Crew Cuts (company)

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Crew Cuts
IndustryPost-production, production, visual effects, film editing, sound design, 3D, motion graphics, finishing
Founded1986
Headquarters,
U.S.
Websitewww.crewcuts.com

Crew Cuts is a New York-based full service post-production company founded in 1986 by Chuck Willis, Clayton Hemmert, and Steve Kraftsow. Sherri Margulies joined as a partner in 1989. Crew Cuts specializes in online and offline editing, visual effects, 3D and motion graphics, audio and sound design, finishing, and aspects of production, for the commercials, shorts, features, and web distribution. The original Crew Cuts was housed in one floor of a townhouse on East 47th Street. Within seven years Crew Cuts had taken over the entire townhouse and moved to its current location, the former New Yorker magazine offices, on the top floor of 28 West 44th Street. The 44th Street space was a showpiece created by architect Peter Wormser with 360-degree views of mid-town Manhattan including 30 Rockefeller Plaza. At one time the editors of Crew Cuts scored Gold, Silver, and Bronze Lions at Cannes in one year.[citation needed] In that same year Pepsi "Boy In The Bottle" was the number 1 rated Super Bowl commercial. In 19997 Crew Cuts editor Sherri Margulies brought home a Grammy for the Beatles Free as a Bird Video and the first ever Emmy for a TV commercial, HBO Chimps, both directed by Joe Pytka. At the height of its success,[when?] Crew Cuts had offices in New York City, Santa Monica, and San Francisco with an additional award-winning effects company called Quietman helmed by Johnny Semerad and a sound studio called Buzz with partner Mike Marinelli.[citation needed] Crew Cuts clients include: Chase, Comcast, GE, Gillette, HBO, Pepsi, SAP AG, Time Warner Cable, and Verizon. Crew Cuts’ work has gained recognition ranging from the Clio Awards[1] to the Grammy Awards.[2][3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Awards, Clio (December 6, 2017). 2000 Clio Awards Annual. Rockport. ISBN 9781564968432. Retrieved December 6, 2017 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Free As A Bird" Credits
  3. ^ "Winners of the 1997 Grammy Awards". February 28, 1997. Retrieved December 6, 2017 – via NYTimes.com.

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