Billy Williams, ‘Gandhi’ and ‘On Golden Pond’ Cinematographer, Dies at 96
The Oscar winner also shot 'Women in Love' and two other films for Ken Russell, plus 'The Wind and the Lion,' 'Suspect' and a key sequence for 'The Exorcist.'
He was not on the list.
Billy Williams, the esteemed British cinematographer who shared an Oscar for shooting Gandhi and also was nominated for his work on the Glenda Jackson-starring Women in Love and Henry Fonda‘s final film, On Golden Pond, has died. He was 96.
Williams’ death was announced in British Cinematographer magazine. No details on the cause of death were provided.
“With deep sorrow, we bid farewell to Billy Williams – an outstanding British cinematographer, laureate of the “Golden Frog” for exceptional achievements in the art of cinematography at the Camerimage Festival in 2000,” tweeted the official X account of Camerimage, the Poland-based film festival dedicated to cinematography.
Williams also served as the director of photography on John
Milius’ The Wind and the Lion (1975), Stuart Rosenberg’s Voyage of the Damned
(1976), Martin Brest’s Going in Style (1979) and Peter Yates’ Suspect (1987).
The London native received an early career break when he was hired for Ken Russell’s Billion Dollar Brain (1967), the third film in the Michael Caine-starring Harry Palmer spy series, and he reunited with the demanding director on Women in Love (1969) and The Rainbow (1989).
“I was soon to learn working with Ken Russell that he was
likely to ask for the sort of thing that hadn’t been done before, and there was
no such thing that it couldn’t be done,” he said in a comprehensive 2003 Web of
Stories interview. “You had to find a way of doing it. It was a great
challenge.”
After shooting the Iraq scene for William Friedkin‘s The Exorcist (1973) and The Wind and the Lion in brutal conditions in Spain, Williams found himself tested again on Richard Attenborough‘s Gandhi (1982), with many sequences filmed on location in India.
“It was obviously very hot and dusty, and traveling was not
easy,” Williams recalled in 2020. “It was a tough schedule. We would leave at
seven in the morning and get back at eight at night, then watch the rushes on a
mobile protector. But it was an intensely rewarding film and satisfying to be
involved in because here’s somebody who really changed history.”
After studying hours of newsreel footage of activist Mahatma Gandhi, Williams had to leave the production after about six weeks for treatment in the U.K. for a slipped disc. He suggested Ronnie Taylor replace him (Taylor had worked with Attenborough as a camera operator on 1969’s Oh! What a Lovely War and 1972’s Young Winston and with Williams on The Wild and the Lion).
The first scene Taylor photographed was the re-creation of
Gandhi’s 1948 funeral that featured 400,000 extras.
Williams returned after four weeks in recovery but encountered the same problem again, so he left and Taylor came back. He said it was the only two times he had ever left a movie.
“Billy and I did about 10 weeks each on the picture,” Taylor
told British Cinematographer magazine. “Richard Attenborough decided that if
there were going to be any nominations, that Billy and I should share the
credit.”
Gandhi, made for about $22 million and shot in 35mm anamorphic, received 11 Academy Award noms and won eight trophies, including those for best picture, best director, best actor for Ben Kingsley and best cinematography (Williams accepted his prize on Oscar night, with Taylor unable to leave work on Champions).
After finding out he was hired for Gandhi, Williams departed
for New Hampshire to shoot On Golden Pond (1981), starring Fonda, his daughter,
Jane, and Katharine Hepburn. When director Mark Rydell didn’t know how to film
a birthday party for Fonda’s Norman Thayer, Williams had an idea.
He suggested they “put the camera on a track and start by the kitchen area,” he said. “Kate [came] out of the kitchen with these 80 candles burning, so we’ve got this lovely warm light glowing onto her face, and we track with her for a little while and then let it go past her so we’ve followed on her back and we reveal the dining area with the others waiting for her. She joins Henry Fonda who makes a little speech about the joys of becoming 80, and then they all lean forward and help him blow out the candles.
“The camera tilts down, they blow out the candles and it goes dark and that’s the cut and it worked beautifully. We didn’t do a single cutaway.”
Williams was born on June 3, 1929, in Walthamstow, London. His father, Billy Sr., was an intrepid cinematographer who filmed the surrender of the German fleet at Scapa Flow in Scotland in 1919, then worked on documentaries.
During World War II, Williams left school when he was 14 to become his dad’s assistant. “He was a very hard taskmaster, everything had to be done just right,” he recalled. “Of course, the camera had to be looked after like a baby. It was so precious.”
In 1946, he traveled to Kenya and Uganda with his father, who was then shooting for the Colonial Film Unit.
Williams served as a photographer with the Royal Air Force for two years, then worked as an assistant cameraman for British Transport Films, shooting documentaries about docks, railways and the Queen Mary. He saved up to purchase his own Arriflex camera, did commercials and eventually made his feature debut on the black-and-white, sound-effects comedy San Ferry Ann (1965).
When older cinematographer Otto Heller (The Ladykillers,
Alfie) refused to take a medical exam to be insured for Billion Dollar Brain,
which was going to be filmed in frigid Finland, producer Harry Saltzman turned
to Williams, who had done commercials for Russell.
For Alan Bates and Oliver Reed’s memorable naked wrestling scene in Women in Love, Williams and Russell decided to “go for a very strong color effect like the color of firelight, which is very orange,” he said in David A. Ellis’ 2012 book, Conversations With Cinematographers. “I filtered all the lamps to be the same color as the fire and created a flickering effect.”
Williams’ résumé also included Ted Kotcheff’s Two Gentlemen Sharing (1969), John Schlesinger’s Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971), Michael Anderson’s Pope Joan (1972), X, Y and Zee (1972), Kid Blue (1973), The Silent Partner (1978), Eagle’s Wing (1979), Boardwalk (1979), Monsignor (1982), Yates’ Eleni (1985), The Manhattan Project (1986), Stella (1990) and Driftwood (1997), his final film.
A four-time BAFTA nominee, Williams served as the president
of the British Society of Cinematographers from 1975-77 and taught
cinematography at the National Film Theatre starting in 1978.
He received lifetime achievement honors from Camerimage in 2000 and the British Society of Cinematographers in 2006 and was awarded the Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 2009.
“I feel I have been very lucky to have had a career in filmmaking, which has been the most satisfying, rewarding, exciting job I can imagine,” he said.
Writer
Behind the Scenes of Red and Blue
Short
Writer
1966
Actor
Cher and Dennis Quaid in Suspect (1987)
Suspect
6.6
Dr. Alan Alpert
1987
Sean Connery and Candice Bergen in The Wind and the Lion (1975)
The Wind and the Lion
6.8
Sir Joseph
1975
Cinematographer
Sven Nykvist in Ljuset håller mig sällskap (2000)
Ljuset håller mig sällskap
7.0
Cinematographer
2000
James Spader and Anne Brochet in Driftwood (1997)
Driftwood
5.4
Cinematographer
1997
Marlo Thomas and Courtney Chase in Reunion (1994)
Reunion
5.9
TV Movie
Cinematographer
1994
Shadow of the Wolf (1992)
Shadow of the Wolf
5.8
director of photography
1992
Women and Men: Stories of Seduction (1990)
Women and Men: Stories of Seduction
5.2
TV Movie
Cinematographer (segment "'Dusk Before Fireworks'")
1990
Bette Midler and Trini Alvarado in Stella (1990)
Stella
6.1
director of photography
1990
The Rainbow (1989)
The Rainbow
6.3
director of photography
1989
The Lottery (1989)
The Lottery
6.3
Short
Cinematographer
1989
Just Ask for Diamond (1988)
Just Ask for Diamond
6.2
director of photography
1988
Cher and Dennis Quaid in Suspect (1987)
Suspect
6.6
director of photography
1987
The Manhattan Project (1986)
The Manhattan Project
6.1
director of photography
1986
John Malkovich and Kate Nelligan in Eleni (1985)
Eleni
6.9
director of photography
1985
Ian Holm and Amelia Shankley in Dreamchild (1985)
Dreamchild
6.6
director of photography
1985
Ordeal by Innocence (1984)
Ordeal by Innocence
5.1
director of photography
1984
Robin Williams and Walter Matthau in The Survivors (1983)
The Survivors
5.8
director of photography
1983
Gandhi (1982)
Gandhi
8.0
director of photography
1982
Monsignor (1982)
Monsignor
5.1
director of photography
1982
Henry Fonda, Katharine Hepburn, Jane Fonda, and Doug McKeon in On Golden Pond (1981)
On Golden Pond
7.6
director of photography
1981
Kirk Douglas, Harvey Keitel, and Farrah Fawcett in Saturn 3 (1980)
Saturn 3
5.1
director of photography
1980
George Burns, Art Carney, and Lee Strasberg in Going in Style (1979)
Going in Style
7.1
director of photography
1979
Eagle's Wing (1979)
Eagle's Wing
5.9
director of photography
1979
Geraldine James in The Dumb Waiter (1979)
The Dumb Waiter
6.5
Short
Cinematographer
1979
Boardwalk (1979)
Boardwalk
6.1
Cinematographer
1979
Elliott Gould, Christopher Plummer, and Susannah York in The Silent Partner (1978)
The Silent Partner
7.4
director of photography
1978
Des Teufels Advokat (1977)
Des Teufels Advokat
6.3
Cinematographer
1977
Voyage of the Damned (1976)
Voyage of the Damned
6.4
director of photography
1976
Sean Connery and Candice Bergen in The Wind and the Lion (1975)
The Wind and the Lion
6.8
director of photography
1975
Horowitz in Dublin (1974)
Horowitz in Dublin
6.5
Cinematographer
1974
The Glass Menagerie (1973)
The Glass Menagerie
7.3
TV Movie
Cinematographer
1973
Night Watch (1973)
Night Watch
6.3
director of photography
1973
Kid Blue (1973)
Kid Blue
6.2
director of photography
1973
Pope Joan (1972)
Pope Joan
5.5
director of photography
1972
Elizabeth Taylor, Michael Caine, and Susannah York in X, Y & Zee (1972)
X, Y & Zee
5.8
director of photography
1972
Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971)
Sunday Bloody Sunday
6.9
director of photography
1971
Tam Lin (1970)
Tam Lin
5.7
director of photography
1970
The Mind of Mr. Soames (1970)
The Mind of Mr. Soames
6.2
Cinematographer (lighting cameraman)
1970
Women in Love (1969)
Women in Love
7.1
director of photography
1969
Two Gentlemen Sharing (1969)
Two Gentlemen Sharing
6.4
Cinematographer
1969
The Magus (1968)
The Magus
5.6
director of photography
1968
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia (1968)
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia
5.3
director of photography
1968
Sweet and Sour (1963)
Red and Blue
6.5
Short
director of photography
1967
Billion Dollar Brain (1967)
Billion Dollar Brain
5.9
director of photography
1967
Wendy Craig and Francis Matthews in Just Like a Woman (1967)
Just Like a Woman
5.3
director of photography
1967
Raceday - 24 Hours of Endurance at Le Mans, France
Short
Cinematographer
1966
San Ferry Ann (1965)
San Ferry Ann
5.5
director of photography
1965
People Apart
6.7
Short
Cinematographer (as W.D. Williams)
1957
Five Guineas a Week
Short
director of photography
1956
Birthday
Short
Cinematographer
1954
Camera and Electrical Department
Max von Sydow in The Exorcist (1973)
The Exorcist
8.1
director of photography: Iraq sequence
1973
Five Guineas a Week
Short
camera operator
1956
No Love for Judy
assistant camera
1955
More Power to Your Elbow
Short
assistant camera (as W.D. Williams)
1953
Ocean Terminal (1952)
Ocean Terminal
7.0
Short
assistant camera (as W.D. Williams)
1952
Additional Crew
Link Span (1956)
Link Span
6.6
Short
production assistant (as W.D. Williams)
1956
London's Country
Short
production assistant (as W.D. Williams)
1954
Elizabethan Express (1954)
Elizabethan Express
7.5
Short
assistant technician (as W. D. Williams)
1954
Self
Team Deakins (2020)
Team Deakins
9.3
Podcast Series
Self - Guest
2023
Billy Williams on Red and Blue
Video
Self
2018
Reflections on Golden Pond
6.9
Video
Self
2003
The 55th Annual Academy Awards (1983)
The 55th Annual Academy Awards
5.7
TV Special
Self - Winner
1983
Archive Footage
The Industry (2018)
The Industry
Podcast Series
Self (archive footage)
2020

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