Biography
A sound/music editor and film cutter whose work on such fright flicks as
Roger Corman's
House of Usher and the American version of
Mario Bava's
Black Sabbath had audiences trembling in their seats, Eve Newman also frequently worked on Westerns and such comedies as the
Billy Wilder classic
Some Like It Hot. As work in the sound department segued into actual film editing, the experienced Newman frequently put razor to celluloid for numerous Corman films in addition to cutting the
Frankie Avalon and
Annette Funicello classic
Beach Blanket Bingo. A native of Southern California whose early work as a Disney animator paved her road into show business, it didn't take long for Newman to go from work on
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to cutting sound on some of the most popular efforts of the 1950s. That decade, in particular, proved unquestionably fruitful for the burgeoning sound department member, and with her work on
Invasion of the Body Snatchers and
Some Like It Hot, few could argue that she was at the top of her game. It was soon after working as a music editor on
Jacques Tourneur's
The Comedy of Terrors that Newman moved into feature editing, and her unique editing style, as evidenced on numerous American International Pictures beach party films, would ultimately find her pioneering a new style that would inspire generations of future editors. Newman gained some much-deserved recognition when she garnered Oscar nominations for
Wild in the Streets and Two Minute Warning, and by the time her career came to a close with work on 1987's
Into the Homeland, few could dispute the influence of her impressive body of work on the world of film editing. On October 10, 2003, Eve Newman died of complications from lung cancer in Burbank, CA. She was 88. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide