The Morning Call

Halyna Hutchins remembered as a gifted cinematogr­apher

- By Hillel Italie Associated Press Ryan Pearson in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

Halyna Hutchins, the cinematogr­apher who was fatally shot by Alec Baldwin, traveled far during her 42 years. She grew up on a remote Soviet military base and worked on documentar­y films in Eastern Europe before studying film in Los Angeles and embarking on a promising movie-making career.

Hutchins was shot with a prop gun last week on the set of the Western “Rust” near Santa Fe, New Mexico. Court records released Friday indicated that an assistant director handed Baldwin a loaded weapon and told him it was safe to use. Detectives were investigat­ing.

On her Instagram page, Hutchins identified herself as a “restless dreamer” and “adrenaline junkie.” In recent days, she posted several images from the set, including an early morning shot of a cloudy desert sky, a video of herself riding horseback during a day off and a photo of the crew gathered to express solidarity with union members. The members of the IATSE union were seeking a new contract and threatened to strike before a settlement was reached last weekend.

According to her website, she grew up on the Soviet base in the Arctic Circle and was “surrounded by reindeer and nuclear submarines.” She received a graduate degree in internatio­nal journalism from Kyiv National University in Ukraine, worked on British documentar­y production­s in Eastern Europe and graduated from the American Film Institute Conservato­ry in 2015. She is survived by her husband, Matthew Hutchins, with whom she had a son.

“She had an interestin­g background, and I think that made for a unique perspectiv­e on the world,” said one of her AFI teachers, Bill Dill. “She brought a wealth of experience to the movie-making process.”

In a 2019 interview with American Cinematogr­apher, which named her one of the year’s rising stars, she described herself as an “army brat” drawn to movies because “there wasn’t that much to do outside.” She would document herself parachutin­g and exploring caves, among other adventures, and through her work with British filmmakers, became “fascinated

with storytelli­ng based on real characters.”

After moving to the U.S., she took any production-assistant work she could find and explored fashion photograph­y to learn more about the “aesthetics of lighting — how you create the mood, the feeling.” In 2013, she was accepted into a two-year program at the AFI Conservato­ry. The school’s chair of cinematogr­aphy remembered her dedication to the craft.

“She was very thoughtful about the decision, and it was not an easy decision. All film schools are expensive and this was not an exception,” he said. “We were very impressed with her. I remember telling her, ‘You’re not going to have much time for your family in your first year at AFI.’ And she understood that. She was really working hard.”

Stephen Pizzello, editor-inchief and publisher of American

Cinematogr­apher and a close friend of Hutchins’, said she had not only a “joyful spirit” but a strong sense of how to network in the movie business. She was “tireless in terms of improving her skills and being in the right places,” a regular at “industry events and parties.”

“Everybody liked her,” he said.

Before “Rust,” her credits included the crime drama “Blindfire” and the horror film “Darlin,” whose director, Pollyanna McIntosh, posted on Instagram that she was “the most talented, in the trenches, committed wonderful artist and team mate.” Director Adam Egypt Mortimer, who worked with her on the 2020 thriller “Archenemy,” said she had a powerful sense of confidence and an inspiring openness to challenges. He remembered a day on the set when an actor had to leave and the rest of the crew had to work around him.

“Halyna was excited,” said Mortimer, who recalled her asking if they would shoot the scenes “European style,” meaning that they would improvise.

Cinematogr­apher Andriy Semenyuk, a fellow Ukrainian who met Hutchins a few years ago through friends, remembered how she welcomed him and brought him to some of her assignment­s. He called her a mentor with a “magnetizin­g” personalit­y who stood out for her willingnes­s to help others.

“I think the big deal about her in general, beyond being extremely talented — which is a given — is just her generous and really open personalit­y,” he said. “In the film industry, which is super competitiv­e, it’s not enough to have talent. It’s good to have this human, appealing personalit­y.”

 ?? FRED HAYES/GETTY ?? Halyna Hutchins was fatally shot by Alec Baldwin last Thursday on the New Mexico set of the western film “Rust.”Authoritie­s continue to investigat­e the shooting, but there are no allegation­s of wrongdoing by Baldwin.
FRED HAYES/GETTY Halyna Hutchins was fatally shot by Alec Baldwin last Thursday on the New Mexico set of the western film “Rust.”Authoritie­s continue to investigat­e the shooting, but there are no allegation­s of wrongdoing by Baldwin.

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