J. Watson Webb Jr.

J. Watson Webb Jr.
President of the Shelburne Museum
In office
1960–1977
Preceded by Electra Havemeyer Webb
Personal details
Born
James Watson Webb III

January 9, 1916
Syosset, New York, U.S.
Died June 10, 2000 (aged 84)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Relations See Vanderbilt family
Parent(s) James Watson Webb II
Electra Havemeyer
Education Groton School
Alma mater Yale University
Occupation Film editor, philanthropist

James Watson Webb III (known as J. Watson Jr.) (January 9, 1916 – June 10, 2000) was an American film editor and heir to both the Havemeyer and Vanderbilt families.

Early life

He was born in Syosset, New York, to James Watson Webb II of the Vanderbilt family and Electra Havemeyer. His siblings were Electra (1910–1982), Samuel (1912–1988), Lila (1913–1961) and Harry (1922–1975).

He attended Groton School and Yale University from which he graduated in 1938.

Career

He began work in California as an apprentice film editor at 20th-Century Fox, and eventually head of the editing department. He eventually became Zanuck's head film cutter and was involved in the founding of the American Cinema Editors.

Webb was the credited editor—as "J. Watson Webb" or "J. Watson Webb Jr."—on 30 films from 1941–52 including A Letter to Three Wives, The Razor's Edge with Tyrone Power, Wing and a Prayer, State Fair, With a Song in My Heart, Call Northside 777, Broken Arrow with James Stewart and Cheaper by the Dozen.

Also among his credits, along with Three Wives (1949) starring Jeanne Crain, Linda Darnell, Ann Sothern and Kirk Douglas were The Jackpot (1950) also with Stewart and Don't Bother to Knock (1952) starring Marilyn Monroe, Richard Widmark and Anne Bancroft. Webb retired from film editing in 1952. Barbara McLean, his boss, promoted Hugh S. Fowler to replace Webb.

Shelburne Museum

Webb succeeded his mother and served as the president of the Shelburne Museum from 1960 until 1977 and then as chairman of the board of directors until 1996. Watson resigned from the board in a dispute over deaccessioning of an estimated $25-million worth of the museum's Impressionist collection which his mother had donated to the museum.

Webb gave his mother's folk art first purchase, made at the age of 18 in Stamford, Connecticut, prominent display in his California home for decades.

Personal life

He died in Los Angeles, California, on June 10, 2000. Webb never married and was survived by three nephews and six nieces.