Born Donald Martin Ashton in Edmonton, London, in 1917, Ashton was the son of a wine buyer. He was educated at Boxlane School, Palmers Green. After training as an
architect, on the outbreak of the
Second World War he joined the R.A.F., serving in the Middle and Far East. During the latter part of the war he was posted to Ceylon, where he served with
Lord Louis Mountbatten's unit. He joined the film industry in 1947 at the suggestion of actor and playwright,
Emlyn Williams. His first job was working as an uncredited
draughtsman for the
Boulting brothers on their film
Brighton Rock. The film starred
Richard Attenborough, who was to employ Ashton many years later to design two of the films he directed. During the 1950s and 1970s Ashton acquired a reputation as one of the best production designers in the business with such works as
The Bridge on the River Kwai and
Young Winston. For this, his last film with Attenborough, Ashton was nominated for an
Academy Award in the category for
Best Art Direction. ==Second career==