Biography
Cinematographer George Barnes got his start with producer
Thomas Ince in 1919, where he lensed one of the first anti-Communist propaganda films,
Dangerous Hours. Barnes was best known for his soft-edged, ethereal photography of such silent-film romances as Son of the Shiek (1926),
The Night of Love (1927), and The Magic Flame (1927). His mastery of the Black and White spectrum was as adaptable to noirish melodramas like
Sherlock Holmes (1932) as it was to splashy musicals like
Footlight Parade (1933). (One of Barnes' seven wives was
Footlight Parade costar
Joan Blondell.) During the early 1930s, George Barnes spent most of his time at the Sam Goldwyn Studio, where he helped nurture the skills of his brilliant assistant, future
Citizen Kane cinematographer
Gregg Toland. In 1940, Barnes won an Academy Award for his work on Hitchcock's
Rebecca. George Barnes' final film was the Technicolor sci-fi fest
War of the Worlds (1953), one of the most visually vivid movie efforts of the early 1950s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide