Anne Bauchens ( Eng. Anne Bauchens ; February 2, 1882 , St. Louis , Missouri , USA - May 7, 1967 , Woodland Hills , California , USA ) is an American editor who is best known for her more than 40 years of working with director Cecil B. DeMillem .
| Anne Bochens | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | |
| Place of death | |
| Citizenship | |
| Profession | |
| Career | - |
| Awards | Oscar Award for Best Editing |
| IMDb | |
Career
Bochens was trained in editing by DeMille [2] and first worked with him on the film Carmen. Until 1918, DeMille edited and also made his films [3] . After the release of the films "Carmen" and "We Can't Have Everything" (1918), Bocens began editing films herself, without a duet with DeMille. She edited films of DeMille for the rest of her long career until the 1956 Ten Commandments movie. After the Oscar introduced the new nomination for Best Editing in 1934 and Bocens became one of three nominees for the installation of the film Cleopatra . She later received an Academy Award for Northwest Mounted Police (1940) and became the first woman to win an Academy Award in this category. She was again nominated for an Academy Award for editing films twice. In total, Bochens is credited with editing 41 films directed by DeMill and 20 films from other directors [4] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Find a Grave - 1995. - ed. size: 165000000
- ↑ Higashi, Sumiko (1994). Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture: The Silent Era (University of California Press), p. 223. ISBN 0-520-08557-4 .
- ↑ The original 1915 version of Carmen appears to be lost; Bauchens' credit as co-editor is for the 1918 re-release of the film. See p. 217 of the book by Sumiko Higashi.
- ↑ Totals based on Bauchens' assessment compiled at the imdb.com website; interest retrieved 2008-06-24.