Mike Todd(1907-1958)
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Film producer Michael Todd was one of the major contributors to
technical innovation in the film industry in the 1950s. Having worked
with Fred Waller and Cinerama, he got tired of the three-panel format, left
the company and tried to find the process for making "Cinerama coming
from one hole". He joined forces with the American Optical Co. and
developed a system using 65mm cine cameras at 30 fps and wide
angle-photography (approx 150 degrees). The system was named Todd-AO
after its inventors and was by far the best big-screen system ever
seen, when it was introduced with Oklahoma! (1955). The Todd-AO prints used 70mm
film with a 2.2:1 ratio. Sound was six-track magnetic only, with five
channels behind the screen and one surround channel, with Perspecta
coding (a switch stereo device) The 70mm Todd-AO productions were
premiered through Magna Theatre Corp., which also co-produced the
pictures. Due to the non-standard speed, the first two Todd-AO pictures
(the other was Around the World in 80 Days (1956)) were parallel-shot in 35mm CinemaScope with 24
fps for general release, but for the third production, South Pacific (1958), the
Todd-AO pictures were all shot in 24 fps. Todd was killed in a plane
crash in 1958, but his system lived on, adopted as the wide super format
of 20th Century-Fox, which used it all through the 1960s. During that
period a number of alternate processes developed, of which
Super Panavision became the most used.