Arthur Miller (cinematographer)

[3] The two remained lifelong friends and in 1967 co-wrote a book about the early days of film titled One Reel a Week.

Miller eventually joined Pathé and, although only 19 years old, became the cinematographer for the 1914 adventure serial The Perils of Pauline.

[citation needed] He moved to Hollywood and had a lengthy tenure at Paramount from the late teens throughout the 1920s.

He retired in 1951 for health reasons but remained active in the industry as president of the American Society of Cinematographers.

[4] In August 1973, his widow Mae Miller and Donald Crisp attended the dedication of the Arthur Miller Memorial Fountain and Arbor at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills.

The House of Hate (1918) - Actors Pearl White and Antonio Moreno , director George B. Seitz , and Miller at Cliffhanger Point on the Hudson River Palisades