I guess this is probably a long stretch, but thought I'd bring up the latest great classic films release by Warner Bros, their Gangster series of Public Enemy, Little Caesar, The Petrified Forest, The Roaring Twenties, Angels With Dirty Faces and White Heat... There is no straight connection to Welles in these stories, at least not that I can think of. But on at least one, there was the inclusion of some snippets that, although part of the original release, had been cut from repeated prints. Public Enemy had a few scenes shortened/cut thanks to the tougher Hays code-meisters, but they have been restored for the dvd release. It's completely different than the issue of scenes cut from The Stranger or Lady From Shanghai (I won't even mention the holy grail of lost nitrate, TMA), but I'm wondering what was the typical protocol of the studios when scenes were extracted from a director's cut -- were some studios better at preserving such film, or, mostly because of the period and value of the film stock, did they all treat it like a discarded gum wrapper? Certainly there are instances of film stock that has been re-constituted (like the terrific opening to 1930s Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde) which have been reborn with the advent of dvd. And studios certainly have discovered that classic films have a value in the new form...
Any ways, I've seen three of the Warners pics and they were stunners -- Cagney was top o' the world when it came to laying it down straight. Kind of wish that he and Welles could have worked together -- I'm thinking of the still shot from some studio lot, where Cagney and Welles in their different studio costumes, listen to clown-faced Jimmy Stewart as he takes a break from 'The Greatest Show on Earth.'
