Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pato_GuzmanPato Guzman - Wikipedia

    Pato Guzman. Patricio "Pato" Guzmán (1933–1991), a native of Chile, worked in the United States as an art director, production designer, and producer of television and film. He worked on such notable shows as The Jack Benny Program, I Love Lucy, The Lucy Show, That Girl.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0350011Pato Guzman - IMDb

    Pato Guzman was born on 10 September 1933 in Chile. He was an art director and production designer, known for Moscow on the Hudson (1984), The In-Laws (1979) and Enemies, A Love Story (1989). He died on 2 January 1991 in Santiago, Chile.

    • Art Director, Production Designer, Producer
    • September 10, 1933
    • Pato Guzman
    • January 2, 1991
  3. Jan 14, 1991 · Pato Guzman, 57, production designer and a longtime associate of Paul Mazursky, died Jan. 2 in Santiago, Chile, after a brief illness. Guzman arrived in Los Angeles in the mid-1950s to work...

    • Overview
    • Career outside Star Trek
    • Further reading
    • External links

    Pato Guzman (10 September 1933 – 2 January 1991; age 57), generally credited as "Pato Guzman", was Star Trek's very first art director, when he was assigned by his employer Desilu Studios to Star Trek's very first production, the pilot "The Cage", in 1964.

    For "The Cage", Guzman was officially credited as "production designer", then a far more coveted title, but this was effectively an illegal credit, as he had at the time only recently become an officially union designated art director. Carrying the title had to be approved by the powerful Art Directors Guild labor union, which it had not, and would have made him the boss of his actual boss, Art Director Rolland M. Brooks, the senior staffer in Desilu's art department at the time. It is conceivable that Guzman was given the title by the studio for his personal relationship with the former Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz couple. But since the pilot was not aired, it never had been an issue and when "The Cage" was finally released to the general public on VHS in 1986, Guzman went uncredited. His subordinate and later successor on the regular run of Star Trek: The Original Series, Matt Jefferies, went through something similar, but unlike Guzman, was brought to heel by the union.

    As Star Trek's art director, Guzman was tasked with creating the look of the futuristic setting of Star Trek from scratch, which he did in a series of color paintings. With a lot of input from Gene Roddenberry and several outside advisors, Guzman conceptualized the interior sets for "The Cage", and also did preliminary work on the USS Enterprise's exterior and bridge. The finalization of the designs for the latter two were subsequently largely assigned to Guzman's assistant, Matt Jefferies, a 'regular' set designer at that time. A few of Guzman's sketches were reproduced in The Art of Star Trek in 1997.

    Homesick, Guzman left the series around October 1964 to return to his native Chile for a year, before the first pilot began filming. He was replaced by Art Director Franz Bachelin, followed by Brooks himself, when Bachelin left as well after "The Cage", and ultimately by Jefferies during the production run of the regular series. (The Making of Star Trek, p. 101)

    Before working on Star Trek, Guzman, a close personal friend of Desi Arnaz, was set designer on Desilu's I Love Lucy.

    After returning to the United States, Guzman worked on the Paramount Pictures film The President's Analyst. This was followed by I Love You, Alice B. Toklas (1968), which marked the film debut of Leigh Taylor-Young. A later notable film Guzman designed was The In-Laws (1979, featuring Ed Begley, Jr., Rosana DeSoto, and Richard Libertini).

    Guzman worked primarily with director Paul Mazursky. Among the Mazursky films on which Guzman worked were Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969, featuring Celeste Yarnall), Alex in Wonderland (1970), An Unmarried Woman (1978, featuring Vincent Schiavelli), Tempest (1982, featuring Jerry Hardin), Moscow on the Hudson (1984), Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986, featuring Darryl Henriques and Irene Tsu), and Scenes from a Mall (1991). He even became a co-producer on some of Mazursky's films.

    Pato Guzman died in Santiago, Chile, in 1991 following a brief illness. He was 57 years old.

    •The Making of Star Trek, 1968

    •Star Trek: The Original Series Sketchbook, 1997

    Pato Guzman at the Internet Movie Database

    •Social Security Death Index

  4. www.rottentomatoes.com › celebrity › pato_guzmanPato Guzman | Rotten Tomatoes

    Explore the filmography of Pato Guzman on Rotten Tomatoes! Discover ratings, reviews, and more. Click for details!

  5. 632K Followers, 1,660 Following, 284 Posts - Nahuel "El Patón" Guzmán 👣 🇦🇷 (@nahuelguzman111) on Instagram: "🎙 @mirodeatras 🇲🇽 @teqbeat ⚽️".

  6. Creating Star Trek’s First Bridge. Gene Roddenberry knew he wnated the bridge to be at the center of the action in Star Trek. Beyond that, his designers, Matt Jefferies and Pato Guzman, had little to go on. Jefferies was still designing the Enterprise itself in early 1964.

  7. People also ask

  1. People also search for