- Born: 1925 in Reigate, Surrey, England
- Occupation: Actor
- Active: '50s-2000s
- Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
- Career Highlights: Erin Brockovich, Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, Chaplin
- First Major Screen Credit: The Pickwick Papers (1952)
| Actor: Anne V. Coates |
| Filmography: Anne V. Coates |
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| Wikipedia: Anne V. Coates |
| Anne V. Coates | |
|---|---|
| Born | December 12, 1925 Reigate, Surrey, England, UK |
| Occupation | Film editor |
| Years active | 1947 – present |
| Spouse(s) | Douglas Hickox (? – 1988) |
Anne V. Coates (born 12 December 1925) is an Academy Award winning British film editor with a 40-year-plus career in film editing. She is perhaps best known as the editor of director David Lean's epic film, Lawrence of Arabia in 1962. Coates has been nominated five times for the Academy Award for Film Editing for the films Lawrence of Arabia, Becket (1963), The Elephant Man (1980), In the Line of Fire (1993), and Out of Sight (1998). In an industry where women only accounted for 16 percent of all editors working on the top 250 films of 2004, and 80 percent of the films had absolutely no females on their editing teams at all, Anne V. Coates continues to thrive as a top film editor.[1] In February 2007, she was awarded BAFTA's highest honour, The Academy Fellowship. [2]
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Anne V. Coates first passion was horses. As a girl, she thought she might end up a race-horse trainer.[3] A graduate of Bartrum Gables College, Anne V. Coates worked briefly as a nurse before entering the British film industry.[4] Before becoming a film editor, Anne Coates served as a nurse at Sir Archibald McIndoe's pioneering plastic surgery hospital in East Grinstead, UK. [5] Coates decided to pursue film directing and started out working as an assistant at a production company specializing in religious films (also doing projectionist and sound recording work). There she fixed film prints of religious short films before sending them out to various British church tours.[5] This splicing work eventually led to the rare job as an assistant film editor at Pinewood Studios (one of the only motion picture studios in England), where she worked on various films. Her first experience was assisting for film editor Reggie Mills.[3] Anne V. Coates later went on to work with world-renowned film director David Lean on his masterpiece, Lawrence of Arabia. Coates has had a long and varied career, seemingly refusing to retire and she continues to edit films such as Out of Sight and Erin Brockovich for iconoclastic film director, Steven Soderbergh. Coates is a member of both the Guild of British Film and Television Editors (GBFTE) and American Cinema Editors (ACE).
Coates is at the centre of a film industry family. Besides being the niece of J. Arthur Rank, she was married to the director Douglas Hickox for many years. Her brother, John Coates, was a producer (The Snowman and Yellow Submarine), and her two sons Anthony Hickox and James D.R. Hickox are directors, whilst her daughter Emma E. Hickox is also a film editor.
Variety's Eileen Kowalski notes that, "Indeed, many of the editorial greats have been women: Margaret Booth, Dede Allen, Verna Fields, Thelma Schoonmaker, Anne V. Coates and Dorothy Spencer."[6]
see: Academy Award for Film Editing
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| Once Upon a Time... Lawrence of Arabia (2008 Film) | |
| Lost (1956 film) | |
| Douglas Hickox |
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