Gordon Parks Movies and Career Information
Nov 30, 1912
Fort Scott
Actor, Director, Producer and Writer
Gordon Roger Alexander Buchanan Parks (November 30, 1912 – March 7, 2006) was a groundbreaking American photographer, musician, poet, novelist, journalist, activist and film director. He is best remembered for his photo essays for Life magazine and as the director of the 1971 film Shaft. At the age of 25, Parks was struck by photographs of migrant workers in a magazine and bought his first camera, a Voigtländer Brilliant, for $12.50 at a pawnshop. The photo clerks who developed Parks' first roll of film, applauded his work and prompted him to get a fashion assignment at Frank Murphy's women's clothing store in St. Paul. Parks double exposed every frame except one, but that shot caught the eye of Marva Louis, heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis' elegant wife. She encouraged Parks to move to Chicago, where he began a portrait business for society women. Over the next few years, Parks moved from job to job, developing a freelance portrait and fashion photographer sideline. He began to chronicle the city's South Side black ghetto and in 1941 an exhibition of those photographs won Parks a photography fellowship with the Farm Security Administration. Working as a trainee under Roy
- Gordon Parks Movies before 2012
- An Unlikely Weapon 2009
- Black as Ink
- Moments Without Proper Names
- Movies Directed by Gordon Parks
- Shaft's Big Score 2000
- Super Fly 1972
- Shaft 1971
- Learning Tree 1969
- Visions
- Superfly
- Leadbelly
- Solomon Northup's: Odyssey
- Super Cops
- Moments Without Proper Names
- Movies Produced by Gordon Parks
- Learning Tree 1969
- Movies Written by Gordon Parks
- Learning Tree 1969
- Moments Without Proper Names