Charles Cameron Macauley (October 20, 1923 – May 17, 2007) was a photographer, filmmaker and educator noted for his prize winning still photographs, his ethnographic films[1] and his expertise on historic films and photographs. His career spanned over 75 years.
Biography
Early life
Charles Cameron Macauley was born on October 20, 1923, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He was the younger brother of the noted editor and novelist Robie Macauley. Both boys took an interest in photography, and at the age of ten Macauley purchased his first Norton camera, a prototype of the highly successful Univex Model A, which sold for 39 cents and was among the first inexpensive cameras marketed for the general public.[2]
Macauley also experimented with a folding Kodak Bantam camera, a Foth Derby, a Rolleicord I, an Argus, a National Graflex and a Miniature Speed Graphic with a soft focus Verito lens.
By the late 1930s Macauley began doing commercial photography using a 4x5 Speed Graphic. He was briefly employed as a photographer and a photoengraver for The Ottawa Times.
Macauley entered Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio in 1942 and in December hitchhiked to New York City to meet Alfred Stieglitz. Although Stieglitz refused to comment on Macauley's photographs, he permitted the young man to photograph him reclining on a couch.[3]
Macauley became interested in anthropological, primatological, archeological and ethnographic films and from 1956 to 1964 was involved with William Heick in the American Indian Film Project, a project to document Native American cultures through film and sound recordings. Macauley worked closely with Alfred Kroeber and Samuel Barrett, writing scripts, filming and recording, and editing many of the 105 films produced during the project,[8] using 16mm color Ektachrome footage.
During this period Macauley taught photography at the University of California at Berkeley and at UCSF and became director of the university's media distribution center for the 9 campuses.[11]
In 1983 he stepped down from this position to found his own media appraisal group, Media Appraisal Consultants. In 1996 he was contracted by the JFK Presidential Library to appraise a series of documentary films which Ernest Hemingway co-produced, narrated and appeared in.[12]
In 1997 Macauley was appointed by the United States Department of Justice to appraise the Zapruder film of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.[4] Macauley and other film experts contracted by the US Government assessed the film's value at $784,065.[13][14] Following arbitration with the Zapruder heirs, the government purchased the film in 1998 for $16 million.[15]
During his career Macauley participated as an awards juror in 85 national and international film festivals and was scriptwriter/cinematographer for 33 films, producer/director of 8 films, and production manager or film animator for 9 films.[3]
He died in California on May 17, 2007.
Photographic works
Macauley's photographic skill was first recognized for a series of black and white stills taken in San Francisco in the early 1950s.[16]
^C. Cameron Macauley, "Ingrid Bergman: An Intimate Portrait by Joseph Henry Steele," (review); Film Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 4 (Summer, 1959), pp. 58–60.