Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. George C. Hull (January 28, 1878 – February 2, 1953) was an American screenwriter. He wrote for 50 films between 1918 and 1932. He died in Los Angeles, California.

    • January 28, 1878
    • 1918-1932
    • Construction
    • Discovery
    • Investigation
    • Quotes
    • Later career
    • Aftermath

    Over the next two years, Hull spent nearly $3,000 bringing his phony giant to life. He began by traveling to Fort Dodge, Iowa, where he secured a 5-ton block of gypsum by claiming it would be used for a statue of the late Abraham Lincoln. Hull then shipped the slab to a Chicago marble dealer who had agreed to help with the scheme in exchange for a ...

    Cardiffs prehistoric man made a splash the likes of which had never been seen in rural New York. A NEW WONDER, read the headline in the Syracuse Daily Standard. Another paper hailed the find as a singular discovery. When the crowds continued to grow, Newell covered the giant with a white tent and began charging 50 cents for admission. Some 2,500 pe...

    Over the next few weeks, more experts converged on Cardiff to inspect the new wonder. New York State Geologist James Hall and Rochester University professor Henry Ward were among the many to throw their weight behind the statue theory, with Hall christening it, the most remarkable object yet brought to light in our country. Another camp still clung...

    Still, where some saw a fraud, others saw dollar signs. Only a day after Marshs inspection, the famed circus impresario and showman P.T. Barnum viewed the giant in Syracuse and tried to buy it. When the owners turned him down, he commissioned a sculptor to build an exact replica and began displaying it at a Manhattan museum as the real thing. What ...

    By early 1870, the Cardiff Giant had turned from a subject of fascination into one of ridicule. Some people still argued for its antiquity, but new exposés were cropping up all the time, and even George Hull began publically bragging about having engineered a hoax. The ruse finally crumbled that February, when newspapers printed confessions from th...

    Having cleared around $20,000 with the Cardiff Giant scheme, George Hull would later attempt to continue his new career as a flimflam man. In 1877, he tried to humbug the masses once again by building a 7-foot-tall giant with a tail and burying it in Colorado. The hoax was quickly exposed, however, and Hull lost a great deal of money. He died in ob...

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0401430George Hull - IMDb

    As one of Hollywood's leading film conceptual designers, George specializes in creating unique and imaginative worlds including the vehicles, sets and mood that makes each film unique. His unique design aesthetic can bee seen in films from the Matrix, Star Wars, Bladerunner 2049 and Dune: Part 1 and the highly anticipated Dune: Part 2.

    • George Hull
  3. George C. Hull was born on 28 January 1878 in Kolhapur, Bombay Presidency, British India. George C. was a writer, known for Beware of Blondes (1928), The Kentucky Derby (1922) and Desperate Youth (1921).

    • January 28, 1878
    • February 2, 1953
  4. People also ask

  5. George C. was a writer, known for Beware of Blondes (1928), The Kentucky Derby (1922) and Desperate Youth (1921). George C. was married to Eleanor Goodnough. George C. died on 2 February 1953 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • Writer
    • January 28, 1878
    • George C. Hull
    • February 2, 1953
  6. George Hull is a Film Designer / Conceptual Artist. As a leading artist in the industry, George specializes in designing the aesthetics of vehicles, architecture, sets and action illustrations.

  7. Jupiter Ascending concept design gallery. This Collection is a small sample of drawings and sketch paintings created by George Hull during the production of the film.

  1. People also search for