
Directing
Jerome Hill (March 2, 1905 – November 21, 1972) was an American filmmaker and artist. He was educated at Yale, where he drew covers, caricatures and cartoons for campus humor magazine The Yale Record.
His 1950 documentary Grandma Moses, written and narrated by Archibald MacLeish, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Two-reel. He won the 1957 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for his film Albert Schweitzer.
In addition to making films, he was a painter and composer.
His last film, the autobiographical Film Portrait (1973), was added to the National Film Registr…

365 Day Project
as Self

Birth of a Nation
as Self

Carl G. Jung by Jerome Hill or Lapis Philosophorum
as Himself

Notes for Jerome
as Self

Film Portrait
as Himself

Diaries, Notes, and Sketches
as Self

Galaxie
as Self

Hallelujah the Hills
as Convict I

Cassis
as Narrator / Jerome