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Barbara Ling died on a Thursday in Santa Barbara (a city in California). She had been diagnosed with cancer before she died. A representative from WME (a company that manages talent) confirmed this to Deadline (a news site about movies).
Important: Her family shared a statement: “Equally gifted at period authenticity, contemporary realism, and stylized fantasy, Ling leaves behind a legacy that profoundly influenced the art of production design and the visual language of modern filmmaking.”
In simple words: She was great at making old-time movies look real, modern movies look real, and fantasy look amazing. She changed how movies look forever.
Barbara was born in August 1952. She started her work by designing sets and lights for more than 200 theater, opera, and musical productions. Imagine building tiny pretend worlds on a stage!
Then she got her first Hollywood job as a lighting designer on a 1981 funny TV show called The Pee-Wee Herman Show.
Her career in movie design began with David Byrne’s film True Stories in 1986.
She became a star designer in the 1980s and 1990s. Here are some of the movies she worked on:
Working with a set decorator (the person who fills sets with furniture and props) named Nancy Haigh, Barbara won the Best Production Design Oscar for Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood. They also won:
Callout: The original article included a photo from that movie showing actor Leonardo DiCaprio in the world Barbara built. It shows how real she made the past look!
In 2019, Barbara talked to Deadline about working on that 1969-set movie (a period piece, meaning set in the past). She said:
“How could you not love the idea of, every new thing you do is a completely new set of rules and inventions? [As a designer], your head never stops. In this case, the uniqueness of this will be very hard to beat afterwards.”
This means: Every movie is a fresh puzzle, and this one was extra special.
Most recently, Barbara worked on director Antoine Fuqua’s Michael Jackson biopic, Michael. Since its release in April, it has earned nearly $1 billion (that’s 1,000 million dollars!) all around the world.
Barbara is survived by (this means her family who are still here):
Barbara Ling was a wonderful production designer who shaped the look of many beloved films. She won an Oscar for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, designed worlds for Batman, Fried Green Tomatoes, and more, and just finished a Michael Jackson movie that made a billion dollars. She died at 73 from cancer, but her amazing movie magic will inspire others forever.
Q1: What is a production designer?
A: Think of them as the architect of a movie’s pretend world. They decide how the places in the film should look so the story feels real or magical.
Q2: What movie won Barbara Ling an Oscar?
A: She won the Best Production Design Oscar for Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood, along with set decorator Nancy Haigh.
Q3: What was her last film?
A: It was Michael, a movie about the life of Michael Jackson, which made almost $1 billion worldwide.
Q4: How old was she when she died?
A: She was 73 years old. She passed away in Santa Barbara after a cancer diagnosis.
Q5: Who were her family members?
A: She left behind her wife Lindsay and their two sons, Clay and Will.