Lisa Fruchtman |
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| Born | August 1948 (age 77) |
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| Occupation | Film editor |
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Lisa Fruchtman (born August 1948) is an American film and television editor, and documentary director with about 25 film credits. Fruchtman won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for The Right Stuff (1983). With her brother, Rob Fruchtman, she produced, directed, and edited the 2012 documentary Sweet Dreams.
Editing career
After her high school years, Lisa Fruchtman enrolled at the University of Chicago and received an A.B. degree there in 1970.[1] She began her career as a film editor in Hollywood in 1973 with the documentary short Ten: The Magic Number. Fruchtman was an assistant to editors Barry Malkin, Richard Marks, and Peter Zinner on The Godfather Part II (1974), directed by Francis Ford Coppola. This film was edited to have a complex structure that weaves a contemporary story with a background story in Sicily at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries; the film was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Editing.
Fruchtman was one of several editors hired by Coppola in 1977 for the post-production of Apocalypse Now. Coppola had shot about 250 hours of film that needed to be cut down to 2.5 hours for its theatrical release. Malkin and Evan Lottman had done preliminary editing, but then dropped out of the project. The difficult editing required nearly two years. The film was released in August 1979.[2][3] In 1980, she and her co-editors Richard Marks, Walter Murch, and Gerald B. Greenberg were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing, the ACE Eddie Award, and the BAFTA Award for Best Editing.
In 1984, she won the Oscar for Best Film Editing for The Right Stuff (1983), along with her co-editors Glenn Farr, Stephen A. Rotter, Douglas Stewart and Tom Rolf. The film was directed by Philip Kaufman. The editors were also nominated for the ACE Eddie Award for the film.
Fruchtman's first solo credit as editor for a major studio film was for Children of a Lesser God (1986), director Randa Haines' first major film.[4] Fruchtman later cut Haines' The Doctor (1991) and Dance with Me (1998).[5]
In 1991, she was nominated for another Oscar, for Coppola's The Godfather Part III with her co-editors Malkin and Murch. All three editors had long experience working with Coppola, on the earlier Godfather films and others.
In 1996, Fruchtman was nominated for an Eddie for the television film Truman, directed by Frank Pierson. The movie depicts U.S. President Harry S. Truman during World War II. She was also nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award (Outstanding Editing for a Miniseries or a Special - Single Camera Production).
In 2010, she received the Professional Achievement Award for alumni of the University of Chicago.[1]
Filmography (selection)
This filmography is based on the listing at the Internet Movie Database.[6]
- Documentaries
Editorial department
| Year
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Film
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Director
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Role
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| 2016
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Crossing Bhutan
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Ben Henretig
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Story editor Supervising editor
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| 2017
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Saving Capitalism
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- Jacob Kornbluth
- Sari Gilman
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Supervising editor
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| 2018
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The Providers
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- Laura Green
- Anna Moot-Levin
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Story consultant
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Additional crew
| Year
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Film
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Director
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Role
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| 2016
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Crossing Bhutan
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Ben Henretig
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Story editor
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Producer
| Year
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Film
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Director
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Credit
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| 2012
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Sweet Dreams
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Producer
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| 2024
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Counted Out
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Vicki Abeles
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- Shorts
Editor
| Year
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Film
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Director
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| 1986
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Captain EO
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Francis Ford Coppola
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Editorial department
| Year
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Film
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Director
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Role
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| 2012
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Witness 11
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Sean Mitchell
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Consulting editor
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- TV movies
References
- ^ a b "Alumni Award winners span varied careers and achievements, from economics to medicine to winemaking". University of Chicago. May 14, 2010. Archived from the original on March 13, 2014. Retrieved December 17, 2013.
- ^ Phillips, Gene D. (2004). Godfather: The Intimate Francis Ford Coppola. University Press of Kentucky. p. 158. ISBN 9780813123042.
- ^ LoBrutto, Vincent (2013). "Apocalypse Now". The Art of Motion Picture Editing: An Essential Guide to Methods, Principles, Processes, and Terminology. Skyhorse Publishing. p. 97. ISBN 9781621532514. LoBrutto's account is based on earlier interviews with Marks, Greenberg, and Murch.
- ^ Dannenbaum, Jed; Hodge, Carroll; Mayer, Doe (2010). Creative Filmmaking from the Inside Out: Five Keys to the Art of Making Inspired Movies and Television. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781451603606.
- ^ Klady, Leonard (June 4, 1998). "Review: 'Dance With Me'". Variety. Archived from the original on January 23, 2018. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
It's all lovingly captured in the fluid sweep of Fred Murphy's camera and the borderline-garish production design of Waldemar Kalinowski. And despite pic's longish running time, there's a crispness to the pace in Lisa Fruchtman's editing.
- ^ Lisa Fruchtman at IMDb
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- Conrad A. Nervig (1934)
- Ralph Dawson (1935)
- Ralph Dawson (1936)
- Gene Havlick and Gene Milford (1937)
- Ralph Dawson (1938)
- Hal C. Kern and James E. Newcom (1939)
- Anne Bauchens (1940)
- William Holmes (1941)
- Daniel Mandell (1942)
- George Amy (1943)
- Barbara McLean (1944)
- Robert J. Kern (1945)
- Daniel Mandell (1946)
- Francis Lyon and Robert Parrish (1947)
- Paul Weatherwax (1948)
- Harry W. Gerstad (1949)
- Ralph E. Winters and Conrad A. Nervig (1950)
- William Hornbeck (1951)
- Elmo Williams and Harry W. Gerstad (1952)
- William Lyon (1953)
- Gene Milford (1954)
- Charles Nelson and William Lyon (1955)
- Gene Ruggiero and Paul Weatherwax (1956)
- Peter Taylor (1957)
- Adrienne Fazan (1958)
- Ralph E. Winters and John D. Dunning (1959)
- Daniel Mandell (1960)
- Thomas Stanford (1961)
- Anne V. Coates (1962)
- Harold F. Kress (1963)
- Cotton Warburton (1964)
- William Reynolds (1965)
- Fredric Steinkamp, Henry Berman, Stewart Linder and Frank Santillo (1966)
- Hal Ashby (1967)
- Frank P. Keller (1968)
- Françoise Bonnot (1969)
- Hugh S. Fowler (1970)
- Gerald B. Greenberg (1971)
- David Bretherton (1972)
- William Reynolds (1973)
- Harold F. Kress and Carl Kress (1974)
- Verna Fields (1975)
- Richard Halsey and Scott Conrad (1976)
- Paul Hirsch, Marcia Lucas, and Richard Chew (1977)
- Peter Zinner (1978)
- Alan Heim (1979)
- Thelma Schoonmaker (1980)
- Michael Kahn (1981)
- John Bloom (1982)
- Glenn Farr, Lisa Fruchtman, Tom Rolf, Stephen A. Rotter, and Douglas Stewart (1983)
- Jim Clark (1984)
- Thom Noble (1985)
- Claire Simpson (1986)
- Gabriella Cristiani (1987)
- Arthur Schmidt (1988)
- David Brenner and Joe Hutshing (1989)
- Neil Travis (1990)
- Joe Hutshing and Pietro Scalia (1991)
- Joel Cox (1992)
- Michael Kahn (1993)
- Arthur Schmidt (1994)
- Mike Hill and Daniel P. Hanley (1995)
- Walter Murch (1996)
- Conrad Buff IV, James Cameron, and Richard A. Harris (1997)
- Michael Kahn (1998)
- Zach Staenberg (1999)
- Stephen Mirrione (2000)
- Pietro Scalia (2001)
- Martin Walsh (2002)
- Jamie Selkirk (2003)
- Thelma Schoonmaker (2004)
- Hughes Winborne (2005)
- Thelma Schoonmaker (2006)
- Christopher Rouse (2007)
- Chris Dickens (2008)
- Chris Innis and Bob Murawski (2009)
- Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter (2010)
- Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter (2011)
- William Goldenberg (2012)
- Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger (2013)
- Tom Cross (2014)
- Margaret Sixel (2015)
- John Gilbert (2016)
- Lee Smith (2017)
- John Ottman (2018)
- Andrew Buckland and Michael McCusker (2019)
- Mikkel E. G. Nielsen (2020)
- Joe Walker (2021)
- Paul Rogers (2022)
- Jennifer Lame (2023)
- Sean Baker (2024)
- Andy Jurgensen (2025)
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- Best Film Editing became Best Editing in 1999
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