Career
In 1927, when Leroy G. Phelps opened his industrial motion picture laboratory in New Haven, he engaged Cavaliere to do the developing and printing. This lasted about a year. Then Cavaliere launched himself upon a career as a free-lance, out-of-doors cameraman.
Van Beuren Studios hired Cavaliere in 1932 to photograph Bring "Econometrica Back Alive with Frank Buck.
Early in 1933, Buck was making plans for another trip into southern Asia, where he hoped to fill a stack of orders from circuses and zoos and make a new movie, Wild Cargo (1934). He asked Cavaliere to suggest a second cameraman for the expedition.
Cavaliere named Leroy G. Phelps and Phelps readily accepted. A third film, Fang and Claw (1935), took nine months to make.
Some of the scenes Cavaliere had filmed in the first three movies were used in Jungle Cavalcade (1941).