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Rudi Fehr : ウィキペディア英語版
Rudi Fehr

Rudolf “Rudi” Fehr, A.C.E. (July 6, 1911 – April 16, 1999) was a German-born, American film editor and studio executive. He had more than thirty credits as an editor of feature films including ''Key Largo'' (1946), ''Dial M for Murder'' (1954), and ''Prizzi's Honor'' (1985). He worked for more than forty years for the Warner Brothers film studio, where he was the Head of Post-production from 1955 through 1976. Fehr was instrumental in establishing the 1967 "sister city" connection between Los Angeles and Berlin, which he had fled in the 1930s.
==Life and career==
Fehr was born in Berlin, Germany. He aspired to become a diplomat or a musician, but was recruited into the film industry, and edited his first film, ''Der Schlemihl'', in 1931; he was just 20 years old. He then worked for several years with the producer Sam Spiegel, including work in Austria and England. In 1933 he edited the French language film ''Le Tunnel'', which was directed by Curtis Bernhardt.〔 The interview concludes with Fehr's advice to aspiring editors.〕 In 1935 he worked on the editing of the Buster Keaton film ''The Invader''.〔〔Daniel Birt is listed as the editor for this film at Fehr is not credited there, but his editing work is detailed in 〕
In 1936, Fehr fled the Nazi regime in Germany and moved to United States. He landed a job at the Warner Brothers film studio in Hollywood, where he initially worked to substitute English sound tracks on two films for the original German ones. He soon became an assistant editor to Warren Low. His first Hollywood editing credit was for the film ''My Love Came Back'' (1940); the film was directed by Curtis Bernhardt, who had worked with Fehr seven years earlier on ''Le Tunnel''. For the next fifteen years Fehr edited dozens of studio films, including ''A Stolen Life'' (directed by Curtis Bernhardt and starring Bette Davis, 1946) and ''Key Largo'' (directed by John Huston, starring Humphrey Bogart, and introducing Lauren Bacall, 1948).
In his obituary, Allen Eyles notes two 1946 films as representative of Fehr's work, "Many of his films were routine, but ''A Stolen Life'' (1946) had the visual intricacy of Bette Davis playing the dual role of two sisters, initially on screen at the same time, and ''Humoresque'' (also 1946) presented John Garfield as an outstanding violinist, dubbed by Isaac Stern. Garfield had to be carefully filmed and edited as he couldn't play a note. He kept his arms behind his back in close-ups while a member of the studio orchestra perched on each side of him, their hands coming into frame to do the fingering and bowing."〔
Jack L. Warner, the co-founder of the Warner Brothers film studio, had briefly assigned Fehr to production duties in 1952.〔 Fehr then edited two films directed by Alfred Hitchcock, ''I Confess'' (1953) and ''Dial M for Murder'' (1954). Following ''Dial M for Murder'' (1954), Warner appointed Fehr as the Head of Post-production including the editing department. Hitchcock made his next films for Paramount Pictures, where George Tomasini became Hitchcock's principal editor in an important collaboration.
Fehr was Head of Post-production at Warner Bros. until his own retirement in 1976; he had worked for the studio for forty years, and reached its mandatory retirement age of 65. The studio then hired Fehr back, and he went to Europe to supervise foreign-language adaptations of Warner Bros. films in France, Germany, Italy and Spain. In 1980, Fehr became Head of Post-production for American Zoetrope, which was Francis Ford Coppola's production company. In 1982, Fehr was co-editor for Coppola's ''One from the Heart'' (1982); it was his first editing credit since 1954. In 1985, he co-edited John Huston's ''Prizzi's Honor'', which was his last film credit.
Fehr taught film editing and post-production at the University of California - Los Angeles and at the California Institute of the Arts in the 1990s.〔

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