American Film Editors
Verna Fields, born. Hellmann (March 21, 1918 - November 30, 1982) was an American film editor, best known for working on some of Hollywood's most significant achievements. Among them is the film Ralja for which Oscar-awarded.
Robert Clifford Jones (March 30, 1936) is a film editor, screenwriter, university professor at the University of Southern California. In 1978 he received Oscar for the best original script for Coming Home (1978). His only other film for which he wrote the script was Being There (1979), but the award for that category was given to the author of the novel by Jerzy Kosinski because Jones was an unsigned associate. The rest of his career focused on editing and was one of the main associates of director Arthur Hiller (seven films from 1967 to 1992) and Hall of Ashby (four films from 1973 to 1982). [1] Jones was nominated three times for Oscar for Best Editing ( It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), Bound for Glory (1976).
Sally JoAnne Menke (December 17, 1953 - September 27, 2010) was an American film editor, best known for collaborating with Quentin Tarantino to install his most successful films.
Russell Albion "Russ" Meyer (March 21, 1922 - September 18, 2004) was an American film director, screenwriter, and producer, known as the author of a series of sex-filming films of the 1960s and 1970s, thanks to the satirical presentation of American society, using the so-called. Amazonian protagonists have gained a good reputation in criticism and cult status. Meyer was also known for his preference for large female breasts and is thought to have promoted such an aesthetic ideal in American culture before making silicone sheets every day. In addition to the film, he also worked on photography, recording editors for the Playboy magazine in his first years, and two of his wives - Eve Meyer and Edy Williams - began their career there. Meyer financed his films alone as an independent producer, with the exception of Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, which was built by the 20th Century Fox studio, for which the script was written by critic Roger Ebert, who, despite failure, will remain his great friend. Meyer withdrew from the film in the late 1970s, partly because he did not want to "descend" his work to the level dictated by the then hardcore pornography. In spite of that, he has earned enough money to spend the rest of his life in wealth. He spent the last year fighting Alzheimer's disease.
Stuart Rosenberg (August 11, 1927 - March 15, 2007) was an American film and television director, best known for the classical prisoner Cold Prisoner. In that film, Paul Newman appeared, who will collaborate with Rosenberg on a few more remarkable films.
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