Nikolai Toporkoff
Nikolai Toporkoff (1885–1965) was a Russian Empire-born French cinematographer. Toporkoff fled his homeland following the 1917 Russian Revolution, moving to France where he shot around seventy films including the 1927 historical The Loves of Casanova.[1]
Nikolai Toporkoff  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 20 June 1885 | 
| Died | 20 June 1965 | 
| Occupation | Cinematographer | 
| Years active | 1917-1954 (film) | 
Selected filmography
    
- The House of Mystery (1923)
 - Le Brasier ardent (1923)
 - Heart of an Actress (1924)
 - The Loves of Casanova (1927)
 - Secrets of the Orient (1928)
 - The Model from Montparnasse (1929)
 - The Adjutant of the Czar (1929)
 - Troika (1930)
 - The White Devil (1930)
 - Nights of Princes (1930)
 - The Mystery of the Yellow Room (1930)
 - La Femme d'une nuit (1931)
 - Suzanne (1932)
 - Take Care of Amelie (1932)
 - Sergeant X (1932)
 - 600,000 Francs a Month (1933)
 - Let's Touch Wood (1933)
 - King of the Camargue (1935)
 - The Mascot (1935)
 - Rose (1936)
 - In the Service of the Tsar (1936)
 - The Red Dancer (1937)
 - Ramuntcho (1938)
 - Vidocq (1939)
 - Camp Thirteen (1940)
 - The White Truck (1943)
 - The Last Judgment (1945)
 - The Eternal Husband (1946)
 - Third at Heart (1947)
 - Farewell Mister Grock (1950)
 - My Seal and Them (1951)
 - My Friend Oscar (1951)
 - Alone in the World (1952)
 - The Unfrocked One (1954)
 - Leguignon the Healer (1954)
 
References
    
- Klossner p.64
 
Bibliography
    
- Klossner, Michael. The Europe of 1500-1815 on film and television. McFarland & Co, 2002.
 
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