, screenwriter and producer

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  1. Guy Mervin Charles Green OBE BSC (5 November 1913 – 15 September 2005) was an English film director, producer, screenwriter, and cinematographer. In 1948, he won an Oscar as cinematographer for the film Great Expectations.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0337885Guy Green - IMDb

    Guy Green was a British filmmaker who won an Oscar for his cinematography on David Lean's Great Expectations. He also directed several acclaimed films, such as The Angry Silence, A Patch of Blue, and Luther.

    • January 1, 1
    • Frome, Somerset, England, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • Beverly Hills, California, USA
  3. Sep 17, 2005 · Guy Green, who won an Academy Award for cinematography for the 1946 film ''Great Expectations,'' died on Thursday at his home in Beverly Hills. He was 91. The cause was heart and kidney...

  4. Learn about Guy Green, the British filmmaker who won an Oscar for his cinematography on David Lean's Great Expectations and also directed several acclaimed movies. Find out his early career, his collaborations with Lean and other actors, and his personal life.

    • November 5, 1913
    • September 15, 2005
  5. Guy Green, a postwar British cinematographer who won an Academy Award for his black-and-white filming of director Sir David Lean’s “Great Expectations” and later directed “A Patch of Blue,”...

  6. A Patch of Blue: Directed by Guy Green. With Sidney Poitier, Shelley Winters, Elizabeth Hartman, Wallace Ford. A blind, uneducated white girl is befriended by a black man who becomes determined to help her escape her impoverished and abusive home life by introducing her to the outside world.

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  8. Sep 15, 2005 · Guy Green. Biography. Green was born in Frome, Somerset, England. He began working in film in 1929 and became a noted film cinematographer and a founding member of the British Society of Cinematographers. Green became a full-time director of photography in the mid-1940s, working on such films as David Lean's Oliver Twist in 1948.

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