Coates makes cut as premier film editor
Oscar winner adds steam to movies in her groundbreaking career
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences recently gave an honorary Oscar to British film editor Anne Coates. Coates, 90, who won an Oscar for her work on “Lawrence of Arabia” and was nominated four more times for films such as “Becket” and “Out of Sight,” was cutting films as recently as last year, when she worked on Universal's “Fifty Shades of Grey.”
In an interview at the academy in October, Coates shared how she added some steam to “Fifty Shades” and forged a groundbreaking career. The following is an edited transcript.
I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth. We lived in quite a large house in a very lovely market town in Surrey called Reigate. My father used to wear a bowler hat to go to work. He was an architect and helped to build up London during the war. One of my first memories was watching the parlormaid iron the London Times so there were no crinkles in it before my father read it.
My grandfather was very Methodist. He made bread. Due to my Uncle Jimmy, we never had bread rationing in the war. He foresaw what was going to happen and stocked up in 1936 or '37. My other uncle was Arthur Rank, who ran Pinewood, Shepperton and Ealing studios at one time. When I wanted to go into films, my uncle wasn't keen. He thought I was going in for the glamour and to have affairs with actors.
No! It did happen, but some years later on. I went into nursing instead. I was a Red Cross nurse. We were called VADs — Virgins Awaiting Destruction. I was the lowest form of nurse, taking the bedpans, and I met a kind of different person than I had before. Because I was a bit snotty growing up. I met all these new kind of people who taught me about the left wing. I turned up at my mother's tea party dressed all in red and said, “I'm a Communist now.” I dabbled with it, but I never joined the party.
Eventually I managed to persuade my uncle to put me [to work] in film, and he put me in religious films. He thought, “That'll cool her down.” Didn't work. I made the tea and coffee and was a projectionist. I heard of a job going at Pinewood for an assistant in the cutting room. I went for an interview. I hadn't even really been in a cutting room on a feature film, but I wasn't about to say that 'cause I wanted a job. They said, “Can you do opticals?” “Oh yes!” I said.
At my age it was quite difficult to do; I was midcareer. I kicked the machine quite a lot. I learned Lightworks. Then when I went on “Out of Sight,” Steven Soderbergh wanted me to use an Avid. I thought, “Oh no, I don't want to learn another one,” but I wanted to work with Steven so I started learning.
I was chatting with George Clooney on the set and I told him how much trouble I was having. But I told George I realized that they're really just the same. It was just a question of calming down and cutting just like I had before. Telling the story. Making it funny. Saving the actor's performance. George thought that was funny. He screamed with laughter. Jennifer Lopez, who was the female lead, came by and George said, “This is the editor Anne Coates who is going to save your performance.” Jennifer did not think it was funny.
On “Unfaithful,” it was hard watching Diane Lane with (director) Adrian Lyne. He would push her and push her and push her. Sometimes she got upset with him, but he got a wonderful performance out of her. She did burst into tears a couple of times.
I'm very open. I tried to make “Fifty Shades” a little more sexy, but they were worried they wouldn't get the R rating. I would have had her trussed up like a suitcase and hoisted to the ceiling. I tried and tried to get that in. They used to laugh at me. Generally speaking, their kissing was a little lukewarm. I wanted more passion. But the audiences liked it.
I love cutting my first cut alone. I used to love a Movieola. It was very personal to me. I shoo people out when I'm cutting. I don't find it lonely, I find it personal.
I have thought about this. Did the men squeeze them out, as the job became more important and better paid? Editors weren't that important in those early days. They mostly cut the negative. There were quite a few women directors too. I don't know why they went away.
When I first came in, I wanted to be a director, and then later on I had opportunities to be a director and turned them down, because I was married to a director. I never edited for my husband. He did ask me to, but I think if you're there all day working on something, you want to be able to go home and say, “I just worked with that idiot director and guess what he did today!” You can't do that if you're married to him.