Mary Cybulski, a veteran script supervisor and production still photographer whose meticulous eye helped shape films from Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind to Life of Pi, has died at 70. Her team said she died on November 8 after living for four years with glioblastoma multiforme, a form of brain cancer.
Active since the 1980s, Cybulski worked on more than 40 features and earned a reputation as one of the industry’s preeminent script supervisors. Her credits span studio and independent projects, including The Ice Storm, Syriana, Michael Clayton, Be Kind Rewind, Synecdoche, New York, The Last Airbender and Life of Pi. She collaborated repeatedly with filmmakers such as Ang Lee, Charlie Kaufman, Stephen Frears, Jodie Foster, Jane Campion, M. Night Shyamalan, Tony Gilroy, Nancy Savoca and John Sayles, often joining them across multiple films as a trusted guardian of continuity and story.
Cybulski was also a prominent advocate for her craft. In 2014 she published Beyond Continuity: Script Supervision for the Modern Filmmaker, a handbook that has since become widely used by aspiring script supervisors. “Our specialty is storytelling. It is our job to understand the bones and the spirit of the story,” she once said, describing the role as carrying “a living, growing movie” in one’s imagination. Charlie Kaufman, who worked with her on Eternal Sunshine and Synecdoche, New York, recalled that on the latter’s labyrinthine set she drew an intricate map of its “warehouses within warehouses” to keep track of the action, later recreating it on a T-shirt as a parting gift.
Around 2010, Cybulski shifted her primary focus to unit still photography while continuing to collaborate with many of the same directors. Her production images on projects for Lee, Martin Scorsese, Judd Apatow, Todd Haynes, Terrence Malick, Jim Jarmusch and Steven Soderbergh were praised for capturing not only composition but atmosphere; Lee said she “snapped the soul of the production.”
Born in the mid-1950s, Cybulski began making films while studying at the University of Michigan, where she met editor and filmmaker John Tintori, later her husband and a longtime NYU film professor. The pair co-directed and co-edited the 1997 ensemble drama Chicago Cab. Their son, Ray Tintori, is a filmmaker and music video director associated with the collective behind Beasts of the Southern Wild, and their daughter, Sophie Tintori, is a molecular biologist and professor. Colleagues and students have been paying tribute to Cybulski as a generous mentor whose precision, calm and imagination helped generations of directors bring complex stories to the screen.


















































