Barbara McLean (November 16, 1903 – March 28, 1996) was an American film editor. In the period Darryl F. Zanuck was dominant at the 20th Century Fox Studio, from the 1930s through the 1960s, McLean was the Studio's most conspicuous editor and ultimately the head of its editing department. She won the 1944 Academy Award for Film Editing for the film Wilson. She was nominated for the same award for six additional films, including the "classic", All About Eve (1950). Her total of seven nominations for editing during her career was only surpassed in 2012 by Michael Kahn. She had a notable collaboration with the director Henry King that extended over twenty-nine films, including Twelve O'Clock High (1949). Her impact was summarized by Adrian Dannatt in 1996: McLean was "a revered editor who perhaps single-handedly established women as vital creative figures in an otherwise patriarchal industry. She received the inaugural American Cinema Editors Career Achievement Award in 1988. She died in Newport Beach, California in 1996.
Birthday: November 16, 1903
Death: March 28, 1996
November 09, 1950
February 07, 1952
October 08, 1952
December 23, 1953
June 23, 1950
January 26, 1953
February 09, 1940
July 19, 1940
July 16, 1952
June 27, 1952
March 01, 1955
May 22, 1951
December 25, 1940
December 07, 1933
August 24, 1934
October 17, 1935
December 27, 1935
January 25, 1935
April 20, 1935
December 23, 1934
August 21, 1936
March 25, 1937
August 10, 1951
August 29, 1951
April 15, 1938
August 25, 1954
October 07, 1955
January 14, 1939
March 29, 1956
September 15, 1939
August 18, 1939
October 11, 1940
February 20, 1941
September 26, 1941
December 04, 1942
August 01, 1944
December 22, 1944
October 09, 1947
December 25, 1947
December 21, 1949
May 20, 1953
December 21, 1943
November 25, 1936
May 24, 1938
October 15, 1946
November 10, 1948
September 16, 1953
February 17, 1951
October 28, 1938
August 16, 1950
November 11, 1949
April 07, 1934
June 21, 1945
July 22, 1948
March 30, 1929
March 20, 1942
November 14, 1945