Los Angeles Times

Admired music, f ilm editor dies

NORMAN HOLLYN, 1952 - 2019

- By Steve Marble

Norman Hollyn, who worked on “Sophie’s Choice,” was also a professor at USC.

Norman Hollyn, a respected film and music editor who worked on such movies as “Sophie’s Choice,” “The Cotton Club” and “Heathers,” has died in Japan, where he was lecturing cinema students. He was 66.

Hollyn died Sunday after suffering cardiac arrest in Yokohama, where he met with students from Tokyo University of the Arts.

“His loss is devastatin­g,” Elizabeth M. Daley, dean of the USC School of Cinematic Arts, wrote on Facebook.

Beyond his work in Hollywood in film and television, Hollyn was a professor at USC’s film school, where he had led the editing department for more than 10 years before recently stepping down. He also helped the university strengthen relationsh­ips with a diverse stable of companies, including Apple and Fox Searchligh­t Pictures. He was a prolific writer and public speaker who traveled the world to work with cinema students and aspiring filmmakers.

Hollyn was born May 11, 1952, in New York. He graduated from Stony Brook University and got an early break in the film world working as an apprentice sound editor on “Lenny,” the 1974 Lenny Bruce biopic. It was heady company for a young editor. The film’s director was Bob Fosse and the lead actor was Dustin Hoffman. He also worked as an uncredited apprentice editor on Sidney Lumet’s “Network,” the 1976 media satire that went on to win four Academy Awards.

Life as a film editor, though, made for uneven employment. Jobs lasted months, occasional­ly a year.

Sometimes he was a film editor, sometimes he was asked to edit the music. On “Sophie’s Choice” and “Cotton Club” he was the music editor. On “Heathers” he was the film editor — as he was on Oliver Stone’s television miniseries “Wild Palms.”

Hollyn had a hand in dozens of films and television shows. His most recent editing project was “Shot,” a 2017 film about the consequenc­es of an accidental shooting.

At the time of his death, Hollyn was on sabbatical from USC so he could travel, both to teach and to conduct interviews for a planned revision of “The Lean Forward Moment,” his book on storytelli­ng. He was also writing a new edition of “The Editing Room Handbook,” his mustread textbook for aspiring film editors.

For five years, he hosted editing workshops at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. He also worked as a consultant for DreamWorks and Pixar.

Hollyn’s wife, Janet Conn, said he was a classic workaholic but also had a bountiful life away from work. “He and I spent endless hours going to museums and galleries. We loved art — the cultural changes occurring in L.A. that allowed us to do what we had done during our years in New York.”

She said her husband had an enthusiasm for even the simple things in life, such as their weekly dinners with their daughter. “A renaissanc­e man with vast intelligen­ce, a huge heart and who gave and received immeasurab­le pleasure from his life,” she said.

Besides his wife, Hollyn is survived by his daughter, Elizabeth Conn-Hollyn.

 ?? Bill Ratner ?? RESPECTED EDITOR Norman Hollyn worked on “Sophie’s Choice.”
Bill Ratner RESPECTED EDITOR Norman Hollyn worked on “Sophie’s Choice.”

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