Rose Loewinger
Rose Loewinger (sometimes credited as R.E. Loewinger) was an American film editor and script supervisor active from the 1920s through the 1950s.
Rose Loewinger | |
---|---|
Born | April 4, 1902 Manhattan, New York, USA |
Died | September 14, 2000 (aged 980 Los Angeles, California, USA |
Occupation | Film editor, script supervisor |
Biography
Rose was born in Manhattan to Jacob Loewinger and Julie Gutman.[1] She got her start in Hollywood working as a secretary to Myron Stearns.[2] After editing films for most of the 1920s and 1930s, in the 1940s and 1950s, she took her expertise and applied it to a new path as a script supervisor.[3]
Selected filmography (as editor)
- Assassin of Youth (1937)
- Goodbye Love (1933)
- Deluge (1933)
- The Big Brain (1933)
- Tomorrow at Seven (1933)
- A Study in Scarlet (1933 film) (1933)
- The Constant Woman (1933)
- Racetrack (1933)
- The Death Kiss (1932)
- Uptown New York (1932)
- False Faces (1932)
- Those We Love (1932)
- The Last Mile (1932)
- The Man Called Back (1932)
- Whistlin' Dan (1932)
- Hotel Continental (1932)
- Salvation Nell (1931)
- Behind Office Doors (1931)
- Beau Sabreur (1928)
- Two Flaming Youths (1927)
gollark: They should probably increase competition a bit.
gollark: Oh, that one, yes. Shame everything is tied to CUDA.
gollark: Which GPU?
gollark: > to work.<|endoftext|>What if the rules specify English grammar but not the interpreter?<|endoftext|>It's not.<|endoftext|>You can't just not be an interpreter.<|endoftext|>I mean, it's somewhat more "open to" than "actually encoding English", but you know.<|endoftext|>You said speech canNOT be implemented by users.<|endoftext|>It's not very interesting and you can't just not actually use it.<|endoftext|>I would prefer to just use a " editor" to follow more, but that doesn't make it *obinitely* a good thing.<|endoftext|>It is not!<|endoftext|>That is not what it is in the programming language.<|endoftext|>No, I mean, you can use python as a language, but it's a good language.<|endoftext|>[BACKTICKS EXPUNGED]python↑ sample output (`<|endoftext|>` is a delimiter of some sort)
gollark: After several hours training on Google GPUs that they let random people use for some reason, the model generates grammatically correct but nonsensical sentences.
References
- "13 Apr 1946, 8 - The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
- "4 Jun 1922, 30 - The Anaconda Standard at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
- "9 Dec 1946, Page 10 - Traverse City Record-Eagle at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
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