Bill Varney dies at 77; Oscar-winning sound mixer
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Bill Varney, an Academy Award-winning sound mixer whose final film credit was a âdirectorâs editionâ of Orson Wellesâ âTouch of Evilâ that was released on the filmâs 40th anniversary, has died. He was 77.
Varney died Saturday of congestive heart failure in Fairhope, Ala., the Cinema Audio Society announced. He was the organizationâs former president.
He won back-to-back Oscars for sound on âThe Empire Strikes Backâ (1980) and âRaiders of the Lost Arkâ (1981).
In 1998, Varney was vice president of sound operations for Universal Pictures when he joined a team that re-edited the 1958 film noir classic âTouch of Evilâ based on a 58-page memo that director Welles wrote the year before the movie was released.
Welles scholars consider âTouch of Evilâ among his greatest works, but the filmmaker was removed from the picture during post-production and never allowed to cut the film the way he wanted. Welles died in 1985.
Prompted by film historians, Universal found the memo in the late 1990s that Welles had written. It detailed about 50 specific changes that he wanted to make to the film that involved continuity of cuts, music cues and improving the sound mix.
Varney led the sound restoration efforts on âTouch of Evil,â relying on âdigital processing to bring the 40-year-old soundtracks to a new level of clarity,â Walter Murch, who was a sound mixer and editor on the film, wrote in 1998 in the New York Times.
Harold William Varney was born Jan. 22, 1934, in Beverly, Mass.
One of his first film projects, in the 1950s, featured folk singer Joan Baez in a movie produced at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where her father taught physics.
In 1961, Varney moved to California to help produce educational films for Encyclopedia Britannica.
By 1972, he had begun working as a sound mixer in film and television, and over the next quarter-century, contributed to 85 projects.
He received Oscar nominations for âDuneâ (1984) and âBack to the Futureâ (1985) and an Emmy Award nomination for the landmark television series âRootsâ (1977).
His other films included âThe Last Waltzâ (1978), âGreaseâ (1978), âOrdinary Peopleâ (1980), âPoltergeistâ (1982), âMy Favorite Yearâ (1982) and âDragonheartâ (1996).
He spent 14 years at Samuel Goldwyn Co. and in 1985 joined Universal to supervise its sound operations.
In 2001, Varney retired from the studio and two years later moved with his family to Fairhope.
Away from Hollywood, he was a pilot who enjoyed boating and building train sets, his family said.
Varney is survived by his wife, Suzanne, and daughter, Lisa.
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