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David Wharnsby (born June 20, 1967) is a Canadian Genie- and Gemini award-winning film editor. ==Life and career== Wharnsby was born in Waterloo, Ontario. Some of Wharnsby's numerous credits include; the CBC's miniseries ''Northern Town'', directed by Gary Burns; ''At The Hotel'', directed by Ken Finkleman; TIFF top ten films, ''I, Claudia'', by Chris Abraham; ''The Uncles'' by Jim Allodi; Ken Finkleman's Gemini winning ''The Newsroom'' and ''Foreign Objects''; Genie-winning short "I Shout Love" by Sarah Polley; Atom Egoyan's Gemini winning ''Sarabande''; Emmy-nominated ''The Four Seasons'' and ''Don Giovanni Unmasked'' by Barbara Willis Sweete; David Weaver's ''Siblings'' and ''Century Hotel''; and Genie-nominated ''Three Stories'' by Semi Chellas. His television directing credits include one episode of ''Billable Hours'' ("Killer Comma"), two episodes of ''Being Erica'' ("This Be the Verse" and "The Unkindest Cut") and two episodes of "Saving Hope" ("Twinned Lambs" and "The Heartbreak Kid"). Wharnsby received a Gemini Award for his work on Jennifer Baichwal's documentary ''The Holier It Gets''. He has also worked with Baichwal on the Gemini-winning ''The True Meaning of Pictures'', and the Emmy winning ''Let It Come Down: The Life of Paul Bowles''. He won a Genie Award in 2004 for his work on Guy Maddin's ''The Saddest Music in the World''. Wharnsby married Sarah Polley, who in addition to directing is an actress, singer, writer and activist, in September 2003. They have since divorced. He collaborated with then wife Polley on the critically acclaimed 2006 feature-length film ''Away from Her'', which Polley directed. His mother Marnie was host of a children's television show in the 1960s for CKCO-TV; his brother Tim is a sports reporter for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's website, cbcsports.ca. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「David Wharnsby」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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