Vittorio Storaro, ASC,
AIC was born in Rome in 1940, where his father was a projectionist at
Lux Film Studio. Storaro began studying photography at a technical school
at the age of 11 and subsequently enrolled at the Italian Cinemagraphic
Training Centre. He continued his education at the Centro Sperimente
di Cinemagrafia (the state film school). Storaro began his career as
an assistant cameramen at the age of 20 and stepped up to the role of
camera operator on his second film.
During a lull in production in Italy, Storaro dedicted several years
to studying all forms of artistic expression, including literature,
painting, sculpting and music. He returned to work as an assistant cameraman
in 1966 on Before the Revolution, the first film directed by
Bernardo Bertolucci. Storaro earned his first cinematography credit
two years later for Giovinezza, Giovinezza [Youthful, Youthful].
His third film La Strategia del Ragno (The Spider Strategy) marked
the beginning of his long collaboration with Bertolucci. In 1970, Bertolucci
and Storaro collaborated on The Conformist, a seminal film in
the history of contemporary cinematography.
Storaro's first mainstream studio film was Apocalypse Now, directed
by Francis Ford Copolla in 1979. Storaro earned his first Oscar for
that effort. He received his second Oscar in 1981 for Reds, directed
by Warren Beatty, and the third one for The Empire of the Sun,
in 1987, directed by Bertolucci. Storaro earned a fourth Oscar nomination
for Dick Tracy in 1990.
His other feature credits include 1900, Luna, Last Tango in Paris,
Tucker: A Man and His Dreams, One From the Heart, Little Buddha, Ladyhawke,
Tango and Bulworth. His eclectic body of work also includes
the TV mini-series, Peter the Great, the opera La Traviata,
a 15-hour documentary, The History of Rome, which plays at museums
around the world, and Captain E-O, an extraordinary 3-D filmswhich
played at the EPCOT Center, in Florida, for years.
Storaro was president of AIC (Association of Italian Cinematographers)
and a founder of IMAGO, an alliance of some 20 cinematography organization
in Europe. He coined the phrase and popularized the concept that cinematographers
are co-authors of the films they help to create and has been an eloquent
advocate for their artistic rights. His recent projects include Dune,
a six hour mini-series, based on Frank Herbert's classic novels, slated
for airing on the USA Networks in December.
The American Society of Cinematographers will present its Lifetime Achievement
Award to Storaro on February 18, 2001.