Jack Pierce - More Movies
Jack Pierce

Personal Info

Known For

Costume & Make-Up

Gender

Male

Birthday

May 4, 1889 (135 years old)

Place of Birth

Valdetsyou, Greece

Jack Pierce

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jack Pierce (born Janus Piccoula; May 5, 1889 – July 19, 1968) was a Hollywood make-up artist best remembered for creating the iconic makeup worn by Boris Karloff in Frankenstein (1931), along with various other classic monster make-ups for Universal Studios. In the 1920s, Pierce embarked on a series of jobs in cinema—cinema manager, stuntman, actor, even assistant director, but within a few years he settled on mastering makeup. The head of Universal, Carl Laemmle, was won over with his creative abilities and hired full-time by the studio. Universal's first "talkie" horror film, Dracula (1931), eschewed elaborate horror make-up. Pierce designed a special color greasepaint for Bela Lugosi for his vampire character, but Lugosi insisted on applying his own make-up. For all film appearances of the character thereafter, Pierce instituted a different look entirely, recasting Dracula as a man with graying hair and a mustache. The most significant creation during Pierce's time at the studio was Frankenstein (1931), with Lugosi originally cast as the Monster. Pierce came up with a design which was horrific as well as logical in the context of the story. So, where Henry Frankenstein has accessed the brain cavity, there is a scar and a seal, and the now famous "bolts" on the neck are actually electrodes: carriers for the electricity used to revive the stitched-up corpse. As the head of Universal's make-up department, Pierce is credited with designing and creating the iconic make-ups for films like Frankenstein, The Mummy (1932), The Wolf Man (1941), and their various sequels associated with the characters. Utilizing his "out-of-the-kit" techniques, Pierce's make-ups were often very grueling and took a considerable amount of time to apply. Pierce was always reluctant to use latex appliances, favoring his technique of building facial features out of cotton and collodion, or nose putty. Pierce eventually started using latex appliances, most notably a rubber nose for Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolf Man (1941) (the edges of the appliance are clearly visible through most of the film), and a rubber head piece for Boris Karloff in Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and Son of Frankenstein (1939). He did a great many historical, old age and character make-ups in TV anthology series such as Screen Directors Playhouse, You Are There and Telephone Time. One episode of that show, a drama called The Golden Junkman, featured Lon Chaney Jr. as an unlettered but kindly Armenian junk dealer who ages from his 30s to his 70s in the course of the story, which Pierce handled with aplomb. Pierce died in 1968 from uremia. Jack Pierce's enduring work at Universal has become a huge influence to many in the entertainment field, including make-up artists Rick Baker and Tom Savini. In 2003, Pierce was recognized with a lifetime achievement award from the Hollywood Make-up Artist and Hair Stylist Guild. In May 2013, Cinema Makeup School in Los Angeles dedicated a memorial gallery in his honor.

Known For
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The Mad Ghoul

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Son of Dracula

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Dracula's Daughter

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The Ghost of Frankenstein

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Son of Frankenstein

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Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man

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House of Frankenstein

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The Amazing Transparent Man

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The Jungle Captive

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Night Key

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I Bury the Living

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Tower of London

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Beyond the Time Barrier

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The Egg and I

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The Kiss Before the Mirror

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Flesh and Fantasy

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Black Angel

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No Escape

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Tangier

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The House of the Seven Gables

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Time Out of Mind

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Gypsy Wildcat

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White Savage

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Sudan

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Master Minds

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Temptation

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Little Miss Big

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The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry

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Scarlet Street

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Captive Wild Woman

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The Wanderer

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Imitation of Life

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King of Jazz

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The Black Cat

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Murders in the Rue Morgue

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Buck Privates Come Home

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The Naughty Nineties

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Little Giant

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Joan of Arc

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Canyon Passage

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Two in a Crowd

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By Candlelight

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The Lady of the Harem

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The Brain from Planet Arous

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The Killers

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The Creation of the Humanoids

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Pursuit to Algiers

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Dressed to Kill

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Terror by Night

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Show Boat

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The Wolf Man

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Dracula

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The Brute Man

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Back Street

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The Climax

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Cobra Woman

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The Mummy's Tomb

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The Mummy's Hand

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Werewolf of London

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She-Wolf of London

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House of Horrors

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Wives Under Suspicion

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Blades of the Musketeers

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Giant from the Unknown

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The Mummy's Curse

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The Mummy's Ghost

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House of Dracula

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Tales of Robin Hood

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Phantom of the Opera

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The Last Warning

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White Zombie

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The Cat Creeps

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The Silent Partner

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The Titanic Incident

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It's Always Sunday

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Bride of Frankenstein

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Man-Made Monster

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The Pilgrimage Play

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Let Them Live

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Half a Sinner

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Great Expectations

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The Mummy

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Magnificent Doll

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The Spider Woman Strikes Back

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Her Adventurous Night

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The Man Who Laughs

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Jungle Woman

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The Big Cage

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Black Friday

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The Invisible Ray

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The Raven

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The Invisible Man

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The Good Fairy

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Prima Donna