Home Video Artist Biography: Albert Lamorisse

Albert Lamorisse

Albert Lamorisse ( January 13th, 1922 - 1970)


French filmmaker Albert Lamorisse is best remembered for making the exquisite short The Red Balloon(1956) a whimsical fantasy in which a French boy is befriended by a magical red balloon. The short earned him both a grand prize at Cannes and an American Oscar. Lamorisse started out as a photographer and began making short films in the late 1940s. The poetic simplicity of his short- and medium-length films gained him an international reputation. His 1952 short, White Mane, an account of how a young boy gentles an untamable wild white stallion, also took top prizes at Cannes and the American Oscars. He unsuccessfully tried his hand at feature-length films in the early '60s and then returned to making short documentaries. Tragically, while making The Lover's Wind (1970) in Teheran, Lamorrise was killed in a helicopter crash. Using his production notes, the film was edited and released in 1978 and earned him a posthumous Oscar for "Best Feature Documentary." Sandra Brennan

Awards & Nominations

1978 —

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences award nominee for Best Documentary Feature in Lovers' Wind

1956 —

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences award winner for Best Original Screenplay in Criterion Collection: Red Balloon

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Awards & Nominations

1978 - Best Documentary Feature Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences award nominee, Lovers' Wind

1956 - Best Original Screenplay Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences award winner, Criterion Collection: Red Balloon

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