Oscar-winning 'Star Wars' editor Marcia Lucas dies at 80
[May 30, 2026]
By ANDREW DALTON
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Marcia Lucas, who won an Oscar as editor of the
original 1977 “Star Wars" and was part of a group of women whose editing
was essential to film's New Hollywood era, has died, a lawyer for her
family said Friday. She was 80.
Lucas, who was married to “Star Wars” creator George Lucas from 1969 to
1983, died Wednesday from metastatic cancer, attorney Deidre Von Rock
said in an email to The Associated Press. She died in Rancho Mirage,
California, surrounded by loved ones, Von Rock said.
Marcia Lucas was the editor on 1983's “Return of the Jedi” and the
pre-“Star Wars” George Lucas-directed films “THX 1138” and “American
Graffiti.”
She was also part of the editing team for director Martin Scorsese's
1970s films “Taxi Driver,” “Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore” and “New
York, New York.”
Editor was a rare senior creative position where a woman could find a
foothold in Hollywood. Marcia Lucas became one of several women whose
work in the editing chair made sense of the work of the overwhelmingly
male directors of the New Hollywood of the late 1960s through the early
1980s, including Dede Allen, editor of “Bonnie and Clyde” and “Dog Day
Afternoon”; Verna Fields, editor of “Paper Moon” and “Jaws"; and Thelma
Schoonmaker, editor of most of Scorsese's films starting with 1980's
“Raging Bull.”

Lucas was often called the unsung hero of “Star Wars,” the original film
that after sequels, prequels and spinoffs has come to be known by its
subtitle, “A New Hope.”
She convinced her then-husband that he should have Obi-Wan Kenobi,
played by Alec Guinness, die in his lightsaber battle with Darth Vader
and become a spirit guide to Mark Hamill's Luke Skywalker.
And she had to make sense of raw footage that could have been a mess in
the wrong hands, including the climactic rebel attack on the Death Star.
“It was extremely complex and we had 40,000 feet of dialogue footage of
pilots saying this and that. And she had to cull through all that, and
put in all the fighting as well,” George Lucas told Rolling Stone in an
interview a few months after the film came out. “Nobody really has ever
tried to interweave an actual plot story into a dogfight, and we were
trying to do that."
[to top of second column]
|

Marcia Lucas, wife of director George Lucas, right, carries her
Oscar statuette as they arrive at a post Academy Awards party at the
Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, April 4, 1978. (AP Photo, File)
 Lucas was born Marcia Griffin in
Modesto, California shortly after the end of World War II. She moved
to Los Angeles with her mother after her parents divorced when she
was a small child.
She began working as a film librarian and moved into working as an
editor on commercials, trailers and promotional films. She was an
assistant editor on the documentary “Journey to the Pacific” for
Fields, who also hired George Lucas, then a film student at the
University of Southern California.
The couple became engaged soon after. Their marriage would
essentially end in 1982, but they kept their divorce under wraps
until after the release of “Return of the Jedi” in 1983. Marcia
Lucas was then married to Tom Rodrigues, a production manager at the
Skywalker Ranch production center, from 1983 to 1993.
She is survived by her daughters, Amanda Lucas and Amy Soper, and
grandchildren Felix Hallikainen, Aeliana Hallikainen and Knox Soper.
"Her influence on film is indelible, but those who knew her best
will remember the way she made life feel more vivid, more beautiful,
more fun, and more full of love,” a family statement said. “Her work
was known for its emotional intelligence, rhythm, and humanity — a
rare ability to find the truth of a scene and bring heart, momentum,
and clarity to the screen.”
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |