Bud S. Smith Dies: Academy Award Film Editing Nominee For
‘The Exorcist’ And ‘Flashdance’ Was 88
DEADLINE
By Bruce Haring
June 29, 2024
Smith’s death was confirmed by his wife, dialogue editor Lucy Coldsnow-Smith.
During his five decades as an editor, Smith was a two-time Academy Award nominee, scoring bids in 1975 for William Friedkin’s horror classic, The Exorcist, which Smith shared with Evan A. Lottman and Norman Gay, and in 1984 for Adrian Lyne’s Flashdance
Smith won the BAFTA award for best editing for Flashdance and a career achievement award from the American Cinema Editors in 2008.
His credits also included Putney Swope, Cruising, Sam Raimi’s Darkman, Robert Towne’s Personal Best and Poltergeist II: The Other Side.
In the 1990s, Smith was a film doctor and consultant, most often on the slate at Universal Pictures under exec Casey Silver.
Born on Dec. 6, 1935, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Smith’s first credit came in 1965 for the TV film “The Bold Men.” He was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2012.
He is survived by his wife of 33 years, Lucy.
Variety first reported his death.
SMITH, Bud (Bud S. Smith)
Born: 12/6/1935, Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
Died: 6/23/2024, Studio City, California, U.S.A.
Bud Smith’s westerns – film editor:
Dundee and the Culhane (TV) – 1967
Greaser’s Palace - 1972
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