Background
Ford was the son of Charles A Ford, an insurance salesman, and Martha A. Ford.
Ford was the son of Charles A Ford, an insurance salesman, and Martha A. Ford.
Young Charles served as an Army cameraman in World War I and later worked for Fox, Pathé and International Newsreels as a cameraman. In 1929 Ford became managing director of and shortly thereafter spent thirty months touring Europe by automobile and plane. Among his newsreels were the series Going Places With Lowell Thomas (1934–1937), Stranger Than Fiction (1934–1941) and another news series Going Places With Graham McNamee (1939–1940) featuring radio broadcaster Graham McNamee as reporter.
One of Ford"s best known s was made in 1937 from 7,000 feet of film flown to New York from war-torn China, said to be the first motion picture of the warfare in Shanghai.
lieutenant showed two major Japanese bombings of the city"s streets, in Nanking Road and near the Cathay Hotel. In 1942 Ford directed and Jules Levey produced Jacare, Killer of the Amazon.
This filmed record of James Dannaldson"s hunting expedition into the Amazon jungles is filled with wild-animal footage, including a terrifying attack by a 28-foot anaconda. Levey incorporated a narration by Frank Buck and music by Miklos Rozsa.
Ford died suddenly of peritonitis after surgery in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, just after returning from the Amazon.
He is buried in Forest Lawn, Glendale, Section Eventide, Map # 01, Lot # 1395, Space Number. 3, (Ground). Doctor Irving Leroy Ress was one of his pallbearers.