Rudi Fehr
Rudolf "Rudi" Fehr, A.C.E. (July 6, 1911 – April 16, 1999) was a German-born, American film editor and studio executive. He had more than thirty credits as an editor of feature films including Key Largo (1946), Dial M for Murder (1954), and Prizzi's Honor (1985). He worked for more than forty years for the Warner Brothers film studio, where he was the Head of Post-production from 1955 through 1976. Fehr was instrumental in establishing the 1967 "sister city" connection between Los Angeles and Berlin, which he had fled in the 1930s.
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Cinema's Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood

More Loverly Than Ever: The Making of 'My Fair Lady'

Film Emigration from Nazi Germany

Dial M for Murder

Prizzi's Honor

I Confess

Key Largo

The Conspirators

Beyond the Forest

The Damned Don't Cry

All Through the Night

Rocky Mountain

Devotion

The Desert Song

Confession

Desperate Journey

Million Dollar Baby

The Voice of the Turtle

Between Two Worlds

A Stolen Life

Watch on the Rhine

House of Wax

The Invader

One from the Heart

Alice in Movieland

The Inspector General

Possessed

Land of the Pharaohs

Honeymoon for Three

The Great Mr. Nobody

Navy Blues

Humoresque

In Our Time

Nobody Lives Forever

Goodbye, My Fancy

Romance on the High Seas

My Love Came Back
Unsichtbare Gegner

Le Tunnel
