In 1926, the Los Angeles Times informed readers that “one of the most important positions in the motion-picture industry is held almost entirely by women” whose job it was to assemble “thousands of feet of film so that it tells an interesting story in the most straightforward manner” (B7). Assembling reels and cutting negatives was tedious work that often fell to young working-class women. However, out of the ranks of these film joiners and negative cutters emerged a handful of women who would help to develop the editing techniques that would become the hallmark of Hollywood’s visual style
The article analyzes the experiences of Italian women editors as examples of the complex interplay b...
This is a modest revision of a paper written for a panel on the past and future of historical editin...
If, as Gertrude Price claimed in 1914, the movies were “a great new field for women,” 1 that field e...
Margaret Booth began work as a negative cutter for D. W. Griffith in 1915. After Griffith closed dow...
This project began just after the centennial celebration of the motion picture, during a distinct tu...
In a 1921 Picturegoer article, Jeanie Macpherson advised prospective writers not to worry about subm...
During the silent era there does not appear to have been much serious thought given to the question ...
In the past decade, a higher percentage of women have worked as editors than as directors, writers, ...
Blanche Sewell entered the ranks of negative cutters shortly after graduating from Inglewood High Sc...
A Denver native, Loring edited movie trailers before becoming a film cutter for Paramount-Famous Pla...
Irene Morra worked as a negative cutter at D. W. Griffith’s Los Angeles studios before becoming a cu...
2018/2019 2nd place award winner. This paper explores the idea that the 1920s filmmaking was recogn...
The purpose of this paper is to examine why female directors were able to achieve success in the sil...
Caption: "There is nothing connected with the staging of a motion picture that a woman cannot do as ...
Looking back on her career in 1977, Bette Davis remembered with pride, "Women owned Hollywood for tw...
The article analyzes the experiences of Italian women editors as examples of the complex interplay b...
This is a modest revision of a paper written for a panel on the past and future of historical editin...
If, as Gertrude Price claimed in 1914, the movies were “a great new field for women,” 1 that field e...
Margaret Booth began work as a negative cutter for D. W. Griffith in 1915. After Griffith closed dow...
This project began just after the centennial celebration of the motion picture, during a distinct tu...
In a 1921 Picturegoer article, Jeanie Macpherson advised prospective writers not to worry about subm...
During the silent era there does not appear to have been much serious thought given to the question ...
In the past decade, a higher percentage of women have worked as editors than as directors, writers, ...
Blanche Sewell entered the ranks of negative cutters shortly after graduating from Inglewood High Sc...
A Denver native, Loring edited movie trailers before becoming a film cutter for Paramount-Famous Pla...
Irene Morra worked as a negative cutter at D. W. Griffith’s Los Angeles studios before becoming a cu...
2018/2019 2nd place award winner. This paper explores the idea that the 1920s filmmaking was recogn...
The purpose of this paper is to examine why female directors were able to achieve success in the sil...
Caption: "There is nothing connected with the staging of a motion picture that a woman cannot do as ...
Looking back on her career in 1977, Bette Davis remembered with pride, "Women owned Hollywood for tw...
The article analyzes the experiences of Italian women editors as examples of the complex interplay b...
This is a modest revision of a paper written for a panel on the past and future of historical editin...
If, as Gertrude Price claimed in 1914, the movies were “a great new field for women,” 1 that field e...