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Mary Tomasini is a charming and gracious woman. Visiting her beautiful home is like stepping into another era. There is an atmosphere of peace and serenity, a place where equal care is given to the brewing of tea, the trimming of a flower, and the painting of the many portraits that fill the walls of her house. Among others, Mary has painted Alfred Hitchcock, Conrad Hilton, friends and relatives, and, of course, George.
George Tomasini was born in 1909, and grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts. His mother and father died when he was very young, and although he had three sisters, the siblings did not live together. George went to foster homes, and when he was a teenager his foster parents decided that he should become a priest.
"He had been an altar boy," says Mary, "but he was not ready to become a priest, thank God. If you knew George, he was not priest material."
Still in his teens, George ran away to California and there met Otho Lovering, who was then John Ford's editor. Otho got George a job carrying cans, and from there he worked his way up to
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Mary spent most of the war years overseas, entertaining the troops with the U.S.O. "I was with Charlie Ruggles in Okinawa. And I was on the island of Tinian when they dropped the atomic bomb. Colonel Paul Tibbets, who was the pilot and the officer in charge, took Charlie and me on the plane the next day, and nobody had been allowed in that encampment. So I was on the Enola Gay. And I had gone with Jack Haley, senior, of course, to Italy and North Africa." Flying to England on a troop shoot, Mary got caught in the Battle of the Bulge. It was an exciting time.
Mary and actress Glenda Farrell were good friends. Glenda's brother Richard was a film editor, and he and George were also friends. After the war, George was in New York in the process
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Mary and George came out to Los Angeles where Mary's mother lived. "I did a few things after that, but it seemed like everything that came up used to go on the road. I had been doing a lot of stage work (including a musical, The Shuberts, in London) but after a few things I decided that I had done all of that, and it was more important for me to be married."
George edited Elephant Walk, for producer Irving Asher, and through him met Alfred Hitchcock. Asher and Hitchcock had been friends in London. When Vivian Leigh became ill and was replaced with Elizabeth Taylor, George was able to use much of the wonderful background footage of Ceylon that Vivian Leigh was in without making the audience conscious that a different actress was now playing the role. Asher was very impressed. "So when Mr. Hitchcock came to
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George and Hitchcock became very close friends. "Mr. Hitchcock wanted George to go with him on every location, whether he could work there or not. And so he had wonderful trips. He went to England and Morocco on The Man Who Knew Too Much, and to Germany when they were doing the sound for The Birds. And to San Francisco, of course, for Vertigo, and wherever he was shooting, because he liked his company, aside from any input that George could give him.
"Mr. Hitchcock always gave George first cut. He wanted to see his interpretation. Then they got down to the fine work. He would go to the preview. Of course, George had been a projectionist and had worked in all of the other phases of the business. There wasn't a thing that he didn't know about his craft."
Hitchcock wanted to put George under personal contract, but George was concerned that there would be long intervals between films. "Sometimes the screenplays that he (Hitchcock) was doing didn't come together very quickly, and George liked to work. So Mr. Hitchcock said that they
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While George was editing The Misfits for John Huston, Mary often went to visit him on location in Reno, Nevada. "They went up for five weeks and stayed for five months. So when Psycho came out, I saw it in a theater up there. I was very impressed, and I was so proud of what George had done, of course. People would often come up and ask him a lot of things about that film." It was one of George's most satisfying experiences as an editor.
George was an outdoor man, and loved to go camping, hunting and fishing. Mary remembers the last, fateful trip that George made. "George went out with Bill Andrews, who was a sound cutter,
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George was only 55 years old when he died, but he left behind a wonderful body of work. Mary has never remarried, but keeps herself busy painting, seeing friends and tending her animals and beautiful garden. Ira Heymann, in his piece recalling George in the Winter, 1965 issue of Cinemeditor, expressed the feelings of many: "His care-free air, fine appearance, and bright outlook on life was stimulating to the worst pessimist among us. That booming chuckle of his was a vitamin pill, when one of us was low in spirits. I'm glad I can say I was a friend of his."