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Obituary: Walter Israel Lassally

Unconventional cameraman noted for filming Zorba the Greek

February 9, 2018 14:55
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For more than two decades, Walter Lassally, who has died aged 90, was the most influential cinematographer in Britain. The Academy Award-winning cameraman became one of the key figures in the British New Wave Free Cinema movement of the 1950s. Best known for his work on such unconventional working-class films as A Taste of Honey (1961) and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962), Lassally scored arguably his greatest success with an Oscar award for Zorba the Greek (1964). He worked on more than 50 feature films and countless documentaries as well as TV commercials

Lassally reflected in his autobiography Itinerant Cameraman his vision of becoming one of the world’s leading cinematographers. His destiny was realised years later, when, after his Oscar and BAFTA Film Award for Heat and Dust plus a BSC Award nomination for The Bostonians in 1984, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Cinematographers in 2008.

Born in Berlin, Walter Lassally was the only child of a German father and Polish mother, Protestants with Jewish ancestry. After the Nazi rise to power in 1939, the family sought refuge in England. However, with Britain’s impending war with Germany, his father was arrested and interned on the Isle of Man as a potential German agent, alongside thousands of Jewish refugees. After his release, the family settled in Richmond, London where young Walter — who watched his father make industrial training films — decided at the age of 15  that he wanted to be a film cameraman. Having finished school, he secured his first job as a clapper boy at London’s  Riverside Studios .

After the war,  Lassally, an enthusiastic follower of the Free Cinema movement, began working as a cameraman on documentary shorts capturing working-class life. By 1954, he was a director of photography on his first feature film,  Another Sky, shot on location in Morocco, followed by A Girl in Black (1956) - the first of six films with the legendary Mihalis Kakogiannis. After this came Lindsay Anderson’s portrayal of Covent Garden, Every Day Except Christmas (1957) and Karel Reisz’s We are the Lambeth Boys (1959). Then he graduated to Director of Photography on the gritty British classic A Taste of Honey, starring Rita Tushingham and Dora Bryan, which reached a wide audience, shot in the hard-edged monochrome style he had honed in his documentaries. It defined a particular chapter in British social history, winning four BAFTA awards, including best film .

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