Art
Community Rating
6.4
TMDB estimate
Born
October 13, 1906
Died
December 19, 1984 (age 78)
Born in
Mexico
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Born in Mexico, Edward Carrere (13 October 1906 - 19 December 1984) first hit Hollywood in 1947, making his debut as an art director on "My Wild Irish Rose". He garnered his first Academy Award nomination two years later for the Errol Flynn epic "Adventures of Don Juan". Throughout the late 1940s and the 1950s he worked on such films as "White Heat" (1949), "The Fountainhead" (1949), "The Flame and the Arrow" (1950), "Dial M for Murder" (1954), "Sweet Smell of Success" (1957), "Separate Tables" (1958) and "Elmer Gantry" (1960). His second Oscar nomination was in 1960 was for the Roosevelt biopic "Sunrise at Campobello". He won the Academy Award seven years later for his work on "Camelot".

There Was a Crooked Man...
as Production Design
1970

The Wild Bunch
as Art Direction
1969

Camelot
as Production Design, Art Direction
1967

Not With My Wife, You Don't!
as Production Design
1966

Never Too Late
as Art Direction
1965

The Third Day
as Art Direction
1965

The Pleasure Seekers
as Art Direction
1964

Act One
as Production Design, Set Decoration
1963

Island of Love
as Art Direction
1963

Critic's Choice
as Art Direction
1963

Taras Bulba
as Art Direction
1962

Francis of Assisi
as Art Direction
1961

Sunrise at Campobello
as Production Design
1960

Elmer Gantry
as Art Direction
1960

Take a Giant Step
as Art Direction
1959

The Devil's Disciple
as Art Direction
1959

Cry Tough
as Art Direction
1959

The Rabbit Trap
as Art Direction
1959

Separate Tables
as Art Direction
1958

Run Silent, Run Deep
as Art Direction
1958