Personal Info
Known For
Editing
Gender
Male
October 15, 1903
Died
December 18, 1986 (83 years old)
Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
Also Known As
- George J. Amy
George Amy
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George Joseph Amy (October 15, 1903 – December 18, 1986) started his career aged 17 as an American film editor, finding his niche at Warner Brothers in the 1930s. It was Amy's editing that was one of the main reasons Warners' films got their reputation for their fluid style and breakneck pace.
He was a favorite of such top Warners directors as Michael Curtiz and Howard Hawks, and won an Academy Award for Best Film Editing for Hawks' Air Force (1943). He received Oscar nominations for Curtiz's Yankee Doodle Dandy in 1942 and Raoul Walsh's fanciful war film Objective, Burma! in 1945. Although Amy directed several shorts and a few features (including She Had to Say Yes) on his own for Warners, they didn't meet with much success. In the 1950s he turned to editing and directing for television.
Known For
Crew

She Couldn't Say No
Editor
1954

A Lion Is in the Streets
Editor
1953

Affair with a Stranger
Editor
1953

Clash by Night
Editor
1952

The Lady Says No
Editor
1952

The Sound of Fury
Editor
1950

My Dream Is Yours
Associate Producer
1949

Romance on the High Seas
Associate Producer
1948

The Unsuspected
Second Unit Director, Associate Producer
1947

Life with Father
Editor
1947

Three Strangers
Editor
1946

Objective, Burma!
Editor
1945






