Ray Lovejoy
Ray Lovejoy (18 February 1939 – 18 October 2001) was a British film editor with about thirty editing credits.[1][2] He had a notable collaboration with director Peter Yates that extended over six films including The Dresser (1983), which was nominated for numerous BAFTA Awards and Academy Awards.
Ray Lovejoy | |
---|---|
Born | 18 February 1939 |
Died | 18 October 2001 (aged 62) |
Lovejoy was an assistant to editor Anne V. Coates for films from The Horse's Mouth (1958) to Lawrence of Arabia (1962).[3] He was next an assistant to editor Anthony Harvey on Dr. Strangelove (1964), which was produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. Harvey subsequently became a director himself, and Kubrick promoted Lovejoy to be the editor for his subsequent film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).[4] Kubrick and Lovejoy next worked together on The Shining (1980); Kubrick worked with other editors for his two films from the 1970s.
Stephen Prince described Lovejoy's contributions to 1980s films as follows, "Ray Lovejoy cut Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and he worked again with Kubrick on The Shining and supplied that film with an entirely different--tenser, more foreboding--texture than the stately science-fiction film possesses. Lovejoy also proved adept at editing for blockbuster effect. His cutting in Aliens sustained that sequel's narrative momentum with a speed and tension that its predecessor did not have, and his editing on Batman finessed that film's gaping narrative problems by simply rushing past them."[5]
In 1987, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for his work on the film Aliens (1986).[1] In 2012, the Motion Picture Editors Guild published a list of the 75 best-edited films of all time based on a survey of its members. Two films edited by Lovejoy are on this listing. 2001: A Space Odyssey was listed nineteenth, and The Shining was listed as forty-fourth.[6]
Lovejoy died of a heart attack on 18 October 2001.
Filmography
This filmography is based on the Internet Movie Database; the director for each film is indicated in parentheses.[2]
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (Kubrick-1968)
- A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (Medak-1972)
- The Ruling Class (Medak-1972)
- Fear Is the Key (Tuchner-1972)
- Ghost in the Noonday Sun (Medak-1973)
- Side by Side (Beresford-1975)
- Never Too Young to Rock (1975)
- The Shining (Kubrick-1980)
- Krull (Yates-1983)
- The Dresser (Yates-1983)
- Sheena (Guillermin-1984)
- Eleni (Yates-1985)
- Aliens (Cameron-1986)
- Suspect (Yates-1987)
- Homeboy (Seresin-1988)
- The House on Carroll Street (Yates-1988)
- Batman (Burton-1989)
- Mister Frost (Setbon-1990)
- Let Him Have It (Medak-1991)
- Year of the Comet (Yates-1992)
- A Far Off Place (Salomon-1993)
- Monkey Trouble (Amurri-1994)
- Mrs. Munck (Ladd-1995)
- Rainbow (Hoskins-1996)
- The Last of the High Kings (Keating-1996)
- Inventing the Abbotts (O'Connor-1997)
- Lost in Space (Hopkins-1998)
- Running Free (Bodrov-1999)
- The Quickie (Bodrov-2001)
- Vacuums (Cresswell and McNicholas-2002)
References
- "Ray Lovejoy". Turner Classic Movies.
- Ray Lovejoy at IMDb
- Lewis, Kevin (March–April 2010). "COATES of Many Colors: The Varied Career of Anne V. Coates". Editors' Guild Magazine. 31 (2).
- Lobrutto, Vince (1999), Stanley Kubrick: A Biography, Da Capo, p. 307, ISBN 978-0-306-80906-4. Reprint of 1997 edition.
- Prince, Stephen (2002). A New Pot of Gold: Hollywood Under the Electronic Rainbow 1980-1989 (Volume 10 of History of the American cinema). University of California Press. p. 196.
- "The 75 Best Edited Films". Editors Guild Magazine. 1 (3). May 2012. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015.
External links
- Stanley Kubrick - 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) - Making of a Myth on YouTube includes interview footage with Lovejoy.