Douglas Stewart (film editor)

Samuel Douglas Stewart ( born March 27, 1919 in Canada, † March 3, 1995 in Los Angeles, California ) was a Canadian editor who won an Academy Award for Best Editing at the Academy Awards in 1984.

Life

Stewart began his career as an editor in the film industry in 1953 with the film The Hitch-Hiker and worked until 1983 in the production of over fifty films and television series with. In the 1970s and 1980s, he was involved in several films of Don Siegel.

In 1971, he was first nominated for an Emmy for outstanding achievements in film editing in entertainment, specifically for the following To Taste of Death But Once that produced by the NBC television series The Bold Ones: The Senator (1970 ) by Daryl Duke with Hal Holbrook, Michael Tolan and Sharon Acker in the lead roles. Another nomination for the Emmy in this category, he received in 1976 for a series of produced by the ABC television series rich and poor (1976 ) with Peter Strauss, Nick Nolte and Susan Blakely.

At the Academy Awards in 1984 he won together with Glenn Farr, Lisa Fruchtman, Stephen A. Rotter and Tom Rolf an Oscar for best editing in the film The stuff of which heroes are the (1983 ) by Philip Kaufman with Sam Shepard, Scott Glenn and Ed Harris.

Filmography (selection)

Awards

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