Daniel Mandell(1895-1987)
- Editor
- Editorial Department
Thrice Oscar-winning editor Daniel Mandell started out in show business
as one of "The Flying Mandells" with Ringling Brothers Circus. He then
turned his acrobatic skills to performing on the vaudeville circuit.
Following service with the Marines in World War I and subsequently
taking part in the post-Armistice occupation, he joined a longtime
friend in the editing department of MGM. For five years he plied his
trade with Columbia (1924-29), before his career really took off after
being hired by independent film maker
Samuel Goldwyn (at RKO: 1930-1932 and
1941-1952; at United Artists: 1936-1940). Mandell quickly became
Goldwyn's number one editor and was assigned the lion's share of
prestige pictures: Dodsworth (1936),
Dead End (1937),
Wuthering Heights (1939) (his
own personal favorite),
The Westerner (1940),
The Little Foxes (1941),
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
and Guys and Dolls (1955). Mandell
considered timing to be of paramount importance in his work and
believed that his performing background had given him an vital insight
into audience reaction.
Mandell's other fruitful collaboration was with the director Billy Wilder, for whom he worked on five films, notably Witness for the Prosecution (1957), The Apartment (1960) and The Fortune Cookie (1966).
Mandell's other fruitful collaboration was with the director Billy Wilder, for whom he worked on five films, notably Witness for the Prosecution (1957), The Apartment (1960) and The Fortune Cookie (1966).