Tuesday 27 December 2016

Oscar-winning art director of Patton passes away

Oscar-winning art director of Patton passes away Los Angeles: Gil Parrondo, an Academy Award-winning art director for Patton and Nicholas and Alexandra, has died on December 24 in Madrid. He was 95. Parrondo’s nephew Oscar confirmed the news of his death, reported Variety. “He had no other illness than his age,” Oscar Parrondo said. Parrondo won Oscars for art direction for Patton in
1970 and Nicholas and Alexandra in 1974. He was nominated for another Oscar for Travels with My Aunt in 1972 and worked on scores of other films, including Doctor Zhivago. Born in Luarca in Spain’s northern Asturia on June 17, 1921, his big break came relatively early. He scored his first job on 1939’s Los cuatro Robinsones, assisting set decorator Sigfrido Burmann with whom he worked for 10 years, including on films by Spanish studio Cifesa.

Parrondo worked for the first time as art director in 1951 on Antonio del Amo’s Dia tras Dia, then headed up set decoration on Orson Welles’ 1955 Confidential Report.

He served a further apprenticeship working in the art direction departments on a string of big-budget US shoots in Spain, from Stanley Kramer’s 1957 "The Pride and the Passion."

In a near-80-year career, at the time of his death, he was working on "33 Days," Carlos Saura's upcoming movie on Picasso's painting go "Guernica," starring Antonio Banderas.

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