- Figueroa Mateos, Gabriel
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▪ 1998Mexican cinematographer (b. April 24, 1907, Mexico City, Mex.—d. April 27, 1997, Mexico City), was internationally celebrated for the visually stunning use he made of the Mexican landscape, clouds, shadows, and starkly contrasting light and shade in some 200 films. He worked with such notable directors as John Ford, Luis Buñuel, John Huston, and, during what was considered the golden age of Mexican cinema, Emilio Fernández. Figueroa was orphaned at a young age and as a teenager took up still photography to earn a living. Working on motion picture sets, he soon progressed to the movie camera, and in the mid-1930s he spent a year in Hollywood studying with and assisting the noted cinematographer Gregg Toland. The first film to gain Figueroa attention was Allá en el rancho grande (1936), but it was his films with Fernández, beginning with Flor silvestre (1943), that secured his reputation. Their second collaboration, María Candelaria (1943), won the 1946 Cannes Film Festival's best photography award. Another of their most highly regarded joint efforts was La perla (1948), whose script John Steinbeck based on his own novel The Pearl (1947). Figueroa worked with Ford on The Fugitive (1947); with Buñuel on such well-known films as Los olvidados (1950; The Young and the Damned) and El ángel exterminador (1962; The Exterminating Angel); and with Huston on The Night of the Iguana (1964), for which Figueroa was nominated for an Academy Award, and Under the Volcano (1984), his last film. Among Figueroa's honours were Mexico's National Arts Prize in 1977 and, in 1995, the American Society of Cinematographers' lifetime achievement award, only the third such award in that society's history.
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Universalium. 2010.