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Dann Cahn
Dann Cahn
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Daniel Richard "Dann" Cahn (April 9, 1923 – November 21, 2012) was an American film editor who received the Career Achievement Award from the American Cinema Editors (ACE). Cahn was best known as the head editor of the TV series, I Love Lucy and for his work as the head of post-production of Desilu Playhouse. Cahn would also go on to edit several more movies and TV series such as The Beverly Hillbillies. Cahn worked with Orson Welles, Russ Meyer and others.

Key Information

Early life

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Cahn was born and raised in Hollywood. His parents were Philip and Gertrude (Barsha) Cahn. Some members of the Cahn family were already in the film business at the time Danny Cahn was born. His family (his grandparents and his father, a baby at the time) had migrated from Poland and Russia to Philadelphia, before settling in New York on the lower east side of Manhattan.[2]

The Cahn family would later move to Hollywood, where his uncle Edward L. "Eddy" Cahn had managed to join the film business in 1913. Eddy Cahn worked first as a prop man and then later moved up to become one of the top film editors at Universal Studios.[2]

Dann Cahn's father, Philip Cahn, tried ranching in North Hollywood on a 2-acre (0.81 ha) piece of property that he bought with proceeds he had saved and money earned from his wife Gertrude's dress shop ("Gertrude's" on Hollywood Boulevard). The ranch property was located at the junction of Vineland and Aqua Vista in North Hollywood next to the Los Angeles River. His father purchased 2,500 baby chicks. But one night the electricity gave out and the incubators went cold. The baby chicks didn't make it. Soon after, Philip Cahn would also join his brother in the film business as a film editor. Dann Cahn's father Philip edited Imitation of Life with Claudette Colbert.[2]

With an uncle and father in the film business, young Danny Cahn grew up in Hollywood and would hang around his father's sets prior to World War II. Dann also got the itch to work on movies. Fascinated by the Dead End Kids pictures that were popular at the time and having acted in a few high school plays, young Danny Cahn thought he might like to become an actor. Cahn got his SAG card and worked on bit parts in several B-movies before deciding that most actors were starving and that he wanted a "real paying gig".[2]

During World War II, Dann Cahn was among the hundreds of actors, directors, producers, writers, editors, cameramen, makeup artists and even musicians enlisted in the armed services who found themselves stationed not in the European front or the Pacific theater, but at the old Hal Roach Studios in Culver City. As members of the First Motion Picture Unit, these soldiers contributed to the war effort by making more than 400 training films and documentaries.[3]

Of making films for the military, Cahn said, "I was an editor in the unit and two of us were sent to the Pentagon for a year and we made newsreels. We were all in for 3½ years, and most of us got a world of experience."[3]

Cahn is the middle part of one of the only three-generation families in ACE editing history. His father, Philip Cahn, had a long career at Universal, mainly cutting Abbott and Costello comedies. His son, Danny Cahn Jr., ACE, is also picture editor on features and TV series,[4] and was elected president of the Motion Picture Editor's Guild at the beginning of 2011.[5]

Career highlights

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Dann Cahn started out working in a film library and then later moved up as an assistant editor on motion pictures. His first job in television came in 1949, the Lucky Strike Showtime. Most notably, Cahn worked at Desilu on the TV series, I Love Lucy. Cahn also edited The Untouchables, and The Loretta Young Show. Dann Cahn also worked at Glenn Larson Productions as head of post production.[6]

I Love Lucy was the first sitcom to shoot with three cameras and ship in 35 mm instead of kinescopes. Cahn was one of the first editors to master cutting on a film Moviola with four heads (three for picture and one for sound).[4] Cahn's work on I Love Lucy is featured in the Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Center in Jamestown, New York, which has an exhibit including his "three-headed monster" editing machine.

At Desilu Studios, Cahn mentored several I Love Lucy team members, editors Gary Freund and Ted Rich both started as his apprentices. His other apprentices included Bud Molin and a fourth, "the one I had to nurse the longest..." Cahn said, "that was Michael Kahn, ACE, and he is now the number one editor in town, doing all of Steven Spielberg's shows."[4]

Cahn would go on to work with several notable feature film directors, including Orson Welles (Fountain of Youth) and the notorious Russ Meyer (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls). Cahn would also direct at least one episode of the classic TV series, Leave It to Beaver and would also produce and/or direct several other films or television shows.

Personal life

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In 1953, Cahn married former pro golfer Judy Cahn (1929–2010).[7] They had two children. His son Daniel T. Cahn is also an editor.[8][9] His daughter Dana died 1973 in a car accident.[10]

Cahn's hobby was collecting exotic birds.

Death

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Cahn died of natural causes at his West Los Angeles home on November 21, 2012, at the age of 89. His remains were interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.[11][failed verification][9]

Selected filmography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dann Cahn is an American film editor known for his pioneering contributions to television post-production, most notably as the supervising editor on the groundbreaking sitcom I Love Lucy, where he helped establish techniques for editing multi-camera filmed television. He nicknamed the "three-headed monster," a modified Moviola with four heads (three for picture and one for sound) to handle the simultaneous editing of footage and soundtracks from three-camera shoots in front of a live audience, an innovation that became essential to the production of I Love Lucy and influenced subsequent sitcom formats. Born Daniel Richard Cahn on April 9, 1923, in Los Angeles, California, into a family of film editors—his father Philip Cahn co-founded what is now the Motion Picture Editors Guild—Cahn grew up in Hollywood and began his career early, appearing as a child actor in B-movies, working as a mailroom clerk on studio lots, and later serving as an apprentice and assistant editor on feature films. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army Air Forces' First Motion Picture Unit at Hal Roach Studios, editing training films and combat newsreels, before returning to civilian editing work that bridged classic Hollywood features and the emerging medium of television. Cahn joined Desilu Productions in the early 1950s and became the principal editor on I Love Lucy from 1951 to 1957, overseeing post-production on many of its most memorable episodes and helping integrate film editing rhythms into the new format of filmed television comedy. He later served as supervising editor for other Desilu series including Our Miss Brooks and The Untouchables, and his career continued with editing and supervisory roles on numerous television programs such as The Beverly Hillbillies, Police Woman, and various TV movies. In recognition of his extensive influence on the profession, Cahn received the Career Achievement Award from the American Cinema Editors. He died on November 21, 2012, at age 89 in West Los Angeles, remembered as the last surviving member of the original I Love Lucy creative team.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Daniel Richard Cahn was born on April 9, 1923, in Los Angeles, California, and grew up in Hollywood during the 1920s and 1930s. His father, Philip Cahn, was a film editor at Universal Studios who co-founded the Motion Picture Editors Guild in 1937, while his mother ran a dress shop on Hollywood Boulevard catering to silent movie stars. Cahn's uncle, Edward L. Cahn, was a director who had also worked as an editor at Universal, contributing to the family's deep roots in the film industry across multiple generations. As a child, Cahn spent significant time on the Universal lot, observing his father at work in the editing room and gaining early exposure to filmmaking processes. This included watching the handling of nitrate film, which editors would burn to recover silver from the emulsion, a common practice in the era of silent and early sound films. The family initially lived near Universal after Philip Cahn's brief attempt at raising chickens on nearby property failed due to a power outage, prompting his full-time shift to studio work in the 1930s. During the Great Depression, Cahn experienced the economic hardships of 1930s Hollywood while immersed in its film culture, with the industry providing the family's livelihood amid broader challenges. He briefly worked as a child actor in B-movies, including a role in the 1938 film Newsboys' Home starring Jackie Cooper, and later held a job in the Universal mail room before transitioning to behind-the-scenes roles. This early exposure laid the foundation for his lifelong involvement in editing, continuing a family tradition that extended to his son Daniel T. Cahn.

World War II service

Dann Cahn served in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II as a member of the First Motion Picture Unit (FMPU), also known as the 18th Army Air Force Base Unit, stationed at "Fort Roach"—the former Hal Roach Studios in Culver City, California, which had been taken over for military film production. He enlisted at age 19 and served for 3½ years, primarily working as an editor on training films that supported the war effort. Cahn and another editor were later assigned to the Pentagon for one year, where they edited combat footage into newsreels. During his service he met actress Marlene Dietrich. This extended wartime assignment in film production honed his editing skills and provided substantial practical experience, effectively bridging his family's early influence in the field and his postwar career as a professional editor.

Career

Early film editing

Dann Cahn's early career in film editing was influenced by his family's deep roots in the industry, particularly his father Philip Cahn, a longtime editor at Universal Pictures. He began as an apprentice at Universal Studios in 1941 and assisted his father on the 1942 film Arabian Nights. He also worked as an uncredited assistant editor on the Paramount Pictures feature Pittsburgh (1942). After serving in World War II, Cahn returned to professional editing and took on assistant editor roles. He worked as an assistant editor on Orson Welles' Macbeth (1948), a feature produced by Republic Pictures. In 1949, Cahn received his first full editing credits on the NBC anthology series Your Show Time. He edited episodes including "The Necklace," which received an Emmy Award at the inaugural ceremony in 1949 for outstanding filmed program. This marked his initial foray into credited editing work before his more extensive television contributions.

Transition to television

Dann Cahn transitioned to television editing in 1949 when producer Stanley Rubin, a friend from his wartime service, gave him his first full editing role on the filmed anthology series Your Show Time for NBC. The series adapted classic short stories into dramatic episodes and stood out as filmed programming during an era when most television was broadcast live, presenting unique opportunities and challenges for editors accustomed to feature films. He edited episodes including "The Invisible Wound," the first he handled for the show, and "The Necklace," an adaptation of Guy de Maupassant's story starring Eva Gabor, which earned an Emmy Award in the inaugural ceremony for the program's outstanding achievement. Working on the anthology format required adapting to self-contained narratives with distinct tones and pacing per episode, while the filmed process enabled precise post-production assembly—unlike live television, which offered no chance for retakes or editing.

I Love Lucy and editing innovations

Dann Cahn joined the production of I Love Lucy in 1951, at the recommendation of director William Asher to producer Jess Oppenheimer, shortly after editing the film The Lady Says No. He initially served as the primary editor for the series' early episodes from 1951 to 1952, handling 33 episodes, before transitioning to editorial supervisor for an additional 106 episodes through the show's conclusion in 1957. In this role, Cahn became a key figure in pioneering post-production techniques for multi-camera television sitcoms filmed on 35mm film in front of a live audience, a format that allowed episodes to be shot continuously like a stage play rather than relying on kinescopes. To manage the large volume of footage from the three-camera setup, Cahn adopted and helped popularize a custom Moviola editing machine with four heads—three for picture and one for sound—nicknamed the "three-headed monster" after he remarked on its imposing size upon its arrival. This device enabled simultaneous viewing and cutting of all three camera angles plus the soundtrack, streamlining the editing process under the show's demanding schedule of overnight dailies and rapid turnarounds. Cahn addressed early synchronization problems caused by imperfect alignment in the multi-camera flashes by having a giant wooden clapper constructed to cover all three cameras at once, a practical solution that improved sync accuracy. He also oversaw the show's shift from optical to magnetic sound in the second season, which enhanced audio quality but required adjustments to how sound was read and integrated during editing. Cahn collaborated closely with producer Jess Oppenheimer, director William Asher, cinematographer Karl Freund, Desi Arnaz, and Lucille Ball to refine the editing rhythms that matched the series' comedic timing and innovative production style. His cut of the first episode earned immediate praise from Lucille Ball, who placed her hands on his shoulders and declared it a good job, boosting confidence in the show's potential. These techniques supported iconic sequences across the series, including the frantic candy factory conveyor belt in "Job Switching," the precise comedic timing of the Vitameatavegamin commercial in "Lucy Does a TV Commercial," and the integration of Lucille Ball's real-life pregnancy and the birth of Little Ricky into the ongoing storyline. Cahn departed the series in 1957 following the exit of Jess Oppenheimer, having played a central role in establishing editing standards for filmed multi-camera television.

Desilu Productions and supervising roles

Cahn advanced to the position of supervising editor of all productions at Desilu Productions, the company owned by Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, where he led the editing department and oversaw post-production on a broad slate of television series. His responsibilities included supervising the editing of notable shows such as the 1950s sitcom Our Miss Brooks and the crime drama The Untouchables, which originated from its pilot episode on Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse. He also served as editorial supervisor on other Desilu series including Whirlybirds, The Real McCoys, and additional programs produced during the company's expansion. Cahn contributed to Orson Welles' television pilot The Fountain of Youth (1958), produced by Desilu, where he served as editorial supervisor and editor, highlighting the project's innovative special effects achieved through optical printing techniques ahead of their time. His supervisory role extended to mentoring numerous editors who advanced in the industry, with his son noting that Cahn was "a Type A who mentored a lot of people." Cahn remained in this capacity at Desilu until Desi Arnaz's departure in the early 1960s.

Later career

In his later career, Dann Cahn continued working as an editor and supervising editor across television series and feature films through the 1970s and 1980s. He edited the television series Police Woman and The Fall Guy, extending his expertise in television post-production beyond his Desilu tenure. His feature film work during this period included editing Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970) and Zero to Sixty (1978). Cahn also contributed to numerous made-for-television movies and other projects, maintaining an active role in the industry. In subsequent decades, he took on supervising or leadership positions in post-production and occasionally directed episodes of television series. He served as head of post-production at Glen Larson Productions, where he oversaw various programs. Cahn reunited with Desi Arnaz on projects such as Land’s End and The Mothers-In-Law. His credits extended to shows including Man from Atlantis (editing 17 episodes), the pilot for Remington Steele, My Sister Sam, Love Boat: The Next Wave, and the Emmy-nominated pilot for DEA (1990). He also consulted on I Love Lucy's 50th Anniversary Special in 2001.

Personal life

Awards and recognition

Death

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