From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victoria Mercanton in 1989

Victoria Mercanton, or Victoria Spiri-Mercanton [1] (1911–2007), was a French film editor and director, born Viktoria Aleksandrovna Pozner ( Russian: Виктория Александровна Познер) on 25 January [ O.S. 12 January] 1911, in Saint Petersburg, Russia, [2] active from the 1930s to 1970s. [3]

Known as Toto, she was a frequent collaborator on the films of Roger Vadim since his directorial debut in 1956 with And God Created Woman.

After surviving a couple of disastrous fires of nitrate film in the editing suite - including one which claimed the life of a director sitting next to her - Mercanton successfully lobbied the government to legislate that the French film industry switch to safety film by the mid-1950s. She flippantly explained to Vadim, "You understand, I wanted to be able to smoke my Gauloises while working." [4]

Family

Daughter of Russian Jews Aleksandr and Elizaveta Pozner. Her family fled Soviet Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution.

References

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victoria Mercanton in 1989

Victoria Mercanton, or Victoria Spiri-Mercanton [1] (1911–2007), was a French film editor and director, born Viktoria Aleksandrovna Pozner ( Russian: Виктория Александровна Познер) on 25 January [ O.S. 12 January] 1911, in Saint Petersburg, Russia, [2] active from the 1930s to 1970s. [3]

Known as Toto, she was a frequent collaborator on the films of Roger Vadim since his directorial debut in 1956 with And God Created Woman.

After surviving a couple of disastrous fires of nitrate film in the editing suite - including one which claimed the life of a director sitting next to her - Mercanton successfully lobbied the government to legislate that the French film industry switch to safety film by the mid-1950s. She flippantly explained to Vadim, "You understand, I wanted to be able to smoke my Gauloises while working." [4]

Family

Daughter of Russian Jews Aleksandr and Elizaveta Pozner. Her family fled Soviet Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution.

References

External links



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