American film editor and producer
Henry Berman
Born (1914-01-14 ) January 14, 1914[ 1] Died June 12, 1979(1979-06-12) (aged 65) Occupation(s) Film editor and producer Spouse Rosemary Anita Cassidy m.1942 Children 3 sons, 1 daughter Relatives Pandro S. Berman (brother)
Henry Michael Berman (January 1, 1914 – June 12, 1979) was an American film editor for RKO and a film producer for MGM .
Early life
Henry Berman was born to a Jewish family[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] in Newcastle, Pennsylvania in 1914. His father Henry (Harry) Berman, was general manager of Universal Pictures during Hollywood 's formative years.[ 5]
Career
Henry began his career working in a film laboratory at Consolidated Film Industries in the 1930s. He also worked in the lab for Universal Pictures . In 1933, he joined RKO as an editor and worked on musicals, including the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers films Follow the Fleet and Swing Time (both 1936), which were produced by his older brother Pandro S. Berman . He became an assistant to Pandro and moved with him to MGM in 1940.[ 5]
During World War II , Berman served in the US Army with the rank of captain and worked with Frank Capra on the documentary film series Why We Fight .[ 5]
Some of the films he produced at MGM after the war include Just This Once (1952), Torch Song (1953), Men of the Fighting Lady (1954), Bedevilled (1955), It's a Dog's Life (1955), and The Great American Pastime (1956).
He won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for Grand Prix in 1966.[ 6]
He died in Los Angeles of cancer.[ 5]
Awards and nominations
Year
Award
Category
Entry
Result
Ref.
1967
39th Academy Awards (Oscars)
Best film editing
Grand Prix (1966)
Won
[ 7]
1976
Primetime Emmy Awards
Outstanding Achievement in Film Editing for Entertainment Programming for a Special
Babe (1975)
Nominated
[ 8]
1973
Primetime Emmy Awards
Outstanding Achievement in Film Editing for Entertainment Programming - For a Special or Feature Length Program of a Series
Go Ask Alice (1973)
Nominated
[ 9]
References
External links
Henry Berman at IMDb
1934–1950 1951–1975 1976–2000 2001–present
Best Film Editing became Best Editing in 1999
International National People