Biography
Russell A. Gausman managed to carve a name for himself as a set designer and art director at a single studio, Universal. In a 29-year career, he worked on over 500 films, ranging from sophisticated comedies such as
The Rage of Paris to German expressionist-influenced horror vehicles such as
Son of Frankenstein, satirical comedies such as
The Bank Dick, slapstick vehicles like
Buck Privates, and film noir classics such as
The Killers (1946) and
The Naked City. His screen career started with an uncredited contribution to
Tod Browning's
Dracula in 1931, and from 1938 onward he was one of the busiest art directors and set designers on the Universal lot, responsible for the look of most of the horror films made there (especially the various Frankenstein-related vehicles of the early '40s, and the
Mummy films with Lon Chaney Jr.), as well as virtually all of the
Basil Rathbone/
Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes movies, and innumerable comedies starring W.C. Fields,
Bud Abbott, and
Lou Costello, and lots of lesser lights. He was very good at designing for dark, black-and-white vehicles, achieving a virtual visual "symphony" working in conjunction with director
Robert Siodmak on films such as
Phantom Lady and
The Killers. He also worked on some attractive color films during the 1940s, such as the programmers
Frontier Gal and Salome Where She Danced, and won an Academy Award for his set designs on
Phantom of the Opera, but it was on the black-and-white films that his sets quietly insinuated themselves into the viewer's consciousness, like characters unto themselves; and even in lesser films, such as Abbott & Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff, Gausman found room for some bravura pieces of visual magic, such as the cavern sequence in the latter movie. During the early '50s, he engaged in important collaborations with director
Jack Arnold on some of his most visually interesting films, including
It Came From Outer Space,
The Glass Web, and
Creature From the Black Lagoon, a trio of 3-D thrillers. Some of his color work during the 1950s, on movies such as
This Island Earth, has always stood out, by virtue of its unusual character (the latter being a very well-made sci-fi adventure), while other examples, such as his work on such
Douglas Sirk-directed vehicles as
Captain Lightfoot, Taza, Son of Cochise,
Written on the Wind,
The Tarnished Angels, and
Imitation of Life, are only now being appreciated in the course of the ever-increasing critical fascination with Sirk's career. Gausman also worked on such small films of the era as
Joe Dakota and
The Saga of Hemp Brown, which in later years are being taken more seriously as good, solid, unusually plotted B-Westerns. Gausman got his first Oscar nomination in 1941 for
The Flame of New Orleans, and was competing with himself the following year, with nominations for
The Spoilers and
The Arabian Nights. He won his first Academy Award in 1943 for his work on
Phantom of the Opera, perhaps the best-looking film that Universal ever made; on that production, Gausman and the rest of the visual production team expanded broadly on the original sets (which, in some instances, were still standing) from the earlier '20s silent production. He was subsequently nominated for his design work on
Pillow Talk, and won again in 1960 for
Spartacus. As with many old Hollywood hands, Gausman took on whatever projects, large or small, that he was assigned by the studio;
Spartacus notwithstanding, by the start of the 1960s, Universal was retrenching, and Gausman finished his career working on
Edward Dein's
The Leech Woman (1960), a horror vehicle that was a far cry from
Dracula. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide