Georges Vaglio
0.2Sound

Georges Vaglio

Aug 9, 1922 - Nice, France

Translated from his official website:

Georges Vaglio, born August 9, 1922, in Nice, was a French film sound engineer.

He entered the world of cinema at a very young age, as his father was an electrician and lighting technician at the Nicea Studios in Saint-Laurent-du-Var and at the Victorine Studios in Nice before World War II.

He developed a passion for sound. He worked closely with leading French engineers such as Robert William Sivel and Louis Hochet, and was a favorite sound engineer of Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub for their historical and musical films; his expertise in reproducing analog sound using his Nagra III and IV recorders is universally recognized.

He was the first to experiment with his own lavalier microphones on a film set ("Is Paris Burning?" in 1966).

He contributed to two Oscar-winning films for sound under the direction of William Sivel ("The Wild State" and "The Passerby of Sans-Souci").

He participated in at least 145 film shoots during a career spanning more than fifty years.

Credits

Cast

No cast credits available.

Crew

Media
Movie1986The Unsewing MachineSound AssistantSound
Movie1956...And God Created WomanAssistant Sound EngineerSound
Movie1967Sorrel FlowerSound AssistantSound
Movie1983EffractionSound EngineerSound
Movie1981The Impostures of ScapinSound EngineerSound
Movie1994Lothringen!Sound RecordistSound
Movie1979From the Clouds to the ResistanceSound RecordistSound
Movie1984Class RelationsSound RecordistSound
Movie1987The Death of EmpedoclesSound RecordistSound
Movie1968The Little BatherSound AssistantSound
Movie1990Cézanne: Conversation with Joachim GasquetSoundSound
Movie1959Blonde in a White CarAssistant Sound EngineerSound
Movie1982AphroditeSoundSound