Post New York Alliance Podcast
Blog Home All Blogs
The Post New York Alliance supports and promotes the Post Production community in New York. This podcast is the collection of talks, seminars and events from the PNYA calendar. PostNewYork.org @PostNY

 

Search all posts for:   

 

Top tags: Sound Editorial  Editorial  Frame by Frame  Assistant Editor  New York Lounge  postproduction  Sundance  Local 700  Sound One  Editor  Festivals  Facility  Postworks Technicolor  Sound Post  Turnover  VFX  Cinematography  Color Management  The Molecule VFX  Audience  Dailies  DIT  Film Financing  Mix  PostBreak  sound  sound editor  Soundtrack Studios  Academy Of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences  ACES 

What She Said: Women Leaders in Post Production and How They Rose Above the Rest

Posted By Ben Baker, Monday, August 7, 2017
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022



WHAT SHE SAID:
Women Leaders in Post Production and How They Rose Above the Rest

In an often male-dominated world of the film and television post production, find out how this post-producer, picture editor, sound editor, music editor and composer made their way to the top.

Suzana Peric, Music Editor has been active in post production since 1981. Growing up in Croatia she attended conservatory and was on track to be a concert pianist — until she suffered a block during a performance, which ended that career. She studied film in Chicago where she gravitated towards picture editing and got a PA job on Arthur Penn’s Four Friends (1981). She then joined the post-production of the film, which brought her to New York. There, she apprenticed in sound and picture until a music editor asked her to be his assistant. Since that discovery, Peric has been music editor for the likes of Mike Nichols, Martin Scorsese, Jonathan Demme, Peter Jackson, Roman Polanski, Robert Benton, Wes Anderson and David Cronenberg, to name but a few, most of these with repeat collaborations. Her most recent work with Demme is Ricki and the Flash.

Nancy Allen, Music Editor discovered music editing at NYU, where she attended the graduate program in Music Technology. It was in the Audio for Video class that she met Suzana Peric, the music editor with whom she worked for nearly 10 years, and learned almost everything she knows about the craft.  Since then, Nancy has worked on films with Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan, Noah, the upcoming film MOTHER!), John Cameron Mitchell (Short Bus), Paul Haggis (The Next Three Days), Julie Taymor, Barry Levinson (Liberty Heights, You Don’t Know Jack) and David Frankel (Hope Springs, One Chance, Collateral Beauty). She has been nominated for 2 Golden Reel awards (winning for Lord of the Rings) and was part of the Emmy award-winning team for the sound and music on HBO’s Bessie.

Eliza Paley, Sound Editor has worked in film, production and post for over 30 years. Beginning in location mixing, moving gradually to the editing room and then to sound editing where she has had an established career since 1988. As supervising sound editor, Eliza has worked with numerous talents including Robert Altman (A Prairie Home Companion, The Company, Tanner On Tanner, Short Cuts), Cary Fukunaga (True Detective), and Hector Bebenco (Caradiru, Foolish Heart). Eliza had Co-Supervised or Supervised Dialogue/ADR editing for directors including Todd Haynes (Wonderstruck, Carol, Mildred Pierce, Velvet Goldmine), The Coen Brothers (Hail , Caeser!) and Julie Taymor (Across the Universe, The Tempest). Additionally she was a sound editor on numerous well known films including Adventureland, Age of Innocence, Casino, Last Temptation of Christ, Crooklyn, Malcolm X, The Hudsucker Proxy, Pret-A Porter and The Wrestler.

Wendy Blackstone, Composer has composed original film scores for over 130 film and TV projects, 9 of which have been nominated for or won Academy Awards. Feature films include: New Jersey Drive directed by Nick Gomez and The Dutch Master directed by Susan Seidelman. Wendy has scored 5 Primetime TV series:  For The People (Lifetime, drama), and MasterClass (HBO). Recent documentaries include: The Girl In the River for HBO, I am Not Your Guru: Tony Robbins, Larry Kramer In Love and Anger, which premiered at Sundance 2015, Dangerous Acts Starring the Unstable Elements of Belarus (HBO), Whitey (CNN), Weight of the Nation (HBO), Crude, and Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq (HBO). Wendy’s work in theater includes Anna Deavere Smith’s Tony-nominatedTwilight: Los Angeles, directed by George C. Wolfe for both the Public Theater and Broadway’s Cort Theatre.

Susan Lazarus, Producer, Post Producer, Post Production Supervisor
, began as an Assistant Editor and Sound Editor on documentaries including the Academy Award-nominated feature,The War At Home, and was a producer on Image Before My Eyes. She then moved into narrative film on Reds (Warren Beatty) and The King of Comedy (Martin Scorsese). Susan combined producing and editing knowledge to become one of New York’s first Post-Production Supervisors for feature films such as Mississippi Masala (Mira Nair), The Boxer (Jim Sheridan), Inside Man (Spike Lee), Foxcatcher (Bennett Miller). Only Lovers Left Alive and Paterson (Jim Jarmusch). Non-Fiction projects include Naqoyqatsi (Goddfrey Reggio), Apache 8 (Sande Zeig) Love, Marilyn (Liz Garbus), and The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst (Andrew Jarecki)She was Co-Producer of the feature Sophie and the Rising Sun (Maggie Greenwald).

Kristina Boden, Picture Editor credits include work with directors such as Brian DePalma (Carlito’s Way), Mira Nair (Kama Sutra, My Own Country, Hysterical Blindness), Lodge Kerrigan (Claire Dolan), Paul Schrader (Light Sleeper, Auto Focus) and Lasse Halstrom (Dear John).


Isabel Sadurni, Moderator, Picture Editor/Producer, To find out more, please visit: www.isabelsadurni.com

 

 

Tags:  assistant editor  editor  Editorial  Sound Editorial  woman  women 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

FXF007: Sidney Lumet's NETWORK- Alan Heim, Mark Laub, Michael Jacobi and Jeffrey Wolf.

Posted By Ben Baker, Sunday, May 21, 2017
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022

 

FXF007: Sidney Lumet's NETWORK- Alan Heim, Mark Laub, Michael Jacobi and Jeffrey Wolf.

 

In 1976, an American satirical film written by Paddy Chayefsky and directed by Sidney Lumet, called Network, about a fictional television network, UBS, and its struggle with poor ratings, starring Faye DunawayWilliam HoldenPeter Finch,  Robert Duvall and Beatrice Straight was nominated for 12 Academy Awards including best film, best director and best editor. Network, won four Academy Awards, including Oscars for Chayefsky’s script, Beatrice  Straights’ performance as an outraged wife, Faye Dunaway’s performance as a cynical programming executive and Peter Finch’s frenetic portrayal of Howard Beale, the troubled “mad prophet of the airwaves.”

 

 Thirty-five years later, “Network” remains an incendiary if influential film, and its screenplay is still admired as much for its predictive accuracy as for its vehemence and a relentless sense of purpose. Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin, cited Chayefsky when he accepted his Oscar for the screenplay of “The Social Network,” and wrote later that “no predictor of the future — not even Orwell — has ever been as right as Chayefsky was when he wrote ‘Network.’ ”

 Alan Heim, the picture editor of the film, Mark Laub, one from a team of sound editors, Michael Jacobi and Jeffrey Wolf, the first assistant editor and the apprentice editor on the film at the time, tell their stories of how the film came together and what it was like in various stages working with director Sidney Lumet, writer Paddy Chayefsky and Producer Howard Gottfried.

 

Tags:  Editor  Editorial  Frame by Frame  Sidney Lumet 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

FXF005: Angelo Corrao and Alex Halpern

Posted By Ben Baker, Thursday, March 16, 2017
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Frame By Frame, Episode 005: Angelo Corrao and Alex Halpern

Post Factory Founder, Alex Halpern and picture editor Angelo Corrao talk about their collaboration on Nine Good Teeth  as well as Angelo’s work on Bruce Weber’s Let’s Get Lost and their experiences coming up in the 1980's New York film scene and developing early relationships with filmmakers like The Coen Brothers.

 

Frame By Frame is a podcast series that introduces you to the most influential, respected and accomplished cinema post-production professionals working in New York today. Through intimate, informal discussions between collaborators about post-production craft, aesthetics, process and technique, we’ll recognize and celebrate the iconic films and people that have made New York film history as well as those contemporaries who continue to make important contributions to the art of filmmaking. In conversations anchored by the film editor, we’ll share the stories that define New York as an essential ongoing capital of the global film industry.

 

Tags:  Assistant Editor  Editor  Editorial  Facility  Frame by Frame  Post Factory  postproduction 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

FXF004: Maurice Schell, Peter Frank, Lee Dichter

Posted By Ben Baker, Tuesday, February 7, 2017
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Frame By Frame, Episode 004: Maurice Schell, Peter Frank, Lee Dichter on Sidney Lumet's The Verdict

Sound editor, Maurice Schell  (Gimme Shelter, Serpico, The Missouri Breaks,  Apocalypse Now, All That Jazz, Melvin and Howard, Reds, Scarface) , re-recording mixer, Lee Dichter, (Grey Gardens, Sophie’s Choice, Hannah and Her Sisters, Miller’s Crossing, The Civil War) and picture editor Peter Frank, (The Verdict, Cadillac Records, Dirty Dancing) share stories about coming up in the 1960's 70's and 80's in the New York film industry and their collaboration on Sidney Lumet’s The Verdict.

 

Frame By Frame is a podcast series that introduces you to the most influential, respected and accomplished cinema post-production professionals working in New York today. Through intimate, informal discussions between collaborators about post-production craft, aesthetics, process and technique, we’ll recognize and celebrate the iconic films and people that have made New York film history as well as those contemporaries who continue to make important contributions to the art of filmmaking. In conversations anchored by the film editor, we’ll share the stories that define New York as an essential ongoing capital of the global film industry.

 

Tags:  Assistant Editor  Editor  Editorial  Frame by Frame  Local 700  postproduction  Sound Editorial  Sound Post 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

FxF001- Reds- Craig McKay and Tom Fleischmann.

Posted By Ben Baker, Wednesday, August 3, 2016
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Frame by Frame 001- Reds- Craig McKay & Tom Fleischmann.

Frame By Frame is a podcast series that introduces you to the most influential, respected and accomplished cinema professionals working in New York today. Through intimate, informal discussions between collaborators about post-production craft, aesthetics, process and technique, we’ll recognize and celebrate the iconic films and people that have made New York film history as well as those contemporaries who continue to make important contributions to the art of filmmaking. In conversations anchored by the film editor, we’ll share the stories with the people that continue to define New York as an essential capital of the global film industry.

Picture editor, Craig McKay and Re-recording mixer Tom Fleischman talk about early influences getting started in the New York film industry of the 1960’s and 70’s as well as their work on the film by Warren Beatty, Reds.                     

Hosted by Isabel Sadurni.                         

Produced by Isabel Sadurni and Ben Baker.      

 


Tags:  Assistant Editor  Editor  Editorial  Frame by Frame  Local 700 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

NYWIFT: Making The Cut

Posted By Ben Baker, Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Updated: Wednesday, March 16, 2022

NYWIFT & the Post New York Alliance podcast are proud to present:

 

Making the Cut: Editors Talk Collaborations and Career

Editing is such a fluid experience. You never know what you will need for the story or what the working relationship with the director is going to be like. Each situation is different. 

Forging a career as an editor can be just as varied. Before digital technology and software became as accessible as they are today, you came up the ranks from apprentice, assistant, to one day becoming an editor. Now you could take on a low-budget film, working as your own assistant and editor, or perhaps collaborate with an established editor and come on as a co-editor. Always, the major skill is storytelling & building relationships. It’s about living your life and understanding that the material for editorial decisions can come from anywhere, and everything you experience. 

Join this panel of talented women editors/filmmakers as they share their journey to the edit chair, and explore the collaborations they’ve built along the way. 


Panelists

R. A. Fedde is an editor and producer, whose film and television work has covered a wide range, from two past presidents to paparazzi on the run. Her editing credits include 10 Days that Unexpectedly Changed America: Antietam, winner of a 2006 Emmy Award for Best Non-Fiction Series; $ellebrity, which premiered at South by Southwest in 2012; Running Wild: The Life of Dayton O. Hyde, which Fedde edited and co-produced, premiered at Slamdance 2013; The Last One, won the Best Social Issues Documentary Award at the 2014 Atlanta Docufest and aired on Showtime in December 2014; and Once and for All, which closed the DocNYC 2015 with a sold-out house. Her editing on Frontlne's Growing Up Online garnered another nomination for a 2009 Emmy. In 2004, Fedde won the prestigious Gracie Allen Award for her work as editor on Pure Magic: The Mother Daughter Bond. Currently she is working on a feature-length PBS project on WWI and a short documentary project of her own about Hindu god lithographs.

Carla Gutierrez is an editor based in New York City. She edited the Oscar nominated film La Carona for HBO and the Emmy-nominated documentary Reportero, which was broadcast on POV. She also edited Kingdom of Shadows that premiered at SXSW and opened theatrically in Mexico. Her latest work, When Two Worlds Collide will have its world premiere at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival as part of the world documentary competition. Gutierrez’s other editing credits include: Wonder Women!Las MarthasTales of the WariaShe Is The MatadorSurviving Hitler: A Love Storyand Iraq For Sale. She has been a creative adviser for the Sundance Edit Lab, and a mentor for Firelight Producers’ Lab.

Geeta Gandbhir's honors include an Academy Award, two Emmy Awards and three Peabody Awards. Most recently, a feature documentary she produced with Perri Peltz and directed with Academy Award winning director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, A Journey of A Thousand Miles: Peacekeepers, premiered at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. She is currently co-directing and co-producing a Conversation series on race with The New York Times Op-Docs. She co-directed and edited the film Remembering the Artist: Robert De Niro Sr. with Perri Peltz for HBO. Additional notable works as an editor include, Mr. Dynamite: The Rise of James BrownMoms Mabley: I Got Somethin’ to Tell YouWhen the Levees Broke … A Requiem in Four ActsBy the People: The Election of Barack ObamaMusic by PrudenceBudrusIf God is Willing and da Creek Don’t Rise, and God is the Bigger Elvis.

Sheila Shirazi's feature editor credits include the forthcoming Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, which will premiere on HBO later this year, and Shola Lynch's Free Angela and All Political Prisoners, which premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival. She has been an assistant editor for the Academy Award-winning Inside Job, the groundbreaking PBS series, Women, War & Peace, and the Sundance Documentary Edit Lab. She produced and wrote the film Arusi Persian Wedding, which won an ITVS Open Call finishing grant and was broadcast on PBS' Independent Lensseries. Shirazi also enjoys the creative (and financial rewards) of editing short-form content for ad agencies, NGO's and corporate clients. 

Cheree Dillon (Moderator) is an independent film/tv editor based in New York City. Most recently she co-edited Death by Design, a feature documentary collaboration from Ambrica Productions and Impact Partners. Her first feature doc, Off and Running, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, was broadcast on PBS’s P.O.V. series, and nominated for an Emmy. Cheree’s other feature doc credits include the broadcast version of The Homestretch for PBS’s Independent Lens 2015 series, Sense The WindSons of BenSurviving Amina, and Song of Hannah, along with cutting long format programs for Discovery, NBC Sports, and The Science Channel. She has also edited several award-winning short docs including Southmost USAAn Imaginary Thing, and Article of Faith. Dillon is a member of the NYWIFT documentary committee and has produced several panels focused on interactive filmmaking, independent film distribution and social media/marketing.

 

  

 

 

Produced by Cheree Dillon

 Hosted by 

 

Tags:  assistant editor  Editor  Editorial  NYWIFT 

PermalinkComments (0)