Sneha Girap (Editor)

Viola Lawrence

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Name
  
Viola Lawrence


Role
  
Film Editor

Viola Lawrence Viola Lawrence Women Film Pioneers Project

Died
  
November 20, 1973, Hollywood, California, United States

Spouse
  
Frank Lawrence (m. 1918–1960)

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Film Editing

Similar People
  
Joseph Walker, Burnett Guffey, Rudolph Mate, Stephen Goosson, Dorothy Kingsley

Viola Mallory Lawrence (December 2, 1894, New York City – November 20, 1973) is considered by many to be the first woman film editor in Hollywood. She was nominated twice for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing: for Pal Joey (1957), with Jerome Thoms; and for Pepe (1960), with Al Clark.

Viola Lawrence Viola Lawrence Women Film Pioneers Project

Career

Viola Lawrence httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

She began working at Vitagraph Studios in Flatbush, Brooklyn as a messenger at the age of 11. At 12, she was holding title cards. In 1915, she became the second female film cutter in cinema history, after Anna McKnight, who also worked at Vitagraph. She married Frank Lawrence, her film cutting teacher at Vitagraph.

In 1917, she moved to Hollywood and worked for Universal, First National, Gloria Swanson Productions, and Columbia Pictures at various times. She became Columbia's "head editor" or "supervising editor" in 1925. After director Erich von Stroheim was fired from the production of Queen Kelly (1929), star Gloria Swanson herself directed an alternate ending, with the help of cinematographer Gregg Toland and Lawrence. Lawrence edited Samuel Goldwyn Studio's first sound film, Bulldog Drummond (1929). She rejoined Columbia in 1934 and remained there for the rest of her long career, ending with Pepe (1960).

Orson Welles biographer Charles Higham wrote that, when Lawrence was assigned to The Lady from Shanghai (1947), she reported to studio boss Harry Cohn that "the footage was a jumbled mess". She also informed Cohn that Welles "had not shot a single close-up"; Welles reluctantly obeyed orders to add some. Following poorly received previews, the studio had Lawrence make drastic cuts, over an hour of footage, shortening the film to 87 minutes.

The California State University, Fullerton University Archives and Special Collections has a collection of material about her.

References

Viola Lawrence Wikipedia