1999 American film
Louise Dahl-Wolfe: Painting with Light |
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Screenshot |
Directed by | Tom Neff |
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Written by | Tom Neff |
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Produced by | Tom Neff Madeline Bell Louise LeQuire |
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Starring | Louise Dahl-Wolfe Lauren Bacall |
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Cinematography | Tom Neff |
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Edited by | Barry Rubinow |
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Music by | John Rosasco |
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Distributed by | Image productions |
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Release date | |
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Running time | 30 minutes |
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Country | United States |
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Language | English |
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Louise Dahl-Wolfe: Painting with Light is a 1999 documentary film about Louise Dahl-Wolfe, an important woman in the history of photography. It was written and directed by Tom Neff, and produced by Neff and Madeline Bell, who previously collaborated on the Oscar nominated short-documentary Red Grooms: Sunflower in a Hothouse (1986).[1]
Synopsis
This short documentary film on the life of Louise Dahl-Wolfe draws upon her art and her personality. The documentary reviews how Dahl-Wolfe "discovered" Lauren Bacall, who at the time was a young actress (seventeen years-of-age) and worked as a model. It was Dahl-Wolfe's photos of Bacall that film producer Harry Warner saw, and subsequently asked Bacall that she come to Hollywood for a screen test. As a result, Bacall was cast opposite Humphrey Bogart in the film To Have and Have Not (1944).
Dahl-Wolfe also photographed: Tallulah Bankhead, Spencer Tracy, Eudora Welty, Paul Robeson, Bette Davis, and others.
Background
The documentary took over ten years to complete and features the only surviving modern footage of Dahl-Wolfe, including extensive interviews.
Interviews
Distribution
The film has been shown on selected PBS television stations and was the first original production of the new digital channel: DOC: The Documentary Channel[2][3] and was screened at the Bel Air Film Festival.[4]
References
External links