Lewis Jacobs

Film director

1904 –

78

Who is Lewis Jacobs?

Lewis Jacobs was an American author, director and publisher. Jacobs attended art school in Philadelphia and soon moved from an interest in photography to a deep interest in cinema. Jacobs directed several experimental short films modeled after the Soviet social and political cinema and he was fond of and drew inspirations from the likes of Dziga Vertov and Hans Richter.

In 1930 he founded the magazine Experimental Cinema, which was one of the first publications to view film as art. He spent time with noted early pioneers such as Sergei Eisenstein. He lived in Hollywood gaining acclaim as a film scholar, taking jobs such as advising Orson Welles on his first feature film Citizen Kane and directing Elizabeth Taylor in her first screen tests for the film National Velvet.

After spending many years in Hollywood as a contract studio writer, he moved to New York during the period of the blacklist and joined the Workers Film and Photo League in 1931 as well as doing work for film trailers.

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Born
1904
Profession

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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"Lewis Jacobs." Biographies.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 7 May 2024. <https://www.biographies.net/people/en/lewis_jacobs>.

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