George Crone
George Crone, also known as George J. Crone, was an American director and editor, whose career spanned both the silent and sound film eras. He began his career cutting the silent film Let's Be Fashionable in 1920. Between that film and his final screen credit, editing Arruza, he edited over 40 films, and directed over a dozen more. Arruza was released 6 years after Crone's death. Crone had worked with director Budd Boetticher, on Boetticher's obsession, a docudrama regarding his friend Carlos Arruza, the famous bullfighter. Boetticher had used ten cameras to film 2 of Arruza's bullfights in January and February 1966, and Crone was tasked with editing the different fights together. Crone died shortly after completing the tasks, in June 1966. Earlier in his career, he had been the original editor on Citizen Kane, before being replaced by Robert Wise.
Filmography
As director
Never Say Die Introduce Me The Floating College Así es la vida Blaze o' Glory Reno What a Man Hollywood, ciudad de ensueño Get That Girl Speed Madness- ''On Your Guard''
As editor
Let's Be Fashionable The Girl in the Taxi The Yankee Consul Flaming Gold Sing and Like It Strictly Dynamite We're Rich Again Gridiron Flash The Richest Girl in the World Old Man Rhythm Hooray for Love Grand Old Girl A Dog of Flanders To Beat the Band Two in the Dark Make Way for a Lady Second Wife Fight for Your Lady New Faces of 1937 Quick Money The Law West of Tombstone Room Service Allegheny Uprising Beauty for the Asking Swiss Family Robinson Wildcat Bus The Gay Falcon A Girl, a Guy and a Gob The Falcon in Danger The Falcon Strikes Back Forever and a Day Gangway for Tomorrow Seven Miles from Alcatraz Rosauro Castro My Outlaw Brother One Big Affair A Life in the Balance Of Love and Desire - assistant editor- ''Arruza''