Ernest Steward


Biography

Filmography

 

Cinematography (Feature Film)

The Wildcats of St. Trinian's (1980)
Director Of Photography
Carry on Behind (1975)
Director Of Photography
Hennessy (1975)
Cinematographer
Dark Places (1973)
Director Of Photography
Ooh... You Are Awful (1972)
Director Of Photography
One More Time (1970)
Director of Photography
Doctor in Trouble (1970)
Cinematographer
Carry on Up the Jungle (1970)
Cinematographer
Percy (1970)
Cinematographer
Carry on Loving (1970)
Director Of Photography
Some Girls Do (1969)
Director Of Photography
Carry on Again, Doctor (1969)
Director Of Photography
Carry on Camping (1969)
Director Of Photography
The High Commissioner (1968)
Director of Photography
Carnaby, M. D. (1967)
Director of Photography
Deadlier Than the Male (1967)
Director of Photography
Psycho-Circus (1967)
Director of Photography
The Brides of Fu Manchu (1966)
Director of Photography
McGuire, Go Home! (1966)
Director of Photography
24 Hours To Kill (1966)
Director of Photography
Ten Little Indians (1966)
Director of Photography
Agent 8 3/4 (1965)
Director of Photography
The Face of Fu Manchu (1965)
Director of Photography
Doctor in Distress (1964)
Director of Photography
Young and Willing (1964)
Director of Photography
A Pair of Briefs (1963)
Director of Photography
The Wrong Arm of the Law (1963)
Director of Photography
Crooks Anonymous (1963)
Director of Photography
A Coming-Out Party (1962)
Director of Photography
Payroll (1962)
Director of Photography
No, My Darling Daughter! (1961)
Director of Photography
No Love for Johnnie (1961)
Director of Photography
Doctor in Love (1961)
Director of Photography
Make Mine a Double (1961)
Director of Photography
The 39 Steps (1959)
Director Of Photography
The Wind Cannot Read (1958)
Director Of Photography
A Tale of Two Cities (1958)
Director Of Photography
The Secret Place (1957)
Director Of Photography
Campbell's Kingdom (1957)
Cinematographer
The Iron Petticoat (1956)
Director of Photography
Cash on Delivery (1956)
Director of Photography
Simon and Laura (1956)
Director Of Photography
Above Us The Waves (1956)
Cinematographer
Doctor in the House (1955)
Director Of Photography
Doctor at Sea (1955)
Director Of Photography
Trouble in Store (1955)
Director Of Photography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Ten Little Indians (1966) -- (Movie Clip) What's He Like? Introduced in credits riding up an Alpine tramway, guests Stanley Holloway, Wilfrid Hyde White, Leo Genn, Hugh O'Brian, Dennis Price, Fabian, Shirley Eaton, Daliah Lavi, plus servants Mario Adorf and Marianne Hoppe, begin to chat, in the 1966 version of Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians.
Face Of Fu Manchu, The (1965) -- (Movie Clip) I Bring You Bad News The daughter (Tsai Chin) and assistant (Peter Mossbacher) of the title character (Christopher Lee) enter his lair in London, with news that Scotland Yard has come calling, causing him to press his prisoner Muller (Walter Rilla) to release the formula for his secret super poison, in The Face Of Fu Manchu, 1965.
Face Of Fu Manchu, The (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Universal Death We’ve just learned that Jansen (Joachim Fuchsberger) and Maria (Karin Dor), the assistant and daughter of kidnapped professor Muller, are a couple, reluctantly sharing what they know with Scotland Yard’s Smith (James Robertson Justice), in the first in the Christopher Lee series, The Face Of Fu Manchu, 1965.
Iron Petticoat, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Human Ice Cube Now in a London hotel, American pilot Chuck (Bob Hope) receives his upper-class Brit fiancee` and her cousin (Noelle Middleton, Nicholas Phipps), who suspect he's hot for the Russian pilot defector Vinka (Katharine Hepburn) he's been assigned to look after, in The Iron Petticoat, 1956.
Iron Petticoat, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) To Moscow Together! Russian pilot Vinka (Katharine Hepburn), having defected only because she's angry at men in general, warming to her American minder Chuck (Bob Hope) at a West German officers' club, while he plots to get sent to London to pursue his well-fixed fiancee`, in The Iron Petticoat, 1956.
Face Of Fu Manchu, The (1965) -- (Movie Clip) In The Name Of Imperial China Smashing opening, on location in Ireland in this British-German-Irish co-production, in which the title character (Christopher Lee) appears to be executed, a result of the efforts of “the foreigner.” (James Robertson Justice, whom we will learn is a Scotland Yard man), in The Face Of Fu Manchu, 1965.
Iron Petticoat, The (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Western Hypocrisy Enter Katharine Hepburn as Capt. Kovolenko, the Russian pilot who's flown her MiG to a West German air base, debriefed by Tarbell (Alan Gifford) and meeting American pilot Chuck (Bob Hope), early in The Iron Petticoat, 1956, from Ben Hecht's original story and screenplay.
Ten Little Indians (1966) -- (Movie Clip) Who's Got The First Line? The guests, Stanley Holloway, Wilfrid Hyde White, Daliah Lavi, Dennis Price, Hugh O'Brian, Shirley Eaton, Fabian, Leo Genn, served dinner by Grohmann (Mario Adorf), finally hearing from their host (voice of Christopher Lee), in Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians, 1966.
Agent 8 3/4 (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Frightful Coward Sent by the employment agency on an interview, bored writer Whistler (Dirk Bogarde) has no idea who Colonel Cunliffe (Robert Morley) really is, nor what he's after, early in Agent 8 3/4, 1965.
Agent 8 3/4 (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Red Businessman Still the unwitting spy, Whistler (Dirk Bogarde) thinks he's been sent to Prague on a business trip, meeting waiter Josef (Roger Delgado) and his Czech minder Vlasta (Sylva Koscina), director Ralph Thomas the suspect in the newspaper, in Agent 8 3/4, 1965.
No, My Darling Daughter -- (Movie Clip) Button Face Tansy (Juliet Mills) touring London with her new American friend Cornelius (Rad Fulton), even as her father (Michael Redgrave) and the general (Roger Livesey) plot her romance with his son (Michael Craig), in No, My Darling Daughter, 1961.
No, My Darling Daughter -- (Movie Clip) You're No Dreamboat Opening scenes from the Betty E. Box production, Sir Matthew (Michael Redgrave) calling from Paris, then his daughter Tansy (Juliet Mills) with Thomas (Michael Craig), the put-upon son of his friend, in No, My Darling Daughter, 1961.

Bibliography