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Old 22-02-2008, 09:19 AM
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Default David Watkin, cinematographer R.I.P.



From The Times
February 21, 2008


David Watkin
Leading film cameraman whose work included The Charge of the Light Brigade, The Devils, and Chariots of Fire

David Watkin was one of British cinema’s top cameramen and greatest characters. He would have liked to have been a musician, but his musical ambitions got no support from his family, which had long connections with the railways. He worked for the newly nationalised British Railways, drifted into film-making as a messenger and camera assistant in its film section and eventually went on to win an Oscar for best cinematography for the luscious African landscape photography in Out of Africa (1985).

The film brought him a slew of prizes, including a British Academy Award, though he accumulated no fewer than eight other Bafta nominations. He worked with such celebrated names as the Beatles, Robert Redford, Barbra Streisand, Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn. He believed in filming scenes as simply as possible. Asked for a slogan for T-shirts at a film festival in Poland, where he was receiving a lifetime achievement award in 2004, he suggested “One tries not to f**k it up”.
The cinematography on Out of Africa, with its wide panoramas and warm, nostalgic interiors, was not particularly typical of his work. But then his no-nonsense approach proved extremely adaptable in a career that included such classic films as The Knack (1965), Help! (1965), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), The Devils (1971), Chariots of Fire (1981), Yentl (1983), Moonstruck (1987) and Hamlet (1990), along with the acclaimed TV mini-series Jesus of Nazareth (1977).

He was so relaxed on set that he was famous within the industry for his habit of taking a nap between shots. Despite his lack of pretensions or any great artistic claims, he was an important innovator, well known for his technique of accentuating whites by reflecting light off sheets of polystyrene. He used the technique on the likes of Help! and The Devils, but it was actually developed to accentuate the whiteness of clothes in washing powder commercials that he did with Richard Lester.

Naturalism was key to Watkin’s work. He often arranged his light to come through windows, prompting one critic to compare him to Vermeer, and he developed a new lighting system for shooting at night. It employed about 200 bulbs in a unit suspended from a crane some distance from the action. It served as a single, powerful light source and solved the problem of fluctuating light when characters walk through a night scene.

His system of lights for night shooting became known as the Wendy Light, because he was gay and known to technicians as Wendy. He loved gossip and anecdotes and amused listeners with a story about how he was once walking down the street in Brighton, where he lived, when he heard someone shout “Wendy”. He turned round and said “Yes?” The stranger behind him explained that he had actually been calling to his wife. “Oh, I’m sorry,” said Watkin, “I thought you were an electrician.”

He was born into an upper middle-class family in Margate, Kent. He was related to Sir Edward Watkin, the Victorian railwayman who built and managed railways around the globe. Watkin’s father was a lawyer, working for the railways. Watkin served in the Army during the Second World War and then followed in the tracks of his antecedents.

It was a dramatic time for Britain’s railways, which were nationalised in 1948 by the new Labour Government. Watkin worked with the Southern Region Film Unit of British Railways and then as an assistant cameraman at BTF, British Transport Films, which was set up in 1949 with the intention of making documentaries about transport and travelogues promoting holiday destinations

He worked for the company throughout the 1950s. During the 1960s he shot television commercials with several directors who would go on to achieve distinction in the field of feature films. He disliked commercials, but they were comparatively well paid. He worked on the memorable title sequence for the James Bond film Goldfinger (1964) — scenes projected on to a golden woman’s body.

But his first full feature film was the comedy The Knack, which was directed by Richard Lester and is one of the films that best capture a certain zany, spontaneous, perhaps imaginary quality of the Swinging Sixties. Rita Tushingham is the young innocent arriving in London, Michael Crawford the awkward young man she meets, and Ray Brooks is his friend who has “the knack” with women. Watkin’s giddy black and white cinematography caught the mood of the film and the times.
Watkin and Lester immediately renewed their collaboration on the Beatles movie Help!, which was seen by some as a disappointment after the first Lester-Beatles movie A Hard Day’s Night (1964), but which is also now regarded a classic, capturing the madcap joie de vivre and surreal humour of the Fab Four before it all got too serious and turned sour.

Watkin and Lester would make a total of eight feature films together, including How I Won the War (1967), with John Lennon, The Bed Sitting Room (1969), with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, The Three Musketeers (1973) and Robin and Marian (1976). But Lester was just one of a number of top directors with whom Watkin worked repeatedly.
When Watkin found a director he liked he would frequently accept repeat engagements. He made six features with Tony Richardson, from The Charge of the Light Brigade in 1968 to The Hotel New Hampshire in 1984. His work with Franco Zeffirelli stretches from Jesus of Nazareth in 1977 to Tea with Mussolini in 1999.
He got on well with Barbra Streisand, the notoriously difficult producer, director and star of Yentl, though he hated her music. She tried to get him to go to her concerts, but he refused. His passion was classical music. He recently completed and self-published a second volume of memoirs, entitled Was Clara Schumann a Fag Hag? The title has nothing to do with his own life, except that it reflects his love of classical music and gossip and his perverse sense of humour.

He is survived by his civil partner, Nick Hand.

David Watkin, cinematographer, was born on March 23, 1925. He died of cancer on February 19, 2008, aged 82




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Old 22-02-2008, 05:17 PM
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I got to work with him a few times and he was a really nice guy..RIP.

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Old 22-02-2008, 05:51 PM
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I got to work with him a few times and he was a really nice guy..RIP.

Aitch,
It must be difficult seeing so many people that you've worked with appearing in the obituaries column. But as long as there isn't an article about you then you're doing OK

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Old 22-02-2008, 07:51 PM
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If you see one about me...email me..

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Old 22-02-2008, 07:54 PM
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He loved gossip and anecdotes and amused listeners with a story about how he was once walking down the street in Brighton, where he lived, when he heard someone shout “Wendy”. He turned round and said “Yes?” The stranger behind him explained that he had actually been calling to his wife. “Oh, I’m sorry,” said Watkin, “I thought you were an electrician.”
Priceless.

He photographed four of my favourite films; The Devils, The Three/Four Musketeers and Robin and Marian.

I just bought the widescreen DVD of Robin and Marian last week, I feel a memorial viewing coming on...
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Old 22-02-2008, 10:36 PM
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If you see one about me...email me..

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Don't worry Aitch, we'll be sure to tell you if you're dead

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Old 25-02-2008, 09:30 AM
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Obituary: David Watkin
Cinematographer who captured the mood of the 60s and won an Oscar for Out of Africa


Ronald Bergan
Saturday February 23, 2008
The Guardian

The names of directors Richard Lester, Ken Russell and Tony Richardson conjure up a time, in the 1960s and early 70s, when British films were refreshing, lively and innovative. The Oscar-winning cinematographer David Watkin, who has died of prostate cancer aged 82, made almost as much of a contribution to this rich period as they did, particularly on the eight films he shot for Lester.
Lester's earliest works seem most representative of British films in the swinging 60s, with their dazzling, self-consciously zany, visual style dependent on quirky, highly skilful tracking and cutting, in sympathy with the new pop mood. He gave Watkin his first crack at a feature film with The Knack... and How to Get It (1965). The freewheeling camerawork gave this witty, youthful lark a mood of spontaneity, and the high contrast monochrome photography underscored the opposing viewpoints of the characters. In the same year, in Help!, Watkin shot the Beatles through colour filters, out of focus, sideways and upside down, a style that suited the group's cheery, slightly anarchic personality. Lester's film started the fashion for placing pop groups in unlikely settings, using jump cuts and slow and speeded-up motion.

John Lennon appeared as a naive squaddie in How I Won the War (1967), Lester's anti-war slapstick satire, which Watkin gave a period look in Eastmancolor and black and white, intercutting with actual second world war newsreels tinted in green, blue and red. He also pays ambivalent homage to Freddie Young, one of the greatest British cinematographers from a previous generation, in a long shot of vehicles crossing the desert, a reference to David Lean's epic Lawrence of Arabia. The fact that Ralph Richardson played the title role in Lester's The Bed Sitting Room (1969) indicates the nature of the surreal humour of this post-nuclear war black comedy, shot in sepia, creating an eerie, nightmarish atmosphere.
Watkin and Lester first met during the shooting of a television commercial in the early 1960s. Watkin had gained his experience as a camera assistant at the Southern Railway film unit in 1948, later becoming director of photography after it was absorbed into British Transport Films in 1950. Under the pioneering producer Edgar Anstey, he shot several excellent short documentaries, including Under Night Streets (1958), about the track cleaners ("fluffers") who maintain the London underground system, and Blue Pullman (1960), which follows the maiden voyage of a train from Manchester to London, with beautifully photographed colour sequences shot from the air and the driver's cab.
Watkin was born in Margate, Kent, the fourth and youngest son of a solicitor father. His ambition was to become a classical pianist, but his father refused his request for piano lessons. Watkin always contended that he would rather have been a musician. This probably accounts for his laid-back, though always professional, approach to his career. When asked when he first developed a passion for cinematography, he answered that he had yet to develop a passion for it, and that he preferred music and literature. (He had a magnificent collection of first editions of books at his mews home in Brighton.) He also had the habit of sleeping in between lighting setups, because "it's the only thing you can do on-set which doesn't make you more tired".
In the postwar era, young directors were struggling to break away from the constraints of studio productions and were developing a more natural, visual language, influenced by the French new wave. Cameramen such as Watkin, with his background in commercials and more adventurous documentaries, were eagerly sought. Among the "angry young men" was Tony Richardson, with whom Watkin worked on Mademoiselle (1966), shot in exquisite black and white for the Panavision screen, and The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968) in Panavision and De Luxe Color. For the latter, Watkin used Ross Express lenses, which had long been replaced by more modern equipment but which enabled him to create highly stylised effects, drenching certain scenes in a single, dramatic color.
In 1971, Watkin shot two very different films for Ken Russell - The Devils (1971), in which the hallucinogenic visual style matched the frenzied Grand Guignol material, and The Boy Friend (1971), a pastiche of Busby Berkeley's 1930s musicals, which skilfully imitated some of the kaleidoscopic effects.
As always, Watkin, matching his style to directorial intent, harnessed the light for the Spanish locations of Lester's The Three Musketeers (1974) and The Four Musketeers (1975) to create exceptionally rich tableaux, and gave Robin and Marian (1976), in which Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn play middle-aged versions of the Robin Hood couple, an apt autumnal air.
But with British cinema in sharp decline by the mid-1970s, and no longer providing the freshness and excitement of the previous decade, Watkin began to bring his expertise to bear more and more on mainstream American films such as Barbra Streisand's Yentl (1983) and Norman Jewison's Moonstruck (1987). An exception was Hugh Hudson's Chariots of Fire (1981), to which Watkin brought a romantic glow familiar from BBC television's Edwardian sagas. The image most people remember from the film is the opening scene with runners in white vests and long white shorts cantering along a beach like white horses.
The slender love story of Sydney Pollack's Out of Africa (1985), for which Watkin won both the Oscar and Bafta cinematography award, was filled out with beautifully photographed travelogue vistas. He reversed conventional applications of film stock, using fast film for night and interior shots and slow film for exterior shots to give the film a soft quality, appropriate to its romantic mood.
Actually, Watkin was known among aficionados of cinematography for his use of the bounce light, lamps aimed at walls and ceilings to create diffuse and soft lighting. He was also known for the "Wendy light" (Wendy was his nickname), which consisted of around 200 bulbs mounted on a crane at heights of up to 150 feet. It functions as a single, powerful light source, producing the type of shadows and degree of smoothness generated by natural light.
Watkin, who preferred to live a quiet life with his friends away from the world of show business, never took himself too seriously. When asked for a motto to embellish the T-shirts of the International Film Festival of the Art of Cinematography at Lodz, where he received the lifetime achievement award in 2004, he suggested: "One tries not to fuck it up."
In the forward to his 1998 autobiography, Why is There Only One Word for Thesaurus?, he wrote: "I was prevented from becoming an unsuccessful musician by a realistic father who said that I'd not make any money at it, and would make a noise in the house; and only came into films to avoid wearing a suit. The resulting lack of ambition has probably been my best asset. This honestly isn't a pose. Once I was actually doing photography, I quite liked it, and I suppose curiosity did the rest."
Watkin, whose second autobiography, Was Clara Schumann a Fag Hag?, is to be published soon, was openly gay long before homosexuality was decriminalised. He is survived by his longtime companion Nicky Hand.


Tom Bussmann writes: David Watkin worked with many of the world's best directors, and Barbra Streisand. There's no doubt that his academy award for Out of Africa was well deserved, although in his acceptance speech David typically gave all the credit to his second unit. But the work that he did on Yentl was every bit as good. It's just that Africa was prettier.
Nevertheless, the Streisand experience gave him some wonderful anecdotes to add to his mischievous repertoire. One story he did not tell happened at a rehearsal. David, having lit the set, promptly fell asleep, as always. Then Streisand started singing. David awoke and slowly wandered over, then peered at her profile as if he had never seen it. "I can see we're going to have a lot of trouble with that," giving The Nose a gentle jab of his finger, then went back to his chair and dozed off. To her credit, Streisand took it surprisingly well. Later in the production she screamed: "David, you're shooting me from my bad side!" Calm as ever, he explained: "It's not your bad side, Barbra, it's your other side."
· Francis David Watkin, cinematographer, born March 23 1925; died February 19 2008

---------------------------------------------------------



David Watkin: Oscar-winning cinematographer
THE INDEPENDENT
Monday, 25 February 2008

An Oscar winner for his ravishing photography of Sidney Lumet's film Out of Africa (1985), David Watkin was one of the finest and most innovative of British cinematographers, his work ranging from the unconventional pyrotechnics of Richard Lester's offbeat comedies to the magisterial sweep of Hugh Hudson's Chariots of Fire (1981) and the surreal flavour of life on an army camp in Mike Nichols's Catch-22 (1970).

Always eager for challenges and willing to flout convention, he was favoured by such maverick directors as Lester, Tony Richardson and Ken Russell. He will be remembered too for his experimentation with light, and his pioneering style of lighting subjects during the onset of late afternoon gloom, when moving figures would fail to maintain consistent visibility. His solution, an array of nearly 200 lights raised to a height and placed up to a quarter of a mile from the scene to provide even, natural lighting with realistic shadows, became known as the "Wendy Light", since he was affectionately known to his friends as "Wendy" Watkin.
The fourth and youngest son of a Catholic solicitor, Watkin was born in Margate, Kent, in 1925 and grew up with a passion for classical music. He suffered early disappointment, however, when his father refused to buy him a piano or allow him to take music lessons. When asked many years later if he recalled just when he developed a love of photography, he replied that he never had and would much rather have been a professional musician. He was later to photograph several musical personalities performing, including Daniel Barenboim.
After a brief spell in the Army during the Second World War, Watkin joined the Southern Railway Film Unit as a messenger boy, graduating to camera assistant in 1948. After the unit was absorbed into British Transport Films in 1950 he trained with the documentary specialist Edgar Anstey, working his way up to director of photography, gaining his first credit on the short Holiday (1955). Leaving to freelance, he became a prolific photographer of commercials, including a notorious one, withdrawn by Norman Lamont, depicting Denis Healey standing in front of a branch of Thresher's off-licence.
Richard Lester was directing commercials at the same time, and later commented:
The great thing is that, in the Sixties, commercials were very much driven by camera technique, different use of lights, filters, stock. Commercials allowed us to try things out. We were the first people to use a cameraman named David Watkin. We had the idea of using extreme whites in a
very high-contrast stock, which we tried out. We went to Barbara Mullen's place to shoot a butter commercial for Ireland. In the end she looked like Lena Horne – you couldn't see her at all, she had just vanished. There was just a dress and a black bob. The commercial was totally unusable. But we learned enough from that disaster to paint one of the rooms white in The Knack and find out how we could manage to actually see the person's face.
Watkin photographed eight films for Lester, starting with a key film of the Sixties, The Knack . . . and How to Get It (1965), starring Rita Tushingham, Michael Crawford and (as the young man with the knack of attracting girls) Ray Brooks. Watkin's other films with Lester included Help! (1965), the second film to star the Beatles and their first in colour, How I Won the War (1967), starring John Lennon in an anti-war drama filmed in colour, black-and-white and tinted shades, and The Three Musketeers (1973) and its sequel, plus the elegiac version of Robin and Marion which brought Audrey Hepburn back to the screen after a long absence, playing Maid Marion to Sean Connery's Robin Hood.
Willing to experiment in any genre, Watkin imbued the expansive landscapes and battlefield scenes of Tony Richardson's The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968) with a muted, painterly quality by using the same lens as that used for postcards in the 1850s. His versatility encompassed the bleached hysteria of Ken Russell's The Devils (1971) and the surrealism of the production numbers in Ken Russell's transformation of Sandy Wilson's wonderful Twenties spoof The Boy Friend (1971) into a pastiche (often very funny) of Busby Berkeley, as well as the contrastingly oppressive atmosphere of suburban claustrophobia in Richardson's TV film of Albee's A Delicate Balance and Peter Hall's distinguished production of Harold Pinter's The Homecoming (both 1973). Both films disguised their theatrical origins with bold compositions and character placement. Watkin could switch from the ethereal aura of Jesus of Nazareth (1977) to the shameless melodramatics of Cuba (1979) with equal ease.
Throughout those early years, Watkin was sometimes cited as the most undervalued and unsung of cinematographers, but that changed in 1981 when he was nominated for an Oscar for his work on the fêted British movie Chariots of Fire, with its haunting shots of athletes running through the sand. He was then chosen by Barbra Streisand to photograph her first film as a director, Yentl (1983), which won praise for its muted, pastel tones, and two years later he won the Academy Award for best cinematographer for the sweep and grandeur he brought to Out of Africa. He achieved the unusually lush look of the film with a particularly unconventional approach, reversing usual photographic procedure by using fast film for the night and interior shots, and slow film for the exteriors. He photographed Cher in her Oscar-winning role in Norman Jewison's romantic comedy Moonstruck (1987), recaptured the mood and look of the Forties for Michael Caton-Jones's enjoyable Memphis Belle (1990), and so pleased the fastidious Franco Zeffirelli with his filming of Hamlet (1990), starring Mel Gibson, that he worked with the director again on the disappointing Jane Eyre (1996) and Zeffirelli's autobiographical tale of his youth, Tea with Mussolini (1999).
The early sequences of Michael Caton-Jones' This Boy's Life (1993), in which a boy and his mother (Leonardo di Caprio and Ellen Barkin) travel the country roads of 1950s America, were described as "candy for the eye", and a stark contrast to the uncompromisingly dreary look that Watkin brought to the Washington suburb in which most of the film is set. In Sidney Lumet's gritty New York-set thriller Night Falls on Manhattan (1997), Watkin himself makes a brief cameo appearance as a sleeping judge. The scene is a knowing reference to the fact that Watkin was noted for his habit of taking a nap on the sound stages between lighting set-ups. "It's the only thing you can do on set which doesn't make you more tired," he would say.
Watkin published two volumes of light-hearted and witty autobiography entitled Why Is There Only One Word for Thesaurus? (1998) and Was Clara Schumann a Fag Hag? (2008)

Tom Vallance

As a cinematographer, David Watkin had a very rare, almost unique, quality – he was both a craftsman and an innovative artist, writes Hugh Hudson. Furthermore, added to the visual brilliance that one would expect, he had serious literary and musical abilities and was possessed of an abundance of taste.
Working with David was an eccentric and a joyous experience. His passion for life knew no bounds: when you sat down with him at lunchtime in the studio commissary or on location, it was not about the film or the cinema that he spoke, but music or books . . . usually with a smattering of some wicked gossip. On location, you might find him absent-mindedly wandering towards the town museum, or walking through the local church or cathedral. This was unusual among film camera technicians, who are normally only interested in film gossip, or the food.
He loved music – Mahler, Britten, Vaughan Williams, and German opera – and had taught himself to play the piano rather well. He understood music, as he understood painting, and I always felt that these appreciations inhabited his work as a cinema artist.
When I began to work in film in 1963, I looked for someone who understood values beyond just photography, and David, who had just left a permanent job making documentaries for British Transport Films, came into my life. He became my first cameraman, and taught me all I know about cameras and lenses and lighting technique.
He fashioned my first commercials and then my first film, a 20-minute sponsored documentary made for a man that my partner David Cammell and myself had met in a King's Road pub. The man owned an egg-packing factory in Norfolk, and we persuaded him he needed a film. It cost £1,000. David Watkin's work with us in these early days was real and true, and of a beauty hard to put into words. So very soon he was discovered by the feature world and lost to the likes of myself.
In Cammell-Hudson, our company in the early Sixties, was the brilliant American designer Robert Brownjohn ("BJ") who was commissioned to make the titles for two James Bond films – Goldfinger and From Russia with Love. BJ and David produced a stunning opening sequence of a voluptuous lady covered in gold paint from head to toe, onto which was projected the moving type of the main credits.
When I finally got the chance to make my first long film, Chariots of Fire, in 1980, who but David could possibly photograph it? To add another dimension to the slow-motion athletic sequences, he came up with a novel way of photographing running. Normally, the shutter is at 180 degrees. David decided to run the film through the camera with a shutter closed down to 10 degrees. The impression was of images taken at 1/800th of a second. The result is that every drop of water is sharp as the athletes run along the beach, and their hair and limbs are better resolved, so without really knowing what you have experienced, a realistic and unusually exhilarating feeling of energy is created. It is why the opening of the film on the beach is so compelling and blends so perfectly with Vangelis's music.
David was generous and very human and was a figure of great affection for all on the set. At 4pm precisely, his electricians would set up a tray of China tea, which would be served from a porcelain teapot and in a cup of delicate china. His simple dress displayed no hint of narcissism, rather rare among cameramen. And at the end of the day, on wrap, he would be the first away, carrying his battered black briefcase and wearing his white tennis shoes, to catch the late train to Brighton where he lived among his books, with his partner and his white Alsatian.

David Watkin, cinematographer: born Margate, Kent 23 March 1925; registered civil partnership 2006 with Nick Hand; died Brighton, East Sussex 19 February 2008.
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Old 25-02-2008, 09:43 AM
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David Watkin
Daily Telegraph

David Watkin, the cinematographer who died on Tuesday aged 82, shot many celebrated British films, most notably Chariots Of Fire (1981), and, for Hollywood, Out Of Africa, for which he won an Academy award in 1985.

Watkin: his way of filming gave Out Of Africa a lush quality that matched its romantic mood

In Chariots Of Fire - for which he was nominated for an earlier Oscar - Watkin helped to create one of the iconic images of 1980s cinema: the opening sequence in which a huddle of young male athletes pounds along the water's edge on a sandy beach as the film's theme music by Vangelis throbs beneath the shot.
As well as working with Hugh Hudson, who made his directorial debut on Chariots Of Fire, Watkin also collaborated with such seasoned directors as Franco Zeffirelli, Sidney Lumet, Richard Lester, Peter Brook, Mike Nichols and Ken Russell.
Watkin's other credits included The Charge of the Light Brigade, which he photographed in 1968 for Tony Richardson, and Jesus Of Nazareth (1977), made for television with his fellow cinematographer Armando Nannuzzi. This was directed by Zeffirelli, for whom Watkin also shot the 1999 film Tea With Mussolini. Before breaking into feature films as a fully-fledged cinematographer, Watkin also photographed (uncredited) the title sequence of the 1964 James Bond film Goldfinger.
A noted innovator, Watkin was among the first directors of photography to experiment with bounced light as a soft lighting source. But his ingenuity was best exemplified when he developed a lighting unit of 196 lamps (14x14) which was mounted on a cherry-picker crane and hoisted up to 150ft in the air, and which created the type of shadow and smoothness that occurs naturally. Because it shed a very bright light over a large area, it became the standard rig for night filming. Known as the Wendy light, it was named after Watkin, who was gay and was nicknamed Wendy by film electricians.

Whether it involved lighting, composition or the use of film stock, Watkin's approach was original or unconventional.
In Out Of Africa, for example, he turned conventional wisdom on its head and used fast film for night and interior shots (for which slow film would normally be used) and slow film for exteriors. This typically maverick move gave Sydney Pollack's film a lush, soft quality that matched its romantic mood. The film won a total of seven Oscars.
Critics admired the painterly quality in Watkin's work, some comparing him with the Dutch artist Vermeer, who often illuminated his subjects with light refracted through windows. Films such as Yentl (1983), The Hotel New Hampshire (1984), White Nights (1985) and The Four Musketeers (1974) contain striking examples of this technique.
Francis David Watkin was born on March 23 1925 at Margate, Kent, the fourth and youngest son of a prosperous solicitor.
Classical music was an early enthusiasm, and the young David was disappointed when his father turned down his request for a piano and music lessons. But he accepted paternal encouragement to try film-making "because I knew film-makers didn't have to wear a suit".
He always maintained, however, that he would rather have been a professional musician than alighting cameraman.
After serving briefly in the Army during the Second World War, in 1948 Watkin joined the Southern Railway film unit as a messenger boy and then camera assistant. Two years later the unit was merged with British Transport Films, with Watkin making his debut as cameraman on Holiday (1955) before being promoted to become BTF's director of photography in the late 1950s. In 1960, he went freelance and started shooting commercials, work that brought him into contact with the young American-born director Richard Lester.
After his success with the Beatles in their first film, A Hard Day's Night (1964), Lester hired Watkin to work on his sex comedy The Knack… And How to Get It (1965), which Watkin shot in a crisp, high-contrast style; the film won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Watkin and Lester went on to collaborate on the second Beatles film, Help! (1965), How I Won The War (1967), The Bed-Sitting Room (1969), The Three Musketeers (1973), The Four Musketeers (1974), Robin and Marian (1976) and Cuba (1979).
Although few matched his skills, Watkin did not earn the recognition enjoyed by many of his contemporaries. It was only his Academy Award for Out Of Africa in 1985 that drew him out of the shadows to join the pantheon of leading cinematographers.
Despite his achievements, Watkin himself remained conspicuously casual about his work. Asked when he had first developed a passion for photography, he replied that he had not as yet done so, his overriding passions being classical music and books. He became known for his eccentric habit of sleeping on the set of his films between lighting set-ups because "it's the only thing you can do on set which doesn't make you more tired".
He produced two volumes of autobiography, Why Is There Only One Word for Thesaurus? (1998) and Was Clara Schumann A Fag Hag?, published earlier this year.
Watkin was always charming and self-deprecating. "Most of my best ideas are born of laziness," he remarked. "I liked using soft light because it looks nice and it's easy. I've also found that a good approach is to have only a few stipulations - I usually like to shoot against the light, for instance - but once you make them, stick to them doggedly."
In 2004, asked for a motto for T-shirts at a Polish film festival, where he received a lifetime achievement award, he rejected conventional tags in favour of: "One tries not to f*** it up".
David Watkin is survived by his long-term partner, Nick Hand.


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Old 25-02-2008, 08:05 PM
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Just caught up with this thread; sad news indeed. Ever since Xmas we have been enjoying the early work of DW with his films for British Transport Films.

IIRC DW lit Hammer's last horror output TO THE DEVIL A DAUGHTER. I remember, as a young film fan, being impressed by the discovery that he used small pieces of foil in a tray of water to recreate that dappled light effect you get from the river outside your window; used for that film.

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