Advertisement

John Francis Chambers

Advertisement

John Francis Chambers

Birth
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Death
15 Aug 2001 (aged 77)
Woodland Hills, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Find A Grave contributor Richard Weide adds
Parents:
Michael Joseph Chambers (1884-1981) born in Ireland, died in Calif
and
Bridget (Delia) Pendergrast born 1889 in Ireland

Mike Jaska Adds
You might want to include his involvement with the fictitious movie "Argo" which enabled six Americans to escape from Iran with Canadian help. Of course, the movie became a real movie with Chambers being played by John Goodman; other major actors in the film were Ben Afleck and Alan Arkin.
♥:¦:.♥.•:*¨¨*:•.♥
John Chambers was an award-winning make-up artist and prosthetic makeup expert who became a veteran in both television and film

From Wikipedia
Born in Chicago, Illinois in an Irish-American family, Chambers trained as a commercial artist and started his career designing jewelry and carpets.[2] Following service as a medical technician during World War II, Chambers found employment repairing faces[3] and making prosthetic limbs for wounded veterans at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs hospital at Hines, Illinois.[4]
In 1953 he joined the NBC American television network working for many live shows for a six-year period. He worked on his first movie, Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), then joined Universal Pictures. He attracted attention for his work in The List of Adrian Messenger, which featured the gimmick of having the audience guess which famous stars were under Chambers' makeup. Chambers also worked on The Munsters and The Outer Limits TV series. Early in his career, he trained under Ben Nye, then head of Make-up at 20th-century Fox.[5]

He was awarded Honorary Academy Award, for his work with characters like Cornelius (left) and Dr. Zaius in the Planet of the Apes series, now in The Science Fiction Museum, Seattle.
His work became known worldwide in the Planet of the Apes series of movies, which began in 1968 with the eponymous film. During it making, he held training sessions at 20th-century Fox studios, where he mentored other make-up artists of the film,[6] and as many as 78 artists worked under him.[7] Later, at the 41st Academy Awards, he won a special Academy Award for his work in film, long before Academy Award for Best Makeup was established in 1981.[2]
Chambers worked on the pilot of Mission Impossible and created the pointed ears worn by Leonard Nimoy as Spock in the original Star Trek television series.[8] Meanwhile, he also made the prosthetic nose of Lee Marvin for his Academy Award-winning role in Cat Ballou (1965); later he created a prosthetic chest for actor Richard Harris in film A Man Called Horse (1970), where in the actor is hung on pins in a native American initiation ceremony.
[2]
who once created a Bigfoot carnival prop and was rumored to be behind the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot footage, died of diabetes complications, 25 August 2001, at the Motion Picture and Television Fund retirement home in Woodland Hills. He was 78.

For years, a rumor had circulated that Chambers, famed Academy Award-winning Hollywood special effects man, manufactured the suit allegedly worn by the Bigfoot pictured in the famed Patterson-Gimlin Film which spawned renewed interest in the creature.

The controversy peaked on the thirtieth anniversary of the filming when press accounts from around the world recycled this rumor without benefit of a personal interview with Chambers. Typical of the headlines is one that appeared in London's Sunday Telegraph for October 19, 1997: "Hollywood admits to Bigfoot hoax." The article, timed to the anniversary of reads in part: "A piece of film, which for 30 years has been regarded as the most compelling evidence for the existence of Bigfoot, the North American 'abominable snowman', is a hoax, according to new claims. John Chambers, the man behind the Planet of the Apes films and the elder statesman of Hollywood's 'monster-makers', has been named by a group of Hollywood make-up artists as the person who faked Bigfoot.

"In an interview with Scott Essman, an American journalist, the veteran Hollywood director John Landis...said: 'That famous piece of film of Bigfoot walking in the woods that was touted as the real thing was just a suit made by John Chambers.' He said he learned the information while working alongside Mr Chambers on Beneath the Planet of the Apes in 1970."

But the truth of the matter apparently lived beyond the Hollywood rumor mill.

On October 26, 1997, California Bigfoot researcher and nurse Bobbie Short interviewed Chambers, then living in seclusion in a Los Angeles nursing home. The make-up artist insisted he had no prior knowledge of Roger Patterson or Bob Gimlin before their claimed Bigfoot encounter on October 20, 1967. He also denied having anything to do with creating the suit, and blamed the Hollywood rumor mill. Chambers went on to say that he was "good" but he "was not that good" to have fashioned anything nearly so convincing as the Bluff Creek Bigfoot.

As stated in the press at the time, the well-known movie director John Landis claimed that Chambers not only made the Patterson suit but helped make the film. For just as long people have pointed to Landis as the one from whom they heard the story, not Chambers. But Chambers himself said the only Bigfoot he made was the "Burbank Bigfoot," a large stone prop intended to imitate a real Bigfootlike creature and used for a carnival tour. Some even speculated that Chambers was involved with constructing the Minnesota Iceman, shown in Midwestern state and stock fairs by Frank Hansen, beginning in 1967. The Burbank Bigfoot, however, appears to be the only "Bigfoot" Chambers ever created.

During his 30-year career, Chambers worked on several movies and television shows, including TV's "The Outer Limits," "The Munsters," "Lost in Space" and "Mission Impossible." Chambers was responsible for putting the pointy ears on "Star Trek's" Mr. Spock. His makeup and prosthetics film credits included "National Lampoon's Class Reunion" (1982), "Halloween II" (1981), "The Island of Dr. Moreau" (1977), "SSSSSSS" (1973), "Battle for the Planet of the Apes" (1973), "Superbeast" (1972), "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" (1972), "Slaughterhouse-Five" (1972), "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" (1971), "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1970), "Planet of the Apes" (1968), "The List of Adrian Messenger" (1963), and "Showdown at Boot Hill" (1958).

John Chambers is best known, however, for designing the anthropoids in the original "Planet of the Apes." When he worked on "Planet of the Apes" in the 1960s, Chambers recalled in a recent Assoicated Press interview how he spent hours at the Los Angeles Zoo doing research.

"It was the best way I could think of for capturing the elastic facial expressions of the apes," he said.

The Associated Press noted that his preparation led him to develop a new type of foam rubber that was easier to work with than the material commonly used at the time. He also created facial appliances that could be attached to actors' faces to form primate features. For his efforts he became only the second makeup artist to receive an honorary Academy Award. A competitive category for makeup was established in the 1980s.

Considering the timing of the filming of the Patterson-Gimlin footage in 1967, many skeptics of the film naturally looked to Chambers as the source of the fully-haired upright primate in the film. Critics of the film's debunkers would later point out that the original "Planet of the Apes" costumes were not full-body suits, but mostly rigid facial and upper torso gear.

Intriguingly, Chambers' first of only a few acting appearances was in a 1971 movie about a California Bigfoot that terrorized co-eds. The film, "Schlock" was directed by John Landis, who also played the film's very thin Bigfoot. Chambers played the National Guard Captain in the film. Chambers' student, Rick Baker, who one day would create Harry in "Harry and the Hendersons," did the makeup and created the Bigfoot in Schlock.

John Chambers' name will forever be linked to Bigfoot, no matter the realities behind the rumors.
Find A Grave contributor Richard Weide adds
Parents:
Michael Joseph Chambers (1884-1981) born in Ireland, died in Calif
and
Bridget (Delia) Pendergrast born 1889 in Ireland

Mike Jaska Adds
You might want to include his involvement with the fictitious movie "Argo" which enabled six Americans to escape from Iran with Canadian help. Of course, the movie became a real movie with Chambers being played by John Goodman; other major actors in the film were Ben Afleck and Alan Arkin.
♥:¦:.♥.•:*¨¨*:•.♥
John Chambers was an award-winning make-up artist and prosthetic makeup expert who became a veteran in both television and film

From Wikipedia
Born in Chicago, Illinois in an Irish-American family, Chambers trained as a commercial artist and started his career designing jewelry and carpets.[2] Following service as a medical technician during World War II, Chambers found employment repairing faces[3] and making prosthetic limbs for wounded veterans at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs hospital at Hines, Illinois.[4]
In 1953 he joined the NBC American television network working for many live shows for a six-year period. He worked on his first movie, Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), then joined Universal Pictures. He attracted attention for his work in The List of Adrian Messenger, which featured the gimmick of having the audience guess which famous stars were under Chambers' makeup. Chambers also worked on The Munsters and The Outer Limits TV series. Early in his career, he trained under Ben Nye, then head of Make-up at 20th-century Fox.[5]

He was awarded Honorary Academy Award, for his work with characters like Cornelius (left) and Dr. Zaius in the Planet of the Apes series, now in The Science Fiction Museum, Seattle.
His work became known worldwide in the Planet of the Apes series of movies, which began in 1968 with the eponymous film. During it making, he held training sessions at 20th-century Fox studios, where he mentored other make-up artists of the film,[6] and as many as 78 artists worked under him.[7] Later, at the 41st Academy Awards, he won a special Academy Award for his work in film, long before Academy Award for Best Makeup was established in 1981.[2]
Chambers worked on the pilot of Mission Impossible and created the pointed ears worn by Leonard Nimoy as Spock in the original Star Trek television series.[8] Meanwhile, he also made the prosthetic nose of Lee Marvin for his Academy Award-winning role in Cat Ballou (1965); later he created a prosthetic chest for actor Richard Harris in film A Man Called Horse (1970), where in the actor is hung on pins in a native American initiation ceremony.
[2]
who once created a Bigfoot carnival prop and was rumored to be behind the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot footage, died of diabetes complications, 25 August 2001, at the Motion Picture and Television Fund retirement home in Woodland Hills. He was 78.

For years, a rumor had circulated that Chambers, famed Academy Award-winning Hollywood special effects man, manufactured the suit allegedly worn by the Bigfoot pictured in the famed Patterson-Gimlin Film which spawned renewed interest in the creature.

The controversy peaked on the thirtieth anniversary of the filming when press accounts from around the world recycled this rumor without benefit of a personal interview with Chambers. Typical of the headlines is one that appeared in London's Sunday Telegraph for October 19, 1997: "Hollywood admits to Bigfoot hoax." The article, timed to the anniversary of reads in part: "A piece of film, which for 30 years has been regarded as the most compelling evidence for the existence of Bigfoot, the North American 'abominable snowman', is a hoax, according to new claims. John Chambers, the man behind the Planet of the Apes films and the elder statesman of Hollywood's 'monster-makers', has been named by a group of Hollywood make-up artists as the person who faked Bigfoot.

"In an interview with Scott Essman, an American journalist, the veteran Hollywood director John Landis...said: 'That famous piece of film of Bigfoot walking in the woods that was touted as the real thing was just a suit made by John Chambers.' He said he learned the information while working alongside Mr Chambers on Beneath the Planet of the Apes in 1970."

But the truth of the matter apparently lived beyond the Hollywood rumor mill.

On October 26, 1997, California Bigfoot researcher and nurse Bobbie Short interviewed Chambers, then living in seclusion in a Los Angeles nursing home. The make-up artist insisted he had no prior knowledge of Roger Patterson or Bob Gimlin before their claimed Bigfoot encounter on October 20, 1967. He also denied having anything to do with creating the suit, and blamed the Hollywood rumor mill. Chambers went on to say that he was "good" but he "was not that good" to have fashioned anything nearly so convincing as the Bluff Creek Bigfoot.

As stated in the press at the time, the well-known movie director John Landis claimed that Chambers not only made the Patterson suit but helped make the film. For just as long people have pointed to Landis as the one from whom they heard the story, not Chambers. But Chambers himself said the only Bigfoot he made was the "Burbank Bigfoot," a large stone prop intended to imitate a real Bigfootlike creature and used for a carnival tour. Some even speculated that Chambers was involved with constructing the Minnesota Iceman, shown in Midwestern state and stock fairs by Frank Hansen, beginning in 1967. The Burbank Bigfoot, however, appears to be the only "Bigfoot" Chambers ever created.

During his 30-year career, Chambers worked on several movies and television shows, including TV's "The Outer Limits," "The Munsters," "Lost in Space" and "Mission Impossible." Chambers was responsible for putting the pointy ears on "Star Trek's" Mr. Spock. His makeup and prosthetics film credits included "National Lampoon's Class Reunion" (1982), "Halloween II" (1981), "The Island of Dr. Moreau" (1977), "SSSSSSS" (1973), "Battle for the Planet of the Apes" (1973), "Superbeast" (1972), "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" (1972), "Slaughterhouse-Five" (1972), "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" (1971), "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1970), "Planet of the Apes" (1968), "The List of Adrian Messenger" (1963), and "Showdown at Boot Hill" (1958).

John Chambers is best known, however, for designing the anthropoids in the original "Planet of the Apes." When he worked on "Planet of the Apes" in the 1960s, Chambers recalled in a recent Assoicated Press interview how he spent hours at the Los Angeles Zoo doing research.

"It was the best way I could think of for capturing the elastic facial expressions of the apes," he said.

The Associated Press noted that his preparation led him to develop a new type of foam rubber that was easier to work with than the material commonly used at the time. He also created facial appliances that could be attached to actors' faces to form primate features. For his efforts he became only the second makeup artist to receive an honorary Academy Award. A competitive category for makeup was established in the 1980s.

Considering the timing of the filming of the Patterson-Gimlin footage in 1967, many skeptics of the film naturally looked to Chambers as the source of the fully-haired upright primate in the film. Critics of the film's debunkers would later point out that the original "Planet of the Apes" costumes were not full-body suits, but mostly rigid facial and upper torso gear.

Intriguingly, Chambers' first of only a few acting appearances was in a 1971 movie about a California Bigfoot that terrorized co-eds. The film, "Schlock" was directed by John Landis, who also played the film's very thin Bigfoot. Chambers played the National Guard Captain in the film. Chambers' student, Rick Baker, who one day would create Harry in "Harry and the Hendersons," did the makeup and created the Bigfoot in Schlock.

John Chambers' name will forever be linked to Bigfoot, no matter the realities behind the rumors.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement