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HomeNewsRobert F. Boyle Passes Away at 100

Robert F. Boyle Passes Away at 100

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Robert Boyle (right) with director Norman Jewison on the set of The Russians Are Coming.

Production designer extraordinaire Robert F. Boyle passed away Aug. 1 at the age of 100. Boyle, a four-time Academy Award nominee for Art Direction for his work on North by Northwest, Gaily, Gaily, The Shootist and Fiddler on the Roof and recipient of an Honorary Oscar in 2008 for his work on these and more than 86 other motion pictures, died of natural causes after a two-day stay at Cedars Sinai Hospital.

In 1997 Boyle was voted a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Art Directors Guild. In 2001 he was further honored with the Hollywood Production Designer of the Year Award by the Hollywood Film Festival. Recently he was given a tribute by the American Cinematheque and the Art Directors Guild with a screening at the Egyptian Theatre of two of his designed films, The Wolf Man (1941) and Gaily, Gaily (1969). In 1973 he was nominated for an Emmy for The Red
Pony
.

Among his other major motion picture credits as a production designer are The Birds, Winter Kills, The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas, Private Benjamin, Portnoy’s Complaint, The Thomas Crown Affair, In Cold Blood, How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying, The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, The Shootist and the original Cape Fear.

Boyle worked on numerous films for Alfred Hitchcock and Norman Jewison as well as for such other famed directors as Tom Mankiewicz, Penny Marshall, Joe Dante, Sylvester Stallone, Hal Ashby, Arthur Hiller and Don Siegel. Until he was hospitalized he was a Distinguished Lecturer at the American Film Institute Conservatory in Los Angeles where he was considered the “guiding light” of the Institute’s production design department.

Boyle is the subject of Daniel Raim’s Oscar-nominated documentary, The Man On Lincoln’s Nose (2000), which refers to Hitchcock’s North By Northwest film that Boyle designed. He also is a prominent subject in Raim’s newest documentary about Production Designers, Something’s Gonna Live, that includes participation by three other deceased production designers, Henry Bumstead, Albert Nozaki and Harold Michelson.

Robert Boyle was born October 10, 1909, in Los Angeles and was a graduate of the School of Architecture of the University of Southern California (1933). He began his art direction career that year at Paramount Studios moving from there to Universal Studios. In 1941 Hitchcock chose him to be the art director on his Saboteur film. He served as a member of the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences for nine years and was a two-term president of the Art Directors Guild.

Boyle is survived by two daughters: Emily Boyle-Biddle of Hollywood, CA, and Susan Licon of Toledo, Oregon, and three grandchildren.

His wife, Bess Taffel Boyle, died in 1999.

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