Pasquale Buba

Pasquale A. "Pat" Buba (April 16, 1946 – September 12, 2018)[1] was an American film editor, noted for his longtime collaboration with George A. Romero.

Life

Pasquale Buba was born in 1946 as the second child of Edward Buba (d. 1997) and Angeline Buba (née Gentile; 1921–2017).[2] His mother, who was born in the Italian city of Tursi, came to the United States in 1929.[2] Buba grew up in Braddock, Pennsylvania, together with his older brother Anthony "Tony" Buba (born 1944).[2]

Buba started to work as a sound engineer and editor in the early 1970s for Pittsburgh’s WQED.[3] Together with John Harrison and Dusty Nelson he founded the small Pittsburgh-based production company BuDuDa in 1973.[3] The company, which was later renamed to The Image Works, produced commercial and industrial films.[3]

He later met George A. Romero and had two short appearances in his films: as drug dealer in Martin and as biker in Dawn of the Dead. For Romero's next film Knightriders Buba supported Romero during the editing of the film, which Romero had done alone on all of his previous films. In 1985 Buba edited Romero's Day of the Dead. Both continued to work on films such as Monkey Shines, Two Evil Eyes and The Dark Half.

In 1995 Buba together with William Goldenberg, Dov Hoenig and Tom Rolf edited Michael Mann's film Heat, starring Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Afterwards Buba was one of the editors for Pacino's directional debut Looking for Richard. Buba worked again with Pacino in 2000 for Chinese Coffee, in 2011 for Wilde Salomé and 2013 for Salomé.

Pasquale Buba was a member of American Cinema Editors.[4]

He was married to production manager Zilla Clinton Buba until his death in 2018.

Selected filmography

Film editing

Acting

Producer

References

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