Special effects inventor and engineer Petro Vlahos, whose industry contributions made possible such iconic film moments as Julie Andrews dancing with penguins in the 1964 classic Mary Poppins, died Sunday. He was 96.
Special effects inventor and engineer Petro Vlahos, whose industry
contributions made possible such iconic film moments as Julie Andrews
dancing with penguins in the 1964 classic Mary Poppins, died Sunday. He
was 96.
A member of the Academys original
Motion Picture Research Council, Vlahos was honored by the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences many times, starting with a Scientific
and Technical Award in 1960 for a camera flicker indicating device. He
earned an Oscar statuette in 1964 for color traveling matte composite
cinematography and another in 1994 for the Ultimatte electronic
blue-screen compositing process, the first of its kind. He received the
Medal of Commendation in 1992 and the Gordon E. Sawyer Award, an Oscar
statuette, in 1993.
Vlahos had more than 35
patents for camera crane motor controls, screen brightness meters, safe
squib systems, cabling designs and junction boxes, projection screens,
optical sound tracks and even sonar. He created analog and digital
hardware and software versions of Ultimatte.
As
the original patents ran out, many other present-day digital blue- and
green-screen compositing systems were derived from Ultimatte and entered
the marketplace. As a result, every green- or blue-screen shot today
employs variants of the Vlahos technique.
Vlahos
achievements also include his work on sodium and color difference
traveling matte systems. His version of the sodium system was used on
dozens of Disney films, including Mary Poppins, The Love Bug (1969) and
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) and was borrowed by Alfred Hitchcock for
The Birds (1963) and by Warren Beatty for Dick Tracy (1990).
Vlahos
developed the color difference system (the perfected blue-screen
system) for Ben-Hur (1959) and such scenes as its legendary chariot
race. It was used in hundreds of films, including the first Star Wars
trilogy and the Indiana Jones films.
Vlahos was
also recognized with an Emmy in 1978 for Ultimatte and the Life
Fellowship and Herbert T. Kalmus awards from the Society for Motion
Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE). An evening in his honor, A
Conversation With Petro Vlahos was held at the Academy in July 2010.
Born
Aug. 20, 1916, in Raton, N.M., Vlahos showed an early aptitude for
electronics and ham radio. He received his engineering degree from the
University of California at Berkeley in 1941, and during World War II,
he worked as a designer at Douglas Aircraft and later as a radar
engineer at Bell Laboratories.
After the war, Vlahos moved
to California armed with an introduction from the head of Bell Labs to
Douglas Shearer, sound director and the de facto head of R&D at MGM.
Shearer steered Vlahos to the Motion Picture Research Council, which he
joined as assistant manager.
The council was
dissolved in 1960 and re-formed in 1968 as the Motion Picture Research
Center with Vlahos as chief scientist. He also served the industry as a
design engineer, field engineer and systems engineer.