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To celebrate her 80th birthday in 2003, Dede Allen
completed her 27th feature film, “The Final Cut,” for 25
year-old director Omar Naim. She remains as passionate, fearless, outspoken
and self-confident today as when she began as a messenger at Columbia
Pictures 64 years ago. A charter member of local 776 (1943) and current
Guild vice president, she continues her decades-old advocacy of film
editing as an art, not a craft. To that end, Allen was the first picture
editor, male or female, to get front single screen credit, for “Bonnie
and Clyde” in 1967. Her close working relationships with directors include
six films with Arthur Penn, three with Sidney Lumet and two with George
Roy Hill. In 1991, she dropped out of cutting for seven years and returned
to Hollywood to become an executive at Warner Bros. Then, in a remarkable
return to cutting, Allen learned the Avid and received her third Oscar
nomination Allen is especially proud of her assistants – Claire Simpson, Jerry Greenberg, Richard Marks, Steve Rotter, William Kruzekowski – all of whom have gone on to stellar careers of their own. “Go to as much theater as you can and learn story and scene,” she counsels young editors today. “Acquire knowledge, taste and a sense of social history. Follow your instincts and love what you do. Learn your tools and screen as much as you can. You can’t break the rules until you know the rules.” – Michael Kunkes |