G.F. Noble

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(b.**/**/1896? - d. **/**/****). Cameraman. G.(George) F. Noble may have came to South Africa in 1922 at the age of 26. He spent most of his life working as a cameraman for African Film Productions, frequently shooting for Joseph Albrecht. Though he was responsible for filming the first Afrikaans-language film, Moedertjie (1931), he was primarily involved with documentaries and made regular contributions to the African Mirror newsreel.

When, in 1925, the Prince of Wales (the future King Edward VIII) toured the African colonies, Noble covered much of the journey for AFP, crossing over from Madeira and the Canary Islands, where he had been shooting a "scenic", to Lagos for the first part of the tour. As the journey progressed, short films were sent for exhibition abroad and afterwards much of the footage found its way into a lengthy documentary entitled The Great White Chief.

In February 1928 Noble embarked on another adventure when he accompanied Gerry Bouwer on a Cape to London via Cairo transcontinental journey sponsored by the Rand Daily Mail and the Sunday Times. Also on board the Crysler made available for the expedition was Emil Millin, the motoring correspondent for the newspapers, but the condition of the roads was such that Noble injured his back and when they reached Broken Hill (Kabwe) in what was then Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) he was sent back by train. (Bouwer and Millin eventually arrived in London on 4 June, with Bouwer embarking on a successful return journey on 22 August.)

Besides filming both Sarie Marais (1931) and Moedertjie (1931) for Joseph Albrecht, he regularly worked with him on documentaries such as The Smoke That Thunders (1932), The Riddle of Rhodesia (1933), The Golden Harvest of the Witwatersrand (1935), The Babel of the Kraal (1938) and Die Bou van 'n Nasie (1938). Like all AFP cameramen, he contributed to many propaganda films during World War II and after his retirement from AFP continued to work as a freelance cameraman, amongst others for George Groom and J. Blake Dalrymple at Films of Africa. In 1979 he was awarded a Rapport Oscar for his contribution to the South African film industry.

(He is sometimes confused with his namesake George Noble (1902 - 1970), a British cinematographer who shot documentaries for various organisations, including British Instructional Films, the GPO Film Unit, the Strand Film Company, the Canadian Army's Film & Photo Unit and finally the Gold Coast Film Unit. This may be why the AFP cameraman is usually credited as G.F. Noble) (FO)

Sources

Gutsche, Thelma - The history and social significance of motion pictures in South Africa 1895-1940

Le Roux, André I. & Fourie, Lilla – Filmverlede: geskiedenis van die Suid-Afrikaanse speelfilm

van der Merwe, Floris - Gerry Bouwer en sy Chrysler deur Afrika (1928)

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