Ellen Kuras facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Ellen Kuras
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Kuras in 2008
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Born | Cedar Grove, New Jersey, U.S.
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July 10, 1959
Alma mater | Brown University |
Occupation | Cinematographer |
Years active | 1987–present |
Ellen Kuras (born July 10, 1959) is an American cinematographer whose work includes narrative and documentary films, music videos and commercials in both the studio and independent worlds. One of few female members of the American Society of Cinematographers, she is a pioneer best known for her work in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004). She has collaborated with directors such as Michel Gondry, Spike Lee, Sam Mendes, Jim Jarmusch, Rebecca Miller, Martin Scorsese and more. She is the three-time winner of the Award for Excellence in Dramatic Cinematography at the Sundance Film Festival, for her films Personal Velocity: Three Portraits, Angela and Swoon, which was her first dramatic feature after getting her start in political documentaries.
In 2008, she released her directorial debut, The Betrayal (Nerakhoon), which she co-directed, co-wrote, co-produced and shot. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2009. In 2010, she won a Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Non-Fiction Filmmaking for the film.
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Early life and education
Kuras grew up in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. Kuras had a fever as an infant, leaving her almost deaf in one ear and with about 20% hearing in the other.
She attended Cedar Grove High School, where she served as president of the school's chapter of the National Honor Society. After earning a double degree in anthropology and semiotics at Brown University, she studied photography at RISD and 8mm filmmaking in New York, with the plan to become a documentary filmmaker. In the early 1980s, Kuras planned to study on a Fulbright grant at a film school in Poland but was unable to go due to the introduction of martial law. She is of Polish descent on her father's side and the family surname was originally Kuraś.
Career
Kuras began her film career in 1987, shooting Ellen Bruno's Samsara: Death and Rebirth in Cambodia, the first US movie filmed in Cambodia after the Vietnam War. In 1990 she won the Eastman Kodak Best Cinematography Focus Award for her work on Samsara. The film got notice from the Student Academy Awards and the Sundance Film Festival where it received Special Jury Recognition.
That same year, she was asked by producer Christine Vachon to shoot her first dramatic film (Swoon) for director Tom Kalin. The film won her the Sundance Award for Excellence in Cinematography in 1992. This was the start of work with Killer Films, which includes Postcards From America and I Shot Andy Warhol.
She worked for political documentaries, and, later, other genre of film and TV, such as big-budget movies (Blow, Analyze That), independent films (Angela, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), documentaries (Unzipped, 4 Little Girls), concert films (Lou Reed's Berlin, Shine a Light), successful TV movies (If These Walls Could Talk), commercials and music videos for musicians like Bjørk, The White Stripes.
In 1999, she was invited to join the American Society of Cinematographers, the fifth female member to join more than 400 male peers.
She has received accolades, including the Women in Film Kodak Vision Award in 1999 and was honored at the 2006 Gotham Award for her entire body of work. In 2003 she was the first film technician to receive the NY Women In Film and TV Muse Award, traditionally is given to actresses. In 2009 she was a special Honoree at the Santa Fe Film Festival for her work in the field of cinematography.
She has served on the juries of several film festivals. In 1997 she was invited to be on the jury of the Sundance Film Festival. In 2013, she was a member of the jury at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival. In 2015 she was on the Jury of the Belgrade Film Festival and the Camerimage. She has guest-lectured at film schools and festival panels, including SVA, NYU, BU University of Texas at Austin, Walker Art Center, Hamptons International Film Festival, Camerimage, Berlinale and Woodstock Film Festival.
Filmography
Cinematographer
Film
Year | Title | Director | Notes |
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1992 | Swoon | Tom Kalin | |
1994 | Post Cards from America | Steve McLean | |
1995 | Angela | Rebecca Miller | |
1996 | I Shot Andy Warhol | Mary Harron | |
1998 | Just the Ticket | Richard Wenk | |
He Got Game | Spike Lee | with Malik Hassan Sayeed | |
1999 | Summer of Sam | ||
The Mod Squad | Scott Silver | ||
2000 | Bamboozled | Spike Lee | |
2001 | Blow | Ted Demme | |
2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | Rebecca Miller | |
Analyze That | Harold Ramis | ||
2003 | Coffee and Cigarettes | Jim Jarmusch | Segments "Renee" and "No Problem" |
2004 | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | Michel Gondry | |
2005 | The Ballad of Jack and Rose | Rebecca Miller | |
2008 | Be Kind Rewind | Michel Gondry | |
2009 | Away We Go | Sam Mendes | |
2014 | A Little Chaos | Alan Rickman |
Documentary works
Year | Title | Director | Notes |
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1989 | Samsara: Death and Rebirth in Cambodia | Ellen Bruno | Documentary short |
1994 | A Century of Women | Chris Harty Barbara Kopple Judy Korin |
Miniseries |
1995 | Unzipped | Douglas Keeve | |
1997 | 4 Little Girls | Spike Lee | |
2005 | No Direction Home: Bob Dylan | Martin Scorsese | |
Dave Chappelle's Block Party | Michel Gondry | ||
2006 | Neil Young: Heart of Gold | Jonathan Demme | Concert film |
2007 | Lou Reed's Berlin: Live at St. Ann's Warehouse | Julian Schnabel | |
2008 | The Betrayal – Nerakhoon | Herself Thavisouk Phrasavath |
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2010 | Public Speaking | Martin Scorsese | |
2014 | The 50 Year Argument | Martin Scorsese David Tedeschi |
Shared credit with Lisa Rinzler |
2017 | Wormwood | Errol Morris | 6 episodes |
Jane | Brett Morgen | ||
2019 | Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese | Martin Scorsese | |
2020 | American Utopia | Spike Lee | Concert film |
2021 | Pretend It's a City | Martin Scorsese | 7 episodes |
Director
Documentary film
- The Betrayal – Nerakhoon (2008) (with Thavisouk Phrasavath)
Feature film
- Lee (2023)
Television
Year | Title | Notes |
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2016 | Falling Water | 2 episodes |
2017 | Ozark | 2 episodes |
2018 | Legion | 1 episode |
2019 | Catch-22 | 2 episodes |
The Son | 2 episodes | |
2019–2020 | The Umbrella Academy | 4 episodes |
2020 | Brave New World | 1 episode |
2022 | Inventing Anna | 2 episodes |
The Terminal List | 1 episode | |
2023 | Extrapolations | 1 episode |
Awards and nominations
Academy Awards
Year | Category | Title | Result |
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2009 | Best Documentary Feature Film | The Betrayal (Nerakhoon) (With Thavisouk Phrasavath) |
Nominated |
Primetime Emmy Awards
Year | Category | Title | Result |
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1994 | Outstanding Cinematography for a Nonfiction Program | A Century of Women | Nominated |
1998 | 4 Little Girls | Nominated | |
2009 | Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking | The Betrayal – Nerakhoon | Won |
2018 | Outstanding Cinematography for a Nonfiction Program | Jane | Won |
2021 | Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video Control for a Special |
American Utopia | Nominated |
Sundance Film Festival
Year | Category | Title | Result |
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1992 | Cinematography Award: Dramatic | Swoon | Won |
1995 | Angela | Won | |
2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | Won | |
2008 | Grand Jury Prize: Documentary | The Betrayal (Nerakhoon) | Nominated |
Independent Spirit Awards
Year | Category | Title | Result |
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1992 | Best Cinematography | Swoon | Nominated |
2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | Nominated | |
2008 | Best Documentary Feature | The Betrayal (Nerakhoon) | Nominated |
Online Film Critics Society
Year | Category | Title | Result |
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2005 | Best Cinematography | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | Nominated |
See also
In Spanish: Ellen Kuras para niños