Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ted_TetzlaffTed Tetzlaff - Wikipedia

    Dale H. "Ted" Tetzlaff (3 June 1903, in Los Angeles, California – 7 January 1995, in Sausalito, California) was an Academy Award-nominated Hollywood cinematographer active in the 1930s and 1940s.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0005898Ted Tetzlaff - IMDb

    Ted Tetzlaff. Cinematographer: Notorious. Ted Tetzlaff was born in 1903 in Los Angeles, the son of racecar driver and movie stuntman Teddy Tetzlaff, Sr. The elder Tetzlaff appeared in a number of silent star Wallace Reid's famous racing movies like The Roaring Road (1919), Double Speed (1920), Excuse My Dust (1920), Too Much Speed (1921) and ...

  3. Theodore R. Tetzlaff is among the most prominent Chicago lawyers, having led two of the nation's largest law firms and served as general counsel for multiple multi-billion dollar public companies.

  4. Ted Tetzlaff. Cinematographer: Notorious. Ted Tetzlaff was born in 1903 in Los Angeles, the son of racecar driver and movie stuntman Teddy Tetzlaff, Sr. The elder Tetzlaff appeared in a number of silent star Wallace Reid's famous racing movies like The Roaring Road (1919), Double Speed (1920), Excuse My Dust (1920), Too Much Speed (1921) and ...

  5. Jan 7, 1995 · Ted Tetzlaff is known as an Director of Photography, Director, Cinematography, and Camera Operator. Some of his work includes Notorious, My Man Godfrey, I Married a Witch, Remember the Night, The Talk of the Town, The More the Merrier, Easy Living, and You Were Never Lovelier.

  6. Hecht and Hitchcock’s screenplay was heavily praised for creating full-ranged, believable, sympathetic characters and an enthralling espionage story in which the audience gets easily wrapped and emotionally invested in the screen, while Ted Tetzlaff’s cinematography, guided by Hitchcock’s ever-present artistic longing to generously use ...

  7. Nov 7, 2020 · Driving a ponderous, 600-cubic-inch Lozier, Tetzlaff won the 200-mile race while averaging a jaw-dropping 70 mph. The press nicknamed him “Terrible Ted,” a moniker that grated on Tetzlaff but aptly described his fearless, win-at-all-costs driving style.

  1. People also search for