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  1. Russell B. Harlan, A.S.C. (September 16, 1903 – February 28, 1974) was an American cinematographer . Biography. Born in Los Angeles, California, Russell Harlan witnessed the city's development from the construction of its first film studio to being the center for motion picture production in the United States.

  2. He was nominated six times for the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, including two in 1962 for his work on Hatari! and To Kill a Mockingbird. Born Russell September 16, 1903 in Los Angeles, California to Frank and Bertha Harlan, who hailed from Iowa and Missouri.

  3. Russell Harlan. Cinematographer: To Kill a Mockingbird. Born Russell September 16, 1903 in Los Angeles, California to Frank and Bertha Harlan, who hailed from Iowa and Missouri.

    • September 16, 1903
    • February 28, 1974
  4. Russell Harlan. Cinematographer: To Kill a Mockingbird. Born Russell September 16, 1903 in Los Angeles, California to Frank and Bertha Harlan, who hailed from Iowa and Missouri. Russell was raised in Los Angeles along with his younger brother Richard (b. 1911).

    • Russell Harlan
  5. Russell Harlan was an active cinematographer in numerous westerns before he shot Lewis Milestone's "A Walk in the Sun" (1945), the first in a series of more distinguished...

    Tomatometer®
    Audience Score
    Title
    Year
    70%
    Rotten audience score. 53%
    1966
    63%
    Fresh audience score. 73%
    1964
    93%
    Fresh audience score. 93%
    1962
    100%
    Fresh audience score. 72%
    1959
  6. California-born Russell Harlan broke into movies as a bit player and stuntman in western movies. But he had a hankering to enter the technical end of the business, so he was given his first opportunities as a cinematographer on Paramount's Hopalong Cassidy series.

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  8. Russell Harlan was an active cinematographer in numerous westerns before he shot Lewis Milestone's "A Walk in the Sun" (1945), the first in a series of more distinguished productions for directors such as Howard Hawks ("Red River" 1948) and Richard Mulligan ("To Kill a Mockingbird" 1962).

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