Betty Davis (film editor)
Betty Davis was an American film editor active primarily in the 1920s. She also appeared in a few uncredited roles as an actress. As an editor, she worked primarily with Australian director J.P. McGowan.[1][2] Later on, she cut films for Cliff Wheeler and Bernard McEveety.[3]
Betty Davis | |
---|---|
Occupation | Film editor |
Years active | 1925–1929 |
Selected filmography
- One Splendid Hour (1929)
- Montmartre Rose (1929)
- Daughters of Desire (1929)
- The Dream Melody (1929)
- The Clean Up (1929)
- Perils of the Rail (1925)
- Cold Nerve (1925)
- Blood and Steel (1925)
- Outwitted (1925)
gollark: I don't think that would work:- people would *obviously* try and represent themselves as cooperative when they aren't- just having 150 representatives a level probably won't help because you are not communicating with these people outside of... representative duties
gollark: That means you still need to work out resource allocation/conflict resolution for the larger-scale things.
gollark: Anyway. People can probably work together in self-organizing small groups using social mechanisms, sure. *But* you're limited to Dunbar's number - about 150 people - and larger scale coordination than that is necessary.
gollark: I don't really know our family income so I can't compare that against the countrywide distribution.
gollark: Eh, upper middle maybe.
References
- McGowan, John J. (2005-01-01). J.P. McGowan: Biography of a Hollywood Pioneer. McFarland. ISBN 9780786419944.
- Institute, American Film (1997). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520209695.
- Motion Pictures, 1912-39. Cumulative Series. 1939.
External links
- Betty Davis on IMDb
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