Irving Glassberg Explained

Irving Glassberg
Birth Date:October 19, 1906
Birth Place:Poland
Death Place:Los Angeles, California
Occupation:Cinematographer

Irving Glassberg, A.S.C. (19 October 1906  - 9 September 1958) was a Polish-American cinematographer, who worked on many Universal Pictures during the forties and fifties. Glassberg, along with Arthur Lubin was responsible for getting Clint Eastwood into the movies.[1]

Partial filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1959Cry Tough
The Rabbit Trap
1958Twilight for the Gods
The Big Beat
Day of the Bad Man
The Lady Takes a Flyer
The Tarnished Angels
1957Joe Butterfly
Four Girls in Town
1956Showdown at Abilene
The Rawhide Years
Outside the Law
Backlash
The Price of Fear
1955The Purple Mask
Captain Lightfoot
1954The Black Shield of Falworth
Francis Joins the WACS
Ride Clear of Diablo
Border River
1953Walking My Baby Back Home
The Mississippi Gambler
The Lawless Breed
1952The Black Castle
The Duel at Silver Creek
Sally and Saint Anne
Flesh and Fury
Here Come the Nelsons
Bend of the River
1951The Strange Door
Cave of Outlaws
The Prince Who Was a Thief
The Fat Man
Francis Goes to the Races
1950Kansas Raiders
Shakedown
Spy Hunt
I Was a Shoplifter
Francis
Outside the Wall
1949Undertow
The Story of Molly X
Sword in the Desert
Arctic Manhunt
Yes Sir, That's My Baby
Calamity Jane and Sam Bass
Red Canyon
1948Larceny
Feudin', Fussin' and A-Fightin'
River Lady
Casbah
Black Bart
1947The Web

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. McGilligan (1999), p.52