Cinematographer Jimmy Glasberg, AFC, passed on 13 January 2023, aged 83. He was the direct descendant of the pioneering "camera men" who weren’t yet called "directors of photography". Jimmy Glasberg, in both his thinking and his work, constantly questioned what it means to film and what he called "the filial passage from a still image to a moving image." He left behind a filmography that is rich in both its diversity and its ideological commitments.
In mid-June, Jimmy Glasberg and I arranged to meet at his house in the south of France "so I can tell you two or three things". I stayed an entire day…
"OOF… I’m at the end of my rope… Writing is such an effort for me… I had my wife reread it, and she said I talk too much about myself and not enough about technique… Perhaps she’s right… What do you think? You can suggest any changes you see fit and we’ll talk about it…" (Jimmy) Those were very exactly the words that Jimmy Glasberg wrote to me in the email he sent to me along with his biography… I had asked him to tell me two or three things about himself because a friend wanted to feature certain cinematographers at the Rencontres Photographiques in Arles where a show had already been organized featuring the work of his father, a photographer. This event never took place and this train - like so many others -remained in the station, but Jimmy’s words remained and I didn’t need to "change" a single one. (Gilles Porte, AFC)
Writing about Jimmy Glasberg could take the form of a book given the extent to which he experimented and searched. More modestly, I limited myself to films that seemed to mark two distinct steps in his career: the short films on Sam & Dave and Otis Redding, and the feature film Le Lien de parenté which I shot alongside him as a cameraman.
I began in this profession as a spark, and then as an assistant cameraman for television reporting - which we didn’t yet call documentaries. Because these films were shot in 16 mm film, an assistant, who often was also a spark, had to load the film magazines. That was how, through my friend Jean-Yves Escoffier, I began to work for Jimmy Glasberg.
Following the news of Jimmy Glasberg’s death, the AFC received many notes of sympathy, some long and some short. Here are two of them, written by Stéphane Cami, AFC, and Étienne Fauduet, AFC