Lee Zavitz

Lee Zavitz

  • Birthday: 1904-08-20
  • Deathday: 1977-06-02
  • Place of birth: Mount Vernon, Virginia, USA
  • Also know as: Lee Zavits

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Leland "Lee" Zavitz (August 20, 1904– June 2, 1977) was a special effects technician. He was born in Mount Vernon, Washington. His first major impact was for his work on John Ford's 1937 film, The Hurricane. Zavitz's work on the 1950 space fantasy film Destination Moon won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. He also worked on films such as Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), The Alamo (1960), Sodom and Gomorrah (1963), The Pink Panther (1963) and John Frankenheimer's The Train (1964). His last film was Sydney Pollack's wartime chiller Castle Keep in 1969. Zavitz held patents on several devices used in his film work, including fog machines, rain bombs, an exploding wagon and "a lightning torch that can be seen for 50 miles."

Production

Bride of the Gorilla

1951

As Special Effects

Destination Moon

1950

As Special Effects

Witness for the Prosecution

1957

As Special Effects

On the Beach

1959

As Special Effects

The Snow Creature

1954

As Special Effects

The Bushwhackers

1951

As Special Effects

From the Earth to the Moon

1958

As Special Effects Coordinator

Captain Kidd

1945

As Special Effects

Guest in the House

1944

As Special Effects

Viva Maria!

1965

As Special Effects

The Diary of a Chambermaid

1946

As Special Effects

The River's Edge

1957

As Special Effects

The Hurricane

1937

As Special Effects

The Pink Panther

1963

As Special Effects

The Crooked Way

1949

As Special Effects

Bait

1954

As Special Effects

Men in War

1957

As Special Effects

keyboard_arrow_up