Gerry Turpin


Gerald Leslie "Gerry" Turpin was an English cinematographer.

Biography

Turpin began his career in 1945 at Ealing Studios as a camera assistant to Douglas Slocombe and Stanley Pavey. From 1953, he worked as a camera operator, and worked with Pavey, Gordon Dines, Desmond Dickinson, Otto Heller, Gilbert Taylor, Reginald H. Wyer and Harry Waxman. He made his first film as director of photography, The Queen's Guards with director Michael Powell.
For his first collaboration with Bryan Forbes, Seance on a Wet Afternoon, he received a nomination at the British Academy Film Awards in 1965. For a later film with Forbes, The Whisperers, he received a BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography, and for Oh! What a Lovely War, Richard Attenborough's directorial debut, he received the 1969 BSC Best Cinematography Award and his second BAFTA.
On Attenborough's, Young Winston, Turpin used a camera lens mounted device he had developed called ColorFlex which represented an alternative to conventional pre-exposure of negative film in the lab. The pre-exposure of the film material means dark areas of the image are brightened.
From 1973, Turpin developed his ColorFlex system into a comprehensive system called Lightflex which was used by cameramen such as Oswald Morris, Freddie Francis, Sven Nykvist, Adam Greenberg and Jost Vacano. At the 56th Academy Awards in 1984, Turpin received a technical Oscar for Flex.

Filmography

As cinematographer