Biography
					From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Albert (born November 26, 
1926, Boston, Massachusetts) and David Maysles (rhymes with "hazels", 
born 10 January 1932, Boston, Massachusetts) were a documentary 
filmmaking team whose cinéma vérité works include Salesman (1968), Gimme
 Shelter (1970) and Grey Gardens (1976). Their 1964 film on The Beatles 
forms the backbone of the DVD, The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit. 
Several Maysles films document art projects by Christo and Jeanne-Claude
 over a three-decade period, from 1974 when Christo's Valley Curtain was
 nominated for an Academy Award to 2005 when The Gates headlined New 
York's Tribeca Film Festival.
David Maysles, the younger brother,
 died of a stroke on January 3, 1987, in New York. Albert Maysles 
graduated in 1949 with a BA from Syracuse University and later earned a 
masters degree at Boston University. Albert has continued to make films 
on his own since his brother's death. Jean-Luc Godard once called Albert
 Maysles "the best American cameraman". In 2005 Maysles was given a 
lifetime achievement award at the Czech film festival AFO (Academia Film
 Olomouc). He is working on his own autobiographical documentary.
In
 2005 he founded the Maysles Institute, a nonprofit organization that 
provides training and apprenticeships to underprivileged individuals. 
Albert is a patron of Shooting People, a filmmakers' community.
Description
 above from the Wikipedia article Albert and David Maysles, licensed 
under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
															Birthday: 1926-11-26 
															Born At:  Brookline, Massachusetts, USA