John Chambers

John Chambers

make-up department, actor, art department

John Chambers was born on Sep 12, 1922 in USA. John Chambers's big-screen debut came with Around the World in 80 Days directed by Michael Anderson in 1956. John Chambers is known for Blade Runner directed by Ridley Scott, Harrison Ford stars as Deckard and Rutger Hauer as Batty. John Chambers has got 3 awards and 5 nominations so far. The most recent award John Chambers achieved is Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hair Stylist Guild Awards. The upcoming new movie John Chambers plays is Class Reunion which will be released on Oct 29, 1982.

John Chambers worked out of his home in a blue collar neighborhood in Burbank, California, just a few short blocks from Disney Studios, (actually, his garage transformed into a makeup lab) where the likes of Lana Turner could be found sitting for a set of teeth, Howard Keel getting a fitting for an Indianesque nose, Leonard Nimoy acquiring the trademark pointed ears for his inimical character Mr. Spock. Marlon Brando, Mickey Rooney and Lee Marvin (who wore one of Chamber's nose jobs in Marvin's 1965 Academy Award-winning "Cat Ballou" role) were also known to have visited his garage for fittings of one thing or another.Indeed, Chambers was the special effects master, stamping (and molding) his influence with his work in such movies and television series as: La Planète des singes (1968), Le dernier de la liste (1963), Au-delà du réel (1963), Les monstres (1964), Perdus dans l'espace (1965) and Mission impossible (1966).Though he developed many of his makeup innovations in the 1950s and 1960s, they are still in use today. His custom design skull caps, for instance, are a standard in the business. It is perhaps with La Planète des singes (1968) that Chambers experienced one of his greatest challenges. His preparation and research for the movie included so much time spent making notes and drawings of monkeys at the Los Angeles Zoo, that he became something of a zoo fixture and a drawer himself. In fact, visitors to the zoo, began watching him as much as they watched the monkeys!For his efforts, before the Motion Picture Academy decided in 1981 to designate a category for a makeup award, Chambers received an honorary Academy Award at the 1969 Oscars ceremony. Through his career, Chambers has received many other honors, most notably an Emmy Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.Not unlike many a professional, he began his career in the United States Army during World War II, where he served as a dental technician. It was in this capacity that he found himself working with the scars of war - actually, working against the scars of war - and gaining a great deal of knowledge of repairing more than teeth: entire faces.His experience with creating new ears, noses, and chins, as well as teeth, for veterans ravaged by war, landed Chambers at NBC in 1953 with a job in makeup. His wartime experiences also influenced Chambers to use his skills to help indigent cancer victims acquire prosthetics against the ravages of another kind of war. Few knew of his charitable work, but few who knew him would be surprised by it.Through his life he took many artists under his wing, giving guidance and training to the like of Michael Westmore, Maurice Stein, Thomas R. Burman, Michael McCracken, David Dittmar, and other accomplished makeup artists, asking only in return that they (to borrow from a recent movie) "pay it forward". Retired since 1982, John Chambers died of diabetes at a hospital in Woodland Hills, California on August 25, 2001.

  • Birthday

    Sep 12, 1922
  • Place of Birth

    Chicago, Illinois, USA

Known For

Awards

3 wins & 5 nominations

Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hair Stylist Guild Awards
2002
Winner - Lifetime Achievement Award
Walk of Fame
1979
Motion Picture
Winner - Star on the Walk of Fame
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Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies