James Wong Howe


James Wong Howe, ASC was a Chinese-born American cinematographer and film director, who worked on over 130 films during the Golden Age of Hollywood and well into the 1970s. During the 1930s and 1940s, he was one of the most sought after cinematographers in Hollywood due to his innovative filming techniques. Howe was known as a master of the use of shadow and one of the first to use deep-focus cinematography.
Born in Guangdong, Howe immigrated to the United States at age five and grew up in Washington. He was a professional boxer during his teenage years, and later began his career in the film industry as an assistant to Cecil B. DeMille. Howe pioneered the use of wide-angle lenses and low-key lighting, as well as the use of the crab dolly.
Despite the success of his professional life, Howe faced significant racial discrimination in his private life. He became an American citizen only after the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943, and due to anti-miscegenation laws, his marriage to Sanora Babb, a white woman, was not legally recognized in the state of California until 1948.
Howe earned 10 nominations for the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, winning twice, once for The Rose Tattoo, and once more for Hud. He also received Oscar nominations for Algiers, Abe Lincoln in Illinois, Kings Row, The North Star, Air Force, The Old Man and the Sea, Seconds, and Funny Lady. He was selected as one of the 10 most influential cinematographers in a survey of the members of the International Cinematographers Guild.

Early life

Howe was born Wong Tung Jim in Taishan, Canton Province, Qing China in 1899. His father Wong Howe moved to America that year to work on the Northern Pacific Railway and in 1904 sent for his family. The Howes settled in Pasco, Washington, where they owned a general store. A Brownie camera, said to have been bought at Pasco Drug when he was a child, sparked an early interest in photography.
After his father's death, the teenaged Howe moved to Oregon to live with his uncle and briefly considered a career as a bantamweight boxer. After compiling a record of 5 wins, 2 losses and a draw, Howe moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in hopes of attending aviation school but ran out of money and went south to Los Angeles. Once there, Howe took several odd jobs, including work as a commercial photographer's delivery boy and as a busboy at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

Career

After a chance encounter with a former boxing colleague who was photographing a Mack Sennett short on the streets of Los Angeles, Howe approached cinematographer Alvin Wyckoff and landed a low-level job in the film lab at Famous Players–Lasky studios. Soon thereafter he was called to the set of The Little American to act as an extra clapper boy, which brought him into contact with silent film director Cecil B. DeMille in 1917. Amused by the sight of the diminutive Asian holding the slate with a large cigar in his mouth, DeMille kept Howe on and launched his career as a camera assistant. To earn additional money, Howe took publicity stills for Hollywood stars.

Silent film

One of those still photographs launched Howe's career as a cinematographer when he stumbled across a means of making silent film star Mary Miles Minter's eyes look darker by photographing her while she was looking at a dark surface. Minter requested that Howe be first cameraman, that is director of photography, on her next feature, and Howe shot Minter's closeups for Drums of Fate by placing black velvet in a large frame around the camera. Throughout his career, Howe retained a reputation for making actresses look their best through lighting alone and seldom resorted to using gauze or other diffusion over the lens to soften their features. Howe worked steadily as a cinematographer from 1923 until the end of the era of silent film.
In 1928, Howe was in China shooting backgrounds for a movie he hoped to direct. The project he was working on was never completed, and when he returned to Hollywood, he discovered that the "talkies" had largely supplanted silent productions. With no experience in that medium, Howe could not find work. To reestablish himself, Howe first co-financed a Japanese-language feature shot in Southern California entitled Chijiku wo mawasuru chikara, which he also photographed and co-directed. When that film failed to find an audience in California's nisei communities or Japan, Howe shot the low-budget feature Today for no salary. Finally, director/producer Howard Hawks, whom he had met on The Little American, hired him for The Criminal Code and then director William K. Howard selected him to be the cinematographer on Transatlantic.

Sound film and the war years

Howe's innovative work on Transatlantic reestablished him as one of the leading cinematographers in Hollywood, and he worked continuously through the 1930s and 1940s, generally on several movies per year. Howe gained a reputation as a perfectionist who could be difficult to work with, often overruling and even berating other members of the film crew. In a 1945 issue of The Screen Writer, Howe stated his views of a cameraman's responsibility, writing in The Cameraman Talks Back that
"he cameraman confers with the director on: the composition of shots for action, since some scenes require definite composition for their best dramatic effect, while others require the utmost fluidity, or freedom from any strict definition or stylization; atmosphere; the dramatic mood of the story, which they plan together from beginning to end; the action of the piece." Howe's broad view of a cinematographer's responsibilities reflected those established for first cameramen in silent films and continued through the studio era where most directors were also contract employees mainly in charge of actor performances.
Howe was nominated for an Academy Award in 1944 in the "Best Cinematography: Black-and-White" category for his work on the movie Air Force, a nomination he shared with Elmer Dyer, A.S.C., and Charles A. Marshall.
In the early 1930s, while at MGM, Howe, who had generally been billed as "James Howe", began listing his name in film credits as "James Wong Howe". Over the course of his career, he was also credited as "James How", "Jimmie Howe", and "James Wong How." Often publicized as a Chinese cameraman, Howe was prevented from becoming a U.S. citizen until the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943.
Prior to World War II, Howe met his future wife, novelist Sanora Babb, whom he married in 1937 in Paris. Due to anti-miscegenation laws, the marriage would not be legally recognized in the state of California until 1948. Babb died in 2005, aged 98.

Post-war work

After the end of World War II, Howe's long-term contract with Warner Bros. lapsed, and he visited China to work on a documentary about rickshaw boys. When he returned Howe found himself gray-listed. While never a Communist, Howe was named in testimony as a sympathizer. Howe and his wife Sanora Babb, who had been a member of the Communist Party, moved to Mexico for a time. Howe was cinematographer for the RKO movie Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House starring Cary Grant, Myrna Loy and Melvyn Douglas. Howe had trouble finding employment until writer/director Samuel Fuller hired him to shoot The Baron of Arizona released in 1950.
Again reestablished, Howe's camerawork continued to be highly regarded. In 1949 he shot tests and was hired for a never made comeback film starring Greta Garbo. In 1956, Howe won his first Academy Award for The Rose Tattoo. The film's director Daniel Mann originally had been a stage director and later stated that he gave Howe control over almost all decisions about the filming other than those regarding the actors and dialogue. In Sweet Smell of Success, Howe worked with director Alexander Mackendrick to give the black-and-white film a sharp-edged look reminiscent of New York tabloid photography such as that taken by Arthur "Weegee" Fellig. During the 1950s, Howe directed his only English-language feature films, Invisible Avenger, one of many film adaptations of The Shadow, and Go Man Go, a movie about the Harlem Globetrotters. Neither was a critical or commercial success. In 1961 Howe directed episodes of Checkmate and 87th Precinct, then returned to cinematography.

Later life and work

Howe's best known work was almost entirely in black and white. His two Academy Awards both came during the period when Best Cinematography Oscars were awarded separately for color and black-and-white films. However, he successfully made the transition to color films and earned his first Academy Award nomination for a color film in 1958 for The Old Man and the Sea. He won his second Academy Award for 1963's Hud. His cinematography remained inventive during his later career. For instance, his use of fish-eye and wide-angle lenses in Seconds helped give an eerie tension to director John Frankenheimer's science fiction movie.
During the mid to late 1960s, he taught cinematography at UCLA's Film School. Some of his students include Dean Cundey, Stephen H. Burum, and Alex Funke. Howe would take a minimal set and teach how to achieve a particular mood and style with just lighting. Cundey said, "it was my most valuable class I took in film school" and it changed his career direction to cinematography.
After working on The Molly Maguires, Howe's health began to fail, and he entered semi-retirement. In 1974, he was well enough to be selected as a replacement cinematographer for Funny Lady. He collapsed during the filming; American Society of Cinematographers president Ernest Laszlo filled in for Howe while he was recovering in the hospital. Funny Lady earned Howe his tenth and final Oscar nomination.
Association of Asian Pacific American Artists created the James Wong Howe Award in his honor. Past winners of "The Jimmie" have included Arthur Dong, Genny Lim, and Jude Narita.

Personal life

Howe met his wife, a white woman named Sanora Babb, before World War II. They traveled to Paris in 1937 to marry, but their marriage was not recognized by the state of California until 1948, after the law banning interracial marriage was abolished. Due to the ban, the "morals clause" in Howe's studio contracts prohibited him from publicly acknowledging his marriage to Babb. They would not cohabit due to his traditional Chinese views, so they had separate apartments in the same building.
During the early years of the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings, Howe was graylisted due to supposedly having Communist ties from his marriage to Babb; she moved to Mexico City to protect Howe.

Technical innovations

Howe's earliest discovery was the use of black velvet to make blue eyes show up better on the orthochromatic film stock in use until the early 1920s. Orthochromatic film was "blue blind"; it was sensitive to blue and green light, which showed as white on the developed film. Reds and yellows were darkened. Faced with the problem of actors' eyes appearing washed out or even stark white on film, Howe developed a technique of mounting a frame swathed with black velvet around his camera so that the reflections darkened the actors' eyes enough for them to appear more natural in the developed film.
Howe earned the nickname "Low-Key Howe" because of his penchant for dramatic lighting and deep shadows, a technique that came to be associated with film noir. Later in his career, as film-stocks became faster and more sensitive, Howe continued to experiment with his photography and lighting techniques, such as shooting one scene in The Molly Maguires solely by candlelight.
Howe also was known for his use of unusual lenses, film stocks, and shooting techniques. For the 1927 film The Rough Riders, Howe created an early version of a crab dolly, a form of camera dolly with four independent wheels and a movable arm to which the camera is attached. For the boxing scenes of Body and Soul, he entered the boxing ring on roller-skates, carrying an early hand-held camera. Picnic features a very early example of the helicopter shot, filmed by the second-unit cinematographer, Haskell Wexler, and planned by Wexler and Howe.
Howe mentored other minority cinematographers, such as John Alonzo, who shot Chinatown and many other productions in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Alonzo credited Howe with giving him his big break on the film Seconds as a camera operator, doing hand-held sequences during the wild party scenes with Rock Hudson. Alonzo became known for his hand-held technique.
Howe also shot The Outrage, a remake of Rashomon. During the chase scenes through the woods, Howe had the actors run around him in a circle, which when filmed, looks like a chase. Alonzo used this technique in Sounder, in the wooded chase sequence.
Although the innovation of deep focus cinematography is usually associated with Gregg Toland, Howe used it in his first sound film, Transatlantic, 10 years before Toland used the technique in Citizen Kane. For deep focus, the cinematographer narrows the aperture of the camera lens, and floods the set with light, so that elements in both the foreground and background remain in sharp focus. The technique requires highly sensitive film and was difficult to achieve with early film stocks. Along with Toland and Arthur Edeson, Howe was among the earliest cinematographers to use it successfully.

Filmography

Cinematographer

Feature films
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1923Drums of FateCharles Maigne
1923The Trail of the Lonesome PineCharles Maigne
1923The Woman With Four FacesHerbert Brenon
1923To the Last ManVictor FlemingWith Bert Baldridge
1923The Spanish DancerHerbert Brenon
1923The Call of the CanyonVictor Fleming
1924The Breaking PointHerbert Brenon
1924The Side Show of LifeHerbert Brenon
1924The AlaskanHerbert Brenon
1924Peter PanHerbert Brenon
1925The CharmerSidney Olcott
1925Not So Long AgoSidney Olcott
1925The Best PeopleSidney Olcott
1925The King on Main StreetMonta Bell
1926The Song and Dance ManHerbert Brenon
1926Sea HorsesAllan Dwan
1926MantrapVictor Fleming
1926PadlockedAllan Dwan
1927The Rough RidersVictor FlemingWith E. Burton Steene
1927Sorrell and SonHerbert Brenon
1928Laugh, Clown, LaughHerbert Brenon
1928The Perfect CrimeBert Glennon
1928Four WallsWilliam Nigh
1929The RescueHerbert BrenonUncredited; with George Barnes and Joseph Biroc
1929Desert NightsWilliam Nigh
1930TodayWilliam Nigh
1930Chijiku wo mawasuru chikaraHimself
1930The Criminal CodeHoward HawksWith Ted Tetzlaff
1931TransatlanticWilliam K. Howard
1931The SpiderKenneth MacKenna
William Cameron Menzies
1931The Yellow TicketRaoul Walsh
1931SurrenderWilliam K. Howard
1932Dance TeamSidney Lanfield
1932Shanghai ExpressJosef von SternbergUncredited; shot Chinese location footage.
1932After TomorrowFrank Borzage
1932Amateur DaddyJohn G. Blystone
1932Man About TownJohn Francis Dillon
1932Chandu the MagicianWilliam Cameron Menzies
Marcel Varnel
1933Hello, Sister!
1933The Power and the GloryWilliam K. Howard
1933Beauty for SaleRichard Boleslawski
1934The Show-OffCharles Reisner
1934Viva Villa!Jack ConwayWith Charles G. Clarke
1934Manhattan MelodramaW. S. Van Dyke
1934Hollywood Party
1934The Thin ManW. S. Van Dyke
1934Stamboul QuestSam Wood
1934Have a HeartDavid Butler
1935Biography of a Bachelor GirlEdward H. Griffith
1935The Night Is YoungDudley Murphy
1935Mark of the VampireTod Browning
1935The Flame WithinEdmund Goulding
1935O'Shaughnessy's BoyRichard Boleslawski
1935RendezvousWilliam K. HowardUncredited; shot reshoots directed by Sam Wood
1935WhipsawSam Wood
1936Little Lord FauntleroyJohn CromwellUncredited; 2nd unit photography
1936Three Live GhostsH. Bruce HumberstoneWith Chester A. Lyons
1937Fire Over EnglandWilliam K. Howard
1937Farewell AgainTim WhelanWith Hans Schneeberger
1937Under the Red RobeVictor SjöströmWith Georges Périnal
1937The Prisoner of ZendaJohn Cromwell
1938The Adventures of Tom SawyerNorman Taurog
1938AlgiersJohn Cromwell
1938Comet Over BroadwayBusby Berkeley
1939They Made Me a CriminalBusby Berkeley
1939The Oklahoma KidLloyd Bacon
1939Daughters CourageousMichael Curtiz
1939Dust Be My DestinyLewis Seiler
1939On Your ToesRay Enright
1939Four WivesMichael CurtizUncredited; with Sol Polito
1940Abe Lincoln in IllinoisJohn Cromwell
1940Dr. Ehrlich's Magic BulletWilliam Dieterle
1940Saturday's ChildrenVincent Sherman
1940Torrid ZoneWilliam Keighley
1940My Love Came BackCurtis BernhardtUncredited; with Charles Rosher
1940City for ConquestAnatole LitvakWith Sol Polito
1940A Dispatch from ReutersWilliam Dieterle
1940FantasiaVariousLive-action segments
1941The Strawberry BlondeRaoul Walsh
1941Shining VictoryIrving Rapper
1941Out of the FogAnatole Litvak
1941Navy BluesLloyd BaconDance sequences; with Sol Polito
1942Kings RowSam Wood
1942Yankee Doodle DandyMichael Curtiz
1943The Hard WayVincent Sherman
1943Air ForceHoward Hawks
1943Hangmen Also Die!Fritz Lang
1943The North StarLewis Milestone
1944Passage to MarseilleMichael Curtiz
1945Objective, Burma!Raoul Walsh
1945Counter-AttackZoltan Korda
1945Confidential AgentHerman Shumlin
1945Danger SignalRobert Florey
1946My ReputationCurtis Bernhardt
1947Nora PrentissVincent Sherman
1947PursuedRaoul Walsh
1947Body and SoulRobert Rossen
1948Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream HouseH. C. Potter
1948The Time of Your LifeH. C. Potter
1950The Baron of ArizonaSamuel Fuller
1950The Eagle and the HawkLewis R. Foster
1950TripoliWill Price
1951The Brave BullsRobert RossenWith Floyd Crosby
1951He Ran All the WayJohn Berry
1951Behave Yourself!George Beck
1951The Lady Says NoFrank Ross
1952The FighterHerbert Kline
1952Come Back, Little ShebaDaniel Mann
1953Main Street to BroadwayTay Garnett
1953Terminal StationVittorio De SicaUncredited; shot additional footage for U.S. recut directed by William Cameron Menzies
1953JenniferJoel Newton
1955The Rose TattooDaniel Mann
1955PicnicJoshua Logan
1956Death of a ScoundrelCharles Martin
1957DrangoHall Bartlett
Jules Bricken
1957Sweet Smell of SuccessAlexander Mackendrick
1957A Farewell to ArmsCharles VidorUncredited reshoots
1958The Old Man and the SeaJohn Sturges
1958Bell, Book and CandleRichard Quine
1959The Last Angry ManDaniel Mann
1959The Story on Page OneClifford Odets
1960Song Without EndCharles Vidor
1960Tess of the Storm CountryPaul Guilfoyle
1963HudMartin Ritt
1964The OutrageMartin Ritt
1965The Glory GuysArnold Laven
1966SecondsJohn Frankenheimer
1966This Property Is CondemnedSydney Pollack
1967HombreMartin Ritt
1968The Heart Is a Lonely HunterRobert Ellis Miller
1970Last of the Mobile Hot ShotsSidney Lumet
1970The Molly MaguiresMartin Ritt
1971The HorsemenJohn FrankenheimerUncredited; additional Afghanistan unit photography
1975Funny LadyHerbert Ross

Short films
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1937Hollywood PartyRoy RowlandUncredited
1938It Might Be YouR.M. LloydWith Bernard Browne
1953The World of Dong KingmanHimselfDocumentary short
1954Autumn in RomeWilliam Cameron MenziesOriginally filmed as additional footage for U.S. recut of Terminal Station

TV documentaries
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1954Light's Diamond JubileeKing Vidor
William A. Wellman
Norman Taurog
Christian Nyby
Roy Rowland
Alan Handley
Bud Yorkin
With Ray June
1963Biography of a Rookie: The Willie Davis StoryHimself
Mel Stuart
1963The Small WorldHimself

TV series
YearTitleDirectorNotes
1955Screen Directors PlayhouseH. C. PotterEpisode "Lincoln's Doctor's Dog"
1967ABC Stage 67Noel BlackEpisode "Trilogy: The American Boy - Skaterdater/The River Boy/Reflections"

Awards and nominations

In 2003, Howe was selected as one of the 10 most influential cinematographers in a survey of the members of the International Cinematographers Guild.