Jump to content

British Film Editors

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by StAnselm (talk | contribs) at 03:05, 4 September 2016 (added wikilink). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Guild of British Film and Television Editors
Founded1966
TypeProfessional Guild
Location
  • UK
Key people
Chairman - StJohn O'Rorke
Guild Secretary - Sally Fisher
Websitewww.gbfte.org/index.html
Formerly called
Guild of British Film Editors (GBFE)

The Guild of British Film and Television Editors (GBFTE) is a not-for profit association of professional British Film and Television Editors.

The Guild was formed by some 40 British Film Editors in 1966. Originally named the Guild of British Film Editors (GBFE), as more television programmes – particularly dramas and drama series – were pre-recorded rather than broadcast live its membership very soon included editors working in television as well. In 2005, when the advance of digital recording and editing meant that very few editors were actually working with film at all, the name was changed to the Guild of British Film and Television Editors. At the same time the motto “Crafting the Moving Image” was added to the logo to reflect these changes.

The Guild has always had two main aims: to raise the profile of the craft of editing and to maintain the technical and creative skills of editors working in film and television.

As a member of the Cine Guilds of Great Britain, the Guild does not act as a trade union.

Craft of film and television editing

Professionals in the industry have long recognised the importance of editing to finished films and television programmes, with awards from the US Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars), the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTAs) and many film festivals. In 2009 the GBFTE joined with the Editors’ Guilds of Austria, Germany, Poland and Switzerland to successfully petition the European Film Academy for an award for Editing from that organisation. The first EFA Editing Award was presented at the Awards Ceremony in Tallinn, Estonia, on 4 December 2010.

The creative importance of Editors to the finished production is also being recognised by some countries, such as Germany and Finland, by including them alongside Directors, Writers, Composers, Cinematographers and Production Designers as “rightsholders” who are entitled to receive payments when the productions are broadcast in those countries.

In 2011 the GBFTE joined with the BSC (British Society of Cinematographers), GBCT (Guild of British Camera Technicians) and BECTU (the UK Industry Technicians trades union) to form a Collecting Society - Screen Craft Rights - to receive these payments from Germany and other countries and distribute them to UK Cinematographers, Designers and Editors.

History

Among the forty or so Founding Members of the Guild were Anne V. Coates who was awarded a BAFTA Fellowship in 2007 and Terry Rawlings who received the American Cinema Editors Career Achievement Award in 2006, as well as editing luminaries such as Ernest Walter, Freddie Wilson, Jack Harris, Bernard Gribble, Geoff Foot, Ralph Sheldon, Bill Lewthwaite, Jim Clark [1] and Teddy Darvas,[2] editor of the classic British movie The Railway Children. Many of these served as Governors of the Guild during their careers. Some of the founder members were also directors, such as Roy Baker and John Glen, who moved from Editing to Directing in 1968 and David Lean became an Honorary Member in 1968.

References