Terence Marsh

Terence " Terry " Marsh ( born November 14, 1931 in London, England ) is a British art director and production designer, who won the Oscar for Best Production Design twice.

Life

Terence Marsh began in 1955 as a draftsman with the love due to Paris in the film industry and has been involved throughout his career as an art director and production designer on the equipment of around 50 films.

At the Academy Awards in 1966, he shared with John Box and Dario Simoni his first Oscar for Best Production Design in the color film Doctor Zhivago (1965). His second Oscar in this category, he received in 1969 along with John Box, Vernon Dixon and Ken Muggleston for Oliver (1968). For Scrooge ( 1970) he was nominated in 1971 not only for the BAFTA award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts ( BAFTA ), but together with Robert Cartwright and Pamela Cornell for the Academy Award for Best Production Design at the Academy Awards in 1971. With Robert Cartwright and Peter Howitt, he was then the last time nominated best Production Design for an Oscar in the category and that of Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland (1971 ) in 1972.

Later he was nominated twice more for the BAFTA Film Award for Best Production Design: For a 1978 A Bridge Too Far (1977 ), on the other 1991 Hunt for Red October (1990).

Marsh, who is also on the features of the films Magic - was an eerie love story (1978), Basic Instinct ( 1992), The Shawshank Redemption (1994) and The Green Mile (1999) involved, worked with film directors such as Paul Verhoeven, Frank Darabont, Richard Attenborough, Ronald Neame, David Lean, Carol Reed and Charles Jarrott together.

In 2010 he was honored for his life's work of the Guild of art directors ( Art Directors Guild ) with the ADG Lifetime Achievement Award.

Filmography (selection)

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