Gale Tattersall
Gale Tattersall | |
---|---|
Born | 1948 (age 75–76) England |
Occupation | Cinematographer |
Spouse(s) | Teresa Tattersall (divorced) |
Children | 2 |
Gale Tattersall (born 1948) is an English cinematographer.
Early life
[edit]Tattersall was born in England in 1948. He divided his childhood and education between Liverpool and the Indian city of Darjeeling, where he attended a boarding school due to his father's role an engineer at a steel company in Mumbai. At the age of 16, he left home in Liverpool and moved to London, where he started working as a photographer at the Architectural Association School of Architecture. A visit by American architect Buckminster Fuller in 1967 inspired Tattersall to pick up a Bolex camera to document the visit, and he became so enchanted by the filmmaking process that he enrolled at the London Film School for a two-year course.
Career
[edit]Upon graduation, Tattersall received a grant from the British Film Institute to make a short film called Value For Money, inspired by a dream and featuring a pre-fame Quentin Crisp. He has since been the cinematographer on films such as The Commitments and Tank Girl, as well as 120 episodes of the medical drama series House. He was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Miniseries or a Movie for his work on Ron Howard's 1998 docudrama miniseries From the Earth to the Moon. He was twice nominated for the American Society of Cinematographers Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular Series for the House episodes "House's Head" and "Meaning". He is the founder of the HDD SLR Workshops in Santa Monica, California.
Personal life
[edit]Tattersall has two sons, Rio and Sunny, with his Brazilian ex-wife Teresa.
Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Cinematographer | Camera operator | Self | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006–2012 | House | Yes | TV series – 120 episodes Nominated – American Society of Cinematographers Awards 2008 – Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular Series for episode "House's Head" Nominated – American Society of Cinematographers Awards 2006 – Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular Series for episode "Meaning"[1] | ||
2006 | Relying on the Anointing | Yes | Video short | ||
The Power of Proclamation | Yes | Video short | |||
The Matchless Message | Yes | Video short | |||
The Man Is the Message | Yes | Video short | |||
Lost at Sea | Yes | Video short | |||
How I Learned Faith | Yes | Video short | |||
The Art of the Impossible | Yes | Video short | |||
2004 | The Commitments: Looking Back | Yes | Video documentary | ||
2002 | Ghost Ship | Yes | |||
2001 | Thir13en Ghosts | Yes | |||
2000 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Yes | TV series – Pilot | ||
1999 | Pushing Tin | Yes | |||
The Jack Bull | Yes | TV movie | |||
1998 | From the Earth to the Moon | Yes | TV mini-series Nominated – 50th Primetime Emmy Awards – Outstanding Cinematography for a Miniseries or a Movie[2] | ||
HBO First Look: Making "From the Earth to the Moon" | Yes | TV series documentary | |||
1995 | Virtuosity | Yes | |||
Tank Girl | Yes | ||||
Hideaway | Yes | ||||
1991 | The Commitments | Yes | |||
The Addams Family | Yes | Additional photographer | |||
1990 | Vroom | Yes | |||
1989 | Wild Orchid | Yes | Yes | ||
1988 | Homeboy | Yes | |||
Space Riders | Yes | ||||
1987 | Aria | Yes | Segment "La Vergine Degli Angeli" | ||
1986 | Comrades | Yes | |||
Forever Young | Yes | ||||
Link | Yes | Director of photography: UK second unit | |||
1985 | Wings of Death | Yes | Yes | Short film | |
The Emerald Forest | Yes | ||||
1983 | Those Glory Glory Days | Yes | TV movie | ||
1980 | Dark Water | Yes | Short film | ||
Sweet William | Yes | ||||
1978 | The Getting of Wisdom | Yes | |||
1977 | Summerfield | Yes | |||
1976 | Don's Party | Yes | |||
The Fourth Wish | Yes | ||||
1974 | Barry McKenzie Holds His Own | Yes | |||
Behind the Scenes Footage from "Barry McKenzie Holds His Own" | Yes | ||||
1973 | My Ain Folk | Yes | |||
Monster or Miracle? Sydney Opera House | Yes | TV movie | |||
The Wreck of the Batavia | Yes | TV movie | |||
1972 | The Adventures of Barry McKenzie | Yes | |||
My Childhood | Yes | Additional photographer |
References
[edit]- ^ "The ASC – Past ASC Awards" Archived 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, American Society of Cinematographers, Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^ "Primetime Emmy Awards nominations for 1998 – OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A MINISERIES OR A MOVIE", Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, Retrieved 22 July 2012.
External links
[edit]- Gale Tattersall at IMDb
- Gale Tattersall Official Website
- Gale Tattersall at HD DSLR Workshops