
Personal Info
Known For
Editing
Gender
Female
November 16, 1903
Died
March 28, 1996 (92 years old)
Palisades Park, New Jersey, USA
Also Known As
- Barbara "Bobby" McLean
Barbara McLean
Biography
Barbara McLean (November 16, 1903 – March 28, 1996) was an American film editor. In the period Darryl F. Zanuck was dominant at the 20th Century Fox Studio, from the 1930s through the 1960s, McLean was the Studio's most conspicuous editor and ultimately the head of its editing department. She won the 1944 Academy Award for Film Editing for the film Wilson. She was nominated for the same award for six additional films, including the "classic", All About Eve (1950). Her total of seven nominations for editing during her career was only surpassed in 2012 by Michael Kahn. She had a notable collaboration with the director Henry King that extended over twenty-nine films, including Twelve O'Clock High (1949). Her impact was summarized by Adrian Dannatt in 1996: McLean was "a revered editor who perhaps single-handedly established women as vital creative figures in an otherwise patriarchal industry. She received the inaugural American Cinema Editors Career Achievement Award in 1988. She died in Newport Beach, California in 1996.
Known For
Crew

Untamed
Editor
1955

The Egyptian
Editor
1954

King of the Khyber Rifles
Editor
1953

The Robe
Editor
1953

The Desert Rats
Editor
1953

Niagara
Editor
1953

The Snows of Kilimanjaro
Editor
1952

Lure of the Wilderness
Editor
1952

Viva Zapata!
Editor
1952

People Will Talk
Editor
1951

David and Bathsheba
Editor
1951

All About Eve
Editor
1950



