Cinematographer, director Mac Ahlberg dies
Worked with John Landis on films including 'Beverly Hills
Cop III'
By Variety Staff
Swedish-born cinematographer and director Mac Ahlberg,
who worked in both low-budget genre films and high-budget studio fare such as
"Beverly Hills Cop III," died on Oct. 26 of complications from
congestive heart failure in Cupra Maritima, Italy. He was 81.
As a director of
photography, Ahlberg shot dozens of features, documentaries and television
productions throughout Europe including the five-part documentary "Ingmar
Bergman Makes a Movie."
In 1965 he directed his first feature, the Danish erotic
film "I, a Woman," a box office success that spawned two sequels.
He moved to Los Angeles in the late '70s and served as
cinematographer on several films for producer Irwin Yablans including
"Hell Night" (1981) and "The Seduction" (1984). Ahlberg was
d.p. for more than 30 of producer Charles Band's Empire and Full Moon Pictures
including "Re-Animator" (1985), directed by Stuart Gordon, with whom
Ahlberg worked on seven films.
Ahlberg's major studio projects included "Striking
Distance" (1993) and "The Brady Bunch Movie" (1995); for
director John Landis, he shot feature films "Oscar," "Innocent
Blood" and "Beverly Hills Cop III," episodes of the
Landis-helmed HBO series "Dream On" and the Michael Jackson video "Black
or White."
His television work also included Joe Dante's "The
Second Civil War" for HBO and "The Wonder Years" for ABC.
Born in Stockholm, Ahlberg began as a camera assistant in
the 1950s.
He is survived by his wife Mary and a daughter.
AHLBERG, Mac
Born: 6/12/2012, Stockholm, Stockholms län , Sweden
Died: 10/26/2012, Cupra Maritima, Marche, Italy
Mac Ahlrberg’s western – cinematographer:
Ghost Town - 1988

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