Daniel L. Fapp


Director Of Photography

Biography

Filmography

 

Cinematography (Feature Film)

Marooned (1969)
Director of Photography
Sweet November (1968)
Director of Photography
5 Card Stud (1968)
Director of Photography
Ice Station Zebra (1968)
Director of Photography
Double Trouble (1967)
Director of Photography
Lord Love a Duck (1966)
Director of Photography
Our Man Flint (1966)
Director of Photography
Spinout (1966)
Director of Photography
I'll Take Sweden (1965)
Director of Photography
The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964)
Director of Photography
The Pleasure Seekers (1964)
Director of Photography
Send Me No Flowers (1964)
Director of Photography
Fun in Acapulco (1963)
Director of Photography
Move Over, Darling (1963)
Director of Photography
The Great Escape (1963)
Director of Photography
A New Kind of Love (1963)
Cinematographer
The Pigeon That Took Rome (1962)
Director of Photography
Bachelor Flat (1962)
Director of Photography
West Side Story (1961)
Director of Photography
One, Two, Three (1961)
Cinematographer
Let's Make Love (1960)
Director of Photography
All the Young Men (1960)
Director of Photography
The Trap (1959)
Director of Photography
Li'l Abner (1959)
Director of Photography
The Five Pennies (1959)
Director of Photography
On the Beach (1959)
Auto race Photographer
Kings Go Forth (1958)
Director of Photography
Desire Under the Elms (1958)
Director of Photography
The Joker Is Wild (1957)
Director of Photography
The Devil's Hairpin (1957)
Director of Photography
Artists and Models (1956)
Director of Photography
The Birds and the Bees (1956)
Director of Photography
Pardners (1956)
Director of Photography
Hollywood or Bust (1956)
Director of Photography
The Far Horizons (1955)
Director of Photography
You're Never Too Young (1955)
Director of Photography
Run for Cover (1955)
Director of Photography
Money from Home (1954)
Director of Photography
Knock on Wood (1954)
Director of Photography
Living It Up (1954)
Director of Photography
The Caddy (1953)
Director of Photography
The Stooge (1953)
Director of Photography
The Girls of Pleasure Island (1953)
Director of Photography
Sailor Beware (1952)
Director of Photography
Anything Can Happen (1952)
Director of Photography
Jumping Jacks (1952)
Director of Photography
The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)
Director of Photography
The Redhead and the Cowboy (1951)
Director of Photography
Darling, How Could You! (1951)
Director of Photography
September Affair (1951)
Fill-in Director of Photographer
Union Station (1950)
Director of Photography
No Man of Her Own (1950)
Director of Photography
Sorrowful Jones (1949)
Director of Photography
Song of Surrender (1949)
Director of Photography
Red, Hot and Blue (1949)
Director of Photography
Bride of Vengeance (1949)
Director of Photography
Hazard (1948)
Director of Photography
Dream Girl (1948)
Director of Photography
Suddenly, It's Spring (1947)
Director of Photography
Golden Earrings (1947)
Director of Photography
Easy Come, Easy Go (1947)
Director of Photography
To Each His Own (1946)
Director of Photography
Kitty (1946)
Director of Photography
You Came Along (1945)
Director of Photography
Hold That Blonde (1945)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich's Little Secret (1944)
Director of Photography
And Now Tomorrow (1944)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich Plays Cupid (1944)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich, Boy Scout (1944)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich Haunts a House (1943)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich Swings It (1943)
Director of Photography
Henry Aldrich Gets Glamour (1943)
Director of Photography
Lady Bodyguard (1943)
Director of Photography
True to the Army (1942)
Director of Photography
My Heart Belongs to Daddy (1942)
Director of Photography
Priorities on Parade (1942)
Director of Photography
Henry and Dizzy (1942)
Director of Photography
Glamour Boy (1941)
Director of Photography
World Premiere (1941)
Director of Photography
Kiss the Boys Goodbye (1941)
2nd Camera
Thirty Day Princess (1934)
Camera Operator
Big Executive (1933)
Camera Operator
Tonight Is Ours (1933)
Assistant Camera
Horse Feathers (1932)
Camera Operator
This Reckless Age (1932)
2nd Camera
Rich Man's Folly (1931)
Camera Operator
The False Madonna (1931)
Camera Operator
Huckleberry Finn (1931)
2nd Camera
The Secret Call (1931)
2nd Camera
El dios del mar (1930)
2nd Camera
Marquis Preferred (1929)
Assistant Camera

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Five Pennies, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) After You've Gone, Armstrong With new New York pal Tony (Harry Guardino, and date Valerie Allen) and his own blind date Willa (Barbara Bel Geddes), cornet player Red Nichols (Danny Kaye) from Utah, unfamiliar with the ways of the 1920's speakeasy, gets a look at Louis Armstrong, mentioned so-far only as a new player from New Orleans, who plays then sings, two standards, in The Five Pennies, 1959.
Five Pennies, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Go Ahead And Dance True life chronicle of Jazz great Loring
Five Pennies, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Lullaby In Ragtime Leading man Danny Kaye as band leader Red Nichols with his real-life wife Sylvia Fine's song and Eileen Wilson's vocal for Barbara Bel Geddes playing his wife, on the bus with bandmates, including Ray Anthony (who was a top-drawer trumpet player and bandleader and who remains the last surviving member of the Glenn Miller orchestra!) on the clarinet playing Jimmy Dorsey and Shelly Manne with the drumsticks, in the hit bio-pic The Five Pennies, 1959.
Five Pennies, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) (Back Home Again In) Indiana Red Nichols, the guy Danny Kaye plays, and who also plays Danny's cornet solos throughout the picture, makes his cameo here as one of the radio eskimos (the other guy with the tambourine on the left), in gag montage about getting by in the music business, in the hit Paramount bio-pic The Five Pennies, 1959.
Lemon Drop Kid, The (1951) -- (Movie Clip) Damon Runyon Wrote Joining the prologue, citing Damon Runyon and meeting Bob Hope, title character, a.k.a. Sidney Milburn, hustling two greenhorns (Oliver Blake, Billie Bird) at a Florida track, the remake of the 1934 Lee Tracy version, The Lemon Drop Kid, 1951, also starring Jane Darwell and Lloyd Nolan.
Ice Station Zebra (1968) -- (Movie Clip) If You Must Have A Suspect British spy Jones (Patrick McGoohan), Russian defector Vaslov (Ernest Borgnine) and Commander Ferraday (Rock Hudson) discuss a submarine sabotage attempt in Ice Station Zebra, 1968, from the Alistair MacLean novel.
Ice Station Zebra (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Now Now, Comrade! Commander Ferraday (Rock Hudson) surfaces to pick up Russian defector Vaslov (Ernest Borgnine), warmly greeted by British spy Jones (Patrick McGoohan) in John Sturges' Ice Station Zebra, 1968, from the Alistair MacLean novel.
Ice Station Zebra (1968) -- (Movie Clip) I Measure An Officer's Weakness Commander Ferraday (Rock Hudson) has just met tough Marine captain Anders (Jim Brown), brought aboard his sub to command an untested combat team, taking over for junior Lt. Walker (Tony Bill), in writer Alistair MacLean’s Cold War espionage thriller Ice Station Zebra, 1968.
All The Young Men (1960) -- (Movie Clip) I'm A Madman Heavyweight champ Ingemar Johansson (as "Torgil") with a Swedish folk song, standup pioneer Mort Sahl (as "Crane") with a routine he must have written, bivouacked in a farmhouse with comrades (James Darren, Paul Richards, Glenn Corbett), in the Korean War drama All The Young Men, 1960.
All The Young Men (1960) -- (Movie Clip) He's In Command Lt. Toland (Charles Quinlivan) about to expire, carried back by Sgt. Towler (Sidney Poitier), who he gives command over Sgt. Kincaid (co-producer Alan Ladd), southerner Bracken (Paul Richards) objecting, in the Korean War drama All The Young Men, 1960.
West Side Story (1961) -- (Movie Clip) America The show-stopping number for Rita Morena in her Academy Award-winning role as Puerto Rican Anita, George Chakiris similarly honored as her boyfriend Bernardo, the song by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, in West Side Story, 1961.
West Side Story (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Tonight Enraptured on the night of their meeting, Tony (Richard Beymer) and Maria (Natalie Wood) on the fire escapes, director Robert Wise mingling the Leonard Bernstein/Stephen Sondheim song with Ernest Lehman's script, singing voices by Marni Nixon and Jimmy Bryant, in West Side Story, 1961.

Trailer

Bibliography