Freeman Harrison Owens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Freeman Harrison Owens (July 20, 1890 - December 9, 1979), born in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, the only child of Charles H. Owens and Christabel Harrison. He attended Pine Bluff High School in Pine Bluff, but quit in his senior year to work at a local movie theatre as a projectionist. He constructed his own 35mm movie camera at the age of 16. He filmed early newsreels, such as the Chicago Union Stock Yards Fire in December 1910 and the Charleston, South Carolina hurricane and flood in August 1911.

His last credit as cinematographer was Love's Old Sweet Song (1923), filmed in the Lee DeForest Phonofilm process, and starring a young Una Merkel. In 1924, Owens sold his patents for the Movietone sound-on-film process to Fox Film Corporation owner William Fox.

In 1926, Fox combined Owens's patents with the work of Theodore Case (1888-1944) and Earl I. Sponable (1895-1977), along with the German Tri-Ergon patents, to create the Fox Movietone sound-on-film system.

Owens died on 9 December 1979 in Pine Bluff.