Marcia Lucas, the Academy Award-winning editor whose work helped shape the original Star Wars into one of cinema’s most enduring adventures, has died at the age of 80. According to the Associated Press, Lucas died in Rancho Mirage, California, after metastatic cancer. For Star Wars history, her name belongs among the essential behind-the-scenes artists who helped turn George Lucas’ space fantasy into something mythic, emotional, funny, fast, and deeply human. She was often introduced through her marriage to George Lucas, but that has never been the full story. Marcia Lucas was one of the key creative forces in the editing room where Star Wars found its rhythm, its tension, and, in many ways, its soul. The Editor Who Helped Shape Star Wars Marcia Lucas won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for the original 1977 Star Wars, sharing the Oscar with Paul Hirsch and Richard Chew. That credit matters…
Marcia Lucas
Anthony Daniels Reflects on Star Wars Legacy in Nearly 3-Hour Icons Unearthed Interview
The Nacelle Company has dropped something special for Star Wars fans who love going deep into the saga’s behind-the-scenes history: a nearly three-hour interview with C-3PO actor Anthony Daniels as part of the Icons Unearthed series. If you’ve ever wanted the long, unfiltered version of Daniels talking about life inside the golden armor, the evolution of Star Wars, and what it’s like being the galaxy’s most talkative protocol droid for nearly five decades… this is it. A Massive Deep Dive Into Anthony Daniels’ Star Wars Legacy The full-length interview runs at just under three hours and offers a rare, extended look at Daniels reflecting on his time across the entire Star Wars timeline—from the original trilogy to modern Disney-era productions. Daniels is one of the few actors to appear in every single mainline Star Wars saga film, making him a living archive of behind-the-scenes stories, production chaos, and creative evolution….