Nov 29, 2014

Charles Tepperman follow-ups: Follow the leader, FOLLOW THE GIRLS, Follow O'Farrell

Guest blogger notes by Charles Tepperman, commenting on the previous posts here about our Orphans at MoMA program of November 18th, "An Amateur Cinema League of Nations." [Asides added by Dan Streible.]


Re: The Amateur Cinema League leaders: I love this section of the previous post. I have some other versions of ACL leaders. While I’m tracking down my 1930s examples to see if the one you describe is there, here’s a down payment, one from the mid-40s. [Watch here, from Chicago Film Archives.]

Kodachrome 8mm animated logo  from Autumn Glory (1945; 20 seconds). (Chicago Film Archives)

Autumn Glory (1945)
John and Evelyn Kibar, silent, color, 8mm, 150 ft., 7'
(A companion 1/4"-inch audiotape not yet digitized.)

[Movie Makers attributed the film to "John R. Kibar, ACL of Racine, Wisc." and gave it one of ten Honorable Mentions (the only 8mm film on the list). One of the amateur organizations the Kibars belonged to was the delightfully named Ra-Ciné Club. CFA's website includes other Kibar films, such as This Is a Hobby?  (Evelyn M. Kibar, ca. 1958), a comedy about amateur movie making.]

The Kibars on screen. Frames from This Is a Hobby?  (Chicago Film Archives)
[CFA says the husband and wife "shot and starred in their own productions (Evelyn’s screen presence as the annoyed wife has delighted us for years now). . . . They began making films together in the 1930s, and were frequent visitors, presenters, judges and winners in both photographic slide and film competitions in Chicago and Milwaukee." From "Celebrating International Women's Day (all year round) at CFA," March 8, 2013.]


The Theisen [Triptych Poem] mystery is fascinating. My cursory search shows that Earl Theisen wrote occasionally for Movie Makers, mostly in the late-1930s. In 1936 and 37 he wrote a handful of articles about rudimentary film special effects (rear project, glass shots, trick shots) and one called “How Movie Tools Developed” (from 1640-1926!) in December 1936. This to reinforce your observations about his interest in technology. I’ll keep my eyes peeled for more clues about this. . . .

It might interest other orphanistas to know more about the volume my Leslie Thatcher essay is in. Cinephemera (just out this month) is very much in the spirit of the orphans project.
Order from McGill-Queen's University Press
http://www.mqup.ca/cinephemera-products-9780773544475.php?page_id=46&
It includes a chapter about Crawley Films (dedicated to Bill O’Farrell, no less), travel films, and other Canadian film oddities. Bill O’Farrell used to say that Canada’s film history isn’t a story of commercial feature filmmaking, it’s a story of sponsored, amateur, and independent production. Cinephemera explores different facets of that story.

[Along with editors Zoë Druick and Gerda Cammaer, film scholars Joseph Clark and JoAnne Stober created the website Cinepherma.ca "to create awareness of orphan media and to excavate, preserve, and contextualize a variety of alternative, non-theatrical, obscure or obsolete forms of Canada’s audio-visual heritage." All four have participated in past Orphan Film Symposium gatherings. The site's answer to the question "What is an Orphan Film?" is here.

For more about O'Farrell's contributions to the scholarship and preservation of amateur film, see "Tributes to Bill O'Farrell," The Moving Image (Spring 2009). It includes Tepperman's remarks about his mentor, as well as this illustration and caption.

Bill O’Farrell (in plaid shirt) with Eric Schaefer, Jim Henderson, and Tricia Welsch to his right, and Alan Kattelle and Kathryn Fuller-Seeley to his left, in Bucksport, Maine, at the 2000 NHF Summer Film Symposium. Bill holds the orb given to recipients of the Maxim Memorial Award for amateur movie makers. Courtesy of NHF. 
Karan Sheldon notes the "hefty spherical trophy" in O'Farrell's hand is the one that Judith and F. R. "Budge" Crawley of Ottawa received in the 1939 Ten Best contest for their film L’Ile d’Orleans. As Tepperman notes in his new book, the ACL created the award in 1937 to recognize the best film among the Ten Best.]



The Follow the Girls/Oscar Horovitz story is terrific and keeps on getting better. I managed to visit the NYPL Library for Performing Arts to watch the video before I headed home to Calgary. The film is colourful and engaging, but a little unusual for a Ten Best award-winner. The film begins with a quasi-educational voice-over commentary that defines and explains the cultural significance of the American musical comedy. Then, after introducing the stars it presents excerpts from the musical itself. The film doesn’t foreground any narrative structure (for one who doesn’t know the musical at least) but shows a series of scenes of solo and ensemble performance, singing and dancing.

Some features that are striking: Horovitz shoots from very good positions (a box or the orchestra pit) and distances, and cuts from wide shots to surprising close views of the singers and dancers. The colour values and lighting in the film are excellent and it’s clear that he only included the best material (something amateur guides were always harping on). Surprising: because of the technological limitations, the non-synch “music on disc” sound track doesn’t match up with the musical numbers we’re watching (I’m not even sure if they’re all from FTG!), which makes it a strange kind of record of the stage performances. But Horovitz manages to match the mood and tempo of the images with the songs on his sound track very well.

The Movie Makers citation for the film notes that plenty of amateurs make films of stage productions or other performances, but what sets Follow the Girls apart is “its sure sense of cinematics.” And it's true that the film’s cinematography and editing are what make it engaging. 




The Gift to Mother story is also a good one. From Melinda Stone to me to Maria, it’s great that this film eventually fell into the right hands. 




-- Charles Tepperman, author of
Amateur Cinema: The Rise of North American Moviemaking, 1923-1960

Nov 26, 2014

More about an Amateur Cinema League of Nations

Here are expanded notes and new research on the films presented on November 18.





Orphans at MoMA:
An Amateur Cinema League of Nations
November 18, 2014 • 6:30pm •
Museum of Modern Art • Titus Theater 2

Inaugurating a new annual collaboration between the Museum of Modern Art’s To Save and Project Festival of Film Preservation and the Orphan Film Symposium at NYU.

Program by Marissa Hicks-Alcaraz, Dan Streible, and Katie Trainor

Music by Stephen Horne

David Weiss (Northeast Historic Film)
Scarf Dance (Hiram Percy Maxim, 1930) 2'
Up the Moose River in 1928  (Maxim, 1928) 16mm excerpt, 5'
Poem of Montclair (Olin Potter Geer, 1933) 34’
→   Two pieces from the man who founded the Amateur Cinema League in 1926, plus the premiere of the 2K scan of a day-in-the-life film by an ACL enthusiast from Montclair, New Jersey. Geer wrote about the making of his poem in Movie Makers magazine.

Dan Streible (NYU Orphan Film Symposium)
Unidentified Theisen No. 1: [Triptych Poem] (maker/s unknown, 1926) 4’
35mm print from the Library of Congress
→   Before the Polyvision triple-screen in Napoléon vu par Abel Gance (1927), unidentified filmmakers made this widescreen experiment. Based on the poem by Thomas Bailey Aldrich, first published as "Voices and Visions" (1893), and subsequently as “In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea” (1896 and thereafter).

Charles Tepperman (University of Calgary)
Another Day (Leslie P. Thatcher, 1934) 10’
→   A founder of the Toronto Amateur Film Club earned one of his three Ten Best awards from the ACL’s Movie Makers magazine for this city sinfonietta. Thanks to Josephine Black (Toronto Film and Video Club); Archives of Ontario; John Gledhill at Bit Works, Inc.; and Peter Oleksik (MoMA).  DCP premiere.

Kimberly Tarr (NYU Libraries)
The Abbakadabba Coopno (Robbins Barstow, 1941) silent, color and b/w, 15’
with music track by Bruce Ramsey added in 2006
“The Newark Kid-Stars in Their Real-Life Drama of Christian Farm Work”
→   Premiere of new 16mm print.  Preserved by NYU Libraries (Nancy Cricco, Janet Bunde, and Paula De Stefano) with a National Film Preservation Foundation grant. Thanks to the Barstow family.  
                                  
Maria Vinogradova (NYU Cinema Studies)
Na odnoi zemle (On the Same Earth, 1976) 10’
Author: Vladimir Medvedev, People’s Film Studio of the House of Culture of Professional Technical Schools of Leningrad (DK Proftekhobrazovania). Script by Boris Goller.
→   A Soviet dance ensemble boards the ship Mikhail Kalinin in Leningrad and travels to Montreal, at the time when traveling abroad was akin to flying to the moon. Digital copy from the director’s 35mm print.


Above is the text handed out to the audience at the MoMA screening on November 18. Below is a multimedia elaboration of it.


Four alumni of NYU’s Moving Image Archiving and Preservation master's program hatched this idea. Walter Forsberg (now at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture), Kathleen Maguire (The Exploratorium),  Jonah Volk (NYPL), and Kim Tarr wanted to gather previously unknown amateur films, works of aesthetic distinction, and curate a DVD or website. That reactivated my desire to track down the many missing works on the filmography of the Amateur Cinema League’s annual Ten Best list. You can find the complete filmography here: Alan D. Kattelle, “The Amateur Cinema League and Its Films,” Film History 15.2 (2003): 238-51. The list extends the ACL's Ten Best (1930-54) to include the American International Film [& Video] Festival's continuation of the awards through 1994. NYU students Dan Erdman and Kathryn Gronsbell added to the research in 2013. Marissa Hicks-Alcaraz worked on this MoMA program over the last several months.
Movie Makers (Nov. 1930), 716.

Others have been searching too, including the founders of the Center for Home Movies (Katie Trainor, among them) and most recently and actively Charles Tepperman. He has organized the workshop "Mapping an Alternative Film History: Towards an Amateur Movie Database" for the 2015 Society of Cinema and Media Studies conference in Montreal, with Karan Sheldon (NHF), Nancy Watrous (Chicago Film Archives), Dwight Swanson (Center for Home Movies), and myself (Dan Streible, NYU) participating.


Finding small-gauge film prints these days means getting them copied into a viewable format. Ideally, preserved on film stock, but more realistically, scanned or transferred to digital video. Thanks to the community of archives, libraries, scholars, collectors, artists, and lab experts who constitute the orphan film movement, we are getting high-resolution digital access copies of these rarities. Preservation and access work for these films was done by Colorlab (film-to-film preservation and 16mm print of The Abbakadabba Coopno), the Library of Congress (35mm film preservation and print, plus HD backup of [Triptych Poem]), Bit Works of Toronto (HD digitization of 16mm print of Another Day), MoMA (Peter Oleksik made a DCP of Another Day for this program), and Net-Film of Moscow (HD digitization of 35mm print of On the Same Earth). Northeast Historic Film did in-house 2k scanning of Poem of Montclair. As the keeper of the Toronto Film and Video Club collection, the Archives of Ontario will be the repository for Another Day


The original idea was to find “city symphony” films, the genre in which avant-garde and amateur aesthetics often intersected. However, as this MoMA program came together, it was clear that we wanted to celebrate the Amateur Cinema League and amateur film culture generally, and to point to its history of internationalism. The Ten Best filmography includes work made all over the world. Even its first year, we find an entry from "Siam" (Condasai, 1930, by Nai B. Juangbhanich of Bangkok). Later films came from Europe, Latin America, Asia, Africa, Australia, as well as North America. As it's logo proclaimed, the ACL was truly a "world wide organization of amateur movie makers." The tone of much amateur cinema discourse, from then to now, has a utopian ring. That utopian chord resonates throughout the work of the cine-poets, storytellers, entertainers, and documentarians who made up an imagined “Amateur Cinema League of Nations.”


Movie Makers (Nov. 1930), 724.







Curator Josh Siegel invited Katie Trainor and me to organize an orphan film / amateur film screening as part of the 12th To Save and Project: The MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation. And he was generous in announcing this as an annual collaboration with the Orphan Film Symposium. Since home movies and amateur films have always been a core part of the symposium, it was a good match.

Playing in the theater before showtime was a looping slide and video projection, with samples of some Amateur Cinema League animated leaders, plus images and text about the ACL, Movie Makers magazine, and our filmmakers.
Among the pre-show slides.

Here's one of the ACL animated logos (ca. 1931), as posted by the Center for Home Movies, in a state of decomposition.

Above: As found in the home movie collection of James A. Mahoney Jr.



Above: Joe Gardner at NHF scanned the 16mm print of Poem of Montclair. It begins with these two ACL leaders joined together.



This ACL leader design appears in the home movies of Gertrude and Philip Medicus. Taken from Little Journeys to Niagara Falls and Canada, August 1931, Prelinger Archives, archive.org.

Nearly as soon as the ACL incorporated, it sold "leaders." An ad in October 1929 Movie Makers reads: "SPLICE IN . . . The finishing touch to an attractive reel is added by one of these fourteen foot animated Amateur Cinema League Leaders. They are so designed that they can be divided and one half used for the leader and the second half for a trailer" (672). They sold for a dollar (14 feet of 16mm film); three dollars for 35 feet of 35mm film. By the early 1930s, the League was selling 9.5 and 8mm versions.

Movie Makers (May 1933), 215.
In April 1936, Movie Makers celebrated an advanced edition of the ACL's "cinematic badge of membership." "The new League leader is full of modern cine tricks different from those that have been used before. It contains iris wipeoffs, beautiful effects produced on an optical printer, 'zoom' shots, animation, double exposure and many other tricks." We can hope that a copy of this whiz-bang version is rediscovered!



David Weiss, co-founder and executive director of Northeast Historic Film in Bucksport, Maine, introduced two pieces from the Hiram Percy Maxim Collection, which includes more than 25,000 feet of 16mm film (with more on the way).

Scarf Dance (Hiram Percy Maxim, 1930) silent, b/w, 16mm, 2'. This web video samples other amateur pieces not on the MoMA program, such as a minute from Boothbay Harbor (O. P. Geer, 1938) silent, color, 16mm.

6.2 Scarf Dance from Northeast Historic Film on Vimeo.

The people on screen in Scarf Dance are Maxim's wife Josephine and daughter Percy (born 1906). (Of biographical note, Josephine Hamilton Maxim was the daughter of the former governor of Maryland; Percy Maxim Lee became president of the League of Women Voters.)

The assigned title Up the Moose River in 1928 is taken from an intertitle that appears in reel #21 of the Maxim home movie collection. Some five minutes of the 350 feet of film were screened from the silent, black-and-white 16mm print (accompanied by Stephen Horne). The scenes depict a trip to and activities at a camp on an island in Moosehead Lake, Maine.  Maxim and his daughter are seen with Henry Holden. The subsequent intertitles read "At the Head of Attean Lake Is the First Carry," "Henry Holden Guided us in 1928," "Holeb Falls Cabin where we lived for a week," "Our garbage disposal system" (she throws food scraps into the woods), and "A long trip up stream without guide."

Olin Potter Geer ("a lawyer by day and film editor at night," he says of himself in an intertitle) wrote about the making of Poem of Montclair in “Suburban Scenario,” Movie Makers (September 1933). The O. P. Geer home movies come from NHF's Blanche Geer, PhD Collection, named for the filmmaker's daughter. 7,000 feet of silent, black-and-white 16mm reversal film on 22 reels, shot from 1930 to 1945. The archive scanned the 4 reels that made up Poem of Montclair to make this re-premiere screening possible. It's likely that the movie had not been seen in some 75 years.

The NHF catalog descriptive notes read:
'Life in a commuter's family from day to midnight.' Horse and buggy approaching. Milk truck, paperboy, man shaving. Percolating coffee, woman cooking eggs. Man reading morning paper, chauffeur to school. Police officer controlling traffic. New York ferries, skyline. Bank teller through bars, market. Grocer brings bag to Geer's car. 'The hours spent in New York are another story, so back to Montclair.' Armory Horse Show. 'The Night Before Christmas' 1932. Stocking, tree, presents. Family dinner, African American household servant. Winter exterior shots. Outdoor, dog, various activities. '2 p.m. Saturday at the Montclair Club.' golf. 'Radio celebrities I have interviewed' with radio. Woman typing. Two couples playing bridge. Drinks. Geer operates splicer. Sets up projector. 
That reflexive moment at the end is just one of the playful cinematic touches. Throughout the narrative Geer uses the kinds of camera tricks amateur enthusiasts often brought to their work, particularly slow motion and reverse motion sequences. His opening and closing titles were made by filming the letters, made of wax, melting.

Stephen Horne accompanied the screening on piano and accordion.

The elegantly designed Movie Makers cover.  O. P. Geer splicing (frame from Poem of Montclair).



Unidentified Theisen No. 1: [Triptych Poem] (unknown maker/s, 1926) b/w, 35mm, 425 feet, 4:44 at 24 fps
Accompanied live by Stephen Horne, with an improvised score using piano and flute.

The brackets around the title [Triptych Poem] are important to keep in mind. They remind us that it is simply a descriptive title assigned by a cataloger at the Library of Congress, circa 2001. Initially LOC also cataloged it as Unidentified Academy No. 01. The film print bears no on-screen title and there is no known reference to the movie's existence until it showed up in the collection of miscellaneous nitrate prints that Earl Theisen donated to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.



This YouTube version was uploaded in 2010 by GoldenSilents (who seems to be associated with Larry Smith, aka larry41onebay, who works with nitrate film at the Library of Congress). This is in fact the version created for the Unseen Cinema DVD in 2005. It includes an added piano soundtrack (music of Edvard Grieg, "Norwegian Dances" [1880] and "Lyric Pieces"), an epigraph from Kevin Brownlow, a new assigned title In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea, and credits dating the film as ca. 1924-25.

Larry Smith's YouTube annotation documents the eureka moment at the LOC Motion Picture Conservation Center in Dayton, Ohio.
I remember the day this forgotten film was discovered. I had just started volunteering at the Library of Congress nitrate film vaults in 1998. I had friends who worked there and they knew of my passion for Cinerama since I had managed the Neon Movies [independent film theater in Dayton] and assisted John Harvey on installing his equipment and prints to show true 3-projector/3-camera Cinerama. It was Vanessa O’Kelly who was processing the unidentified reels of the Theisen collection when she noticed this film had 3 panels.
The date 1924-25 is used in the booklet for the 7-DVD set Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant-Garde Film, 1894-1941, curated by Bruce Posner and produced by David Shepard for Anthology Film Archives in 2005. On disc one, "The Mechanized Eye: Experiments in Technique and Form," it appears amid 17 other short films as In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea, programmed between another work by an unknown maker, Melody on Parade (ca. 1936), and the 1904 actuality Westinghouse Works, Panorama View Street Car Motor Room, by the noted avant-gardist Billy Bitzer. Elsewhere in the Unseen Cinema series it is referred to as "Triptych Film Poem (c. Unidentified filmmaker, 1925)."

One of the few other 35mm screenings came at the 2001 Giornate del Cinema Muto in Sacile, Italy. The festival catalog referred to [Unidentified Theisen No. 1: Triptych Poem] (1928?), with a short note by George Willeman. Inserted in that annotation is this: "[The Italian company Ambrosio used the same technique in some of its travelogues of the early 1910s. - Eds.]" Indeed here is a snippet of a triptych from the beautiful Ambrosio scenic Santa Lucia (ca. 1910, preserved by EYE and Cineteca di Bologna; with piano by Donald Sosin in 2010).


The triptych shot comes 2:46 into the five-minute Santa Lucia (ca. 1910). Video from Donald Sosin.

However, we now know the film almost certainly dates from 1926. When I asked George Willeman, nitrate vault manager at the Library of Congress, about the date discrepancies, he looked at the LOC's internal database (MAVIS -- Merged AudioVisual Information System). His e-mail of October 27, 2014, reads:
I’ve no idea where the 1928 date comes from, although it is on the MAVIS record (well, actually “ca. 1928”). I pulled the nitrate to confirm some dates. The print itself is on 1926 Kodak stock, per the edge code. The print-through from the negative was hard to discern (possibly because of all the overlaying?) but I was finally able to discern that the negative was also 1926 [with some pieces of 1925 stock]. So my guess is that the film was made in 1926. I don’t think it has any connection to Gance’s Polyvision, as that was a three screen, three projector, three frames of same AR [aspect ratio] process, whereas this is more like a triptych, with full-size frame in the middle and undersized frame "wings" on either side.   
P.S. I am changing the date in the MAVIS record to 1926.

The mistaken connection between this mysterious triptych movie and the French Polyvision system of 1927 stems from the original inventory of the Earl Theisen Collection. Here's the typewritten list.

From the Library of Congress (thanks to Mike Mashon, Head of the Moving Image Section).
It's not clear who added the Polyvision descriptor, much less designated it a "test" of that wholly different system. (French manufacturer André Debrie devised the triptych cameras, with synchronized motors, used to film the Napoleon sequences. Not even Gance saw the triptych effect until three projectors were set up. And that method of presentation for Napoleon was not seen in the United States until the 1980s tour. See Kevin Brownlow's 1968 book  The Parade's Gone By . . . .) Given that the original print of [Triptych Poem] was found in the U.S. (and uses an American literary source in a familiar way), it's unlikely that this film was made outside of North America.

Where would such a film have been seen? Its production values and sophisticated optical printing seem to make it unlikely to have been merely a test. Although there is no way to prove it was an amateur film, it has stylistic qualities similar to the experimental narratives that amateurs deluxe J. S. Watson Jr. and Melville Webber produced in the late 1920s and early 30s. They earned some of the earliest ACL Ten Best awards with The Eyes of Science (1931) and Lot In Sodom (1932), for which Watson did extensive effects on a "homemade" optical printer he built with Carl Louis Gregory. So far there's no evidence of [Triptych Poem] showing up on the amateur film circuit. The only lead thus far is (as Bruce Posner conveyed in an e-mail) that Kevin Brownlow recalled seeing a 1920s film of similar description in the 1960s. But where?

Although we know little about Unidentified Theisen No. 1, Earl Theisen's contributions to film and photo history are rather well documented, albeit in scattered places. Searching for Earl Theisen on the Web leads mostly to his portrait photographs, especially work he did for Look magazine -- and most especially pictures he took of emerging star Marilyn Monroe in the late 1940s and early 50s. (A quick Tumblr search for his name yields a stunning sample of his glamour portraits.)
Theisen with Marilyn on a set, Los Angeles, 1952.
(Getty Images licenses 251 photos in its Earl Theisen Collection.)

His success as a popular photographer extended from his credits for Joan Bennett's book How to Be Attractive (Knopf, 1943) to his own books marketed to the amateur, Making Your Pictures Interesting (Ziff-Davis Publishing, 1947) and Photographic Approach to People (Amphoto, 1966). The Look Magazine Photograph Collection at the Library of Congress includes a couple dozen images by Theisen, including shots of Audrey Hepburn, Salvador Dalí, Hal Wallis, Walter Wanger, Walt Disney, the cast of Mary Poppins (1963), and . . . wait for it . . .  L. Ron Hubbard in 1950. In 1939, Look published Theisen images in "America's Own Refugees: The Story behind 'The Grapes of Wrath'" (Oct. 24). He was in fact one of the founding photographers for Look, which launched in 1937.

The Margaret Herrick Library has an Earl Theisen Collection, which he gave to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1949. The Herrick bio reads:
Earl Theisen (1903-1973) was born in Denver and educated in Chicago and Los Angeles. He entered the film industry in 1922 when he took a job with the Alexander Film Company. He left Alexander for Consolidated Film Company. In 1931 he began researching early cinema history and collecting artifacts under the auspices of the Los Angeles Museum [now the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County]. and the Society of Motion Picture Engineers. He later became associate editor of International Photographer, lectured at the University of Southern California, and became the West Coast representative for the Register Tribune Syndicate and a photographer for Look.
The Herrick description of the photograph collection makes it clear why Theisen would have been interested in a film as novel as [Triptych Poem].
The series consists entirely of motion picture film-frame specimens. . . . [They] document a wide variety of formats in relation to image size, sound on film, and color processes. The specimens were collected by Theisen in the 1920s and 1930s, and they reflect his interest in film technology, cinematography, and film stocks. . . . Some 19 different film gauges ranging from 8mm to 85mm, more than a dozen sound recording processes, and more than 50 types of color processes can be found.
Ernest Hemingway Posing with a Rifle
while Earl Theisen Takes His Photograph
(ca. 1953) public domain
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
Theisen's articles for the journal International Photographer (1933-37) are largely about the history of motion picture technologies. The publication was a house organ for the large union of technical workers, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) and Motion Picture Machine Operators (MPMO), which also represented film lab workers, cinematographers, and others. He also published articles in the Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, such as "The Depicting of Motion Prior to the Advent of the Screen" (Mar. 1933) and "The History of the Animated Cartoon" (Sept. 1933).

The Earl Theisen Collection on the History of Motion Pictures is housed at the Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. Its biography offers that he "served as Honorary Curator of Theatrical Arts at the museum for a few years following 1931. Theisen was a technician at the Dunning Process Plant, a member of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, and a member of the Society's Historical Committee." As "William Earl Theisen" he appears in the Merritt Crawford Papers at the Museum of Modern Art. He corresponded with Crawford (an eccentric collector of early cinema ephemera), Georges Méliès, and the inventor Eugene Lauste.

Independent film historian Buckey Grimm has been compiling documents and information about Theisen for several years and shared much of it for this posting.



Charles Tepperman (University of Calgary) introduced the only film on the program that actually received an ACL award. He also wrote the following text for the forthcoming Web release of that movie.

Leslie Thatcher's Another Day (1934)




Unknown in the annals of film history, Leslie Thatcher was a star of the amateur cinema world. In the mid-1930s Thatcher was a winner of numerous international awards, whose well-crafted short films evince a striking aesthetic sophistication. During the 1930s the category of “amateur film” encompassed a wide variety of styles including documentary, experimental and industrial works. The porousness of the amateur film category allowed for a dynamic and vernacular mode of film expression that drew on examples and styles from elsewhere and infused them with localized significance. Thatcher’s amateur films reflect this in their blending of globally circulating art cinema stylistics with their rootedness in local milieu and regional customs. In the 1930s Thatcher was an American Cinematographer prize-winner and three-time winner of Amateur Cinema League annual “Ten Best” honors. Closer to home, Thatcher was instrumental in founding the Toronto Amateur Movie Club in 1934.

About Leslie Thatcher himself, little information is available, except that he worked as a salesman for paper and engraving companies during the 1920s and 30s. His earliest extant film, Mighty Niagara (1933), is a 14-minute silent work that narrates a steamship voyage from Toronto to the Niagara Falls. It won a Silver Medal for Travel in the 1933 American Cinematographer amateur movie competition. 

Another Day is a city symphony film of Thatcher’s hometown, Toronto. City symphonies were an early type of non-narrative film that emerged in the 1920s and presented cities like New York or Berlin in montage form, using editing to draw out some of the energy, routines, and rituals of daily life in a big city. Like other city symphony films, Thatcher’s follows the chronology of a day’s activity, fragments continuous action, and emphasizes quotidian objects (the alarm clock, the toaster, the coffee pot) to present a modernist visual record of Toronto. The film was named one of the Ten Best amateur films of 1934 by Movie Makers magazine, and the award citation describes it as “a splendid example of the relatively simple avant garde film, so popular among European amateurs but so seldom attempted by even the advanced workers of the American continent.” Thatcher made other award-winning amateur films in the 1930s, but by the end of the decade he had moved towards the production of industrial and sponsored films, establishing his own company, Thatcher Film Productions, around 1939.
-- Excerpted and adapted from Tepperman's essay “Uncovering Canada’s Amateur Film Tradition: Leslie Thatcher’s Films and Contexts” in Cinephemera: Archives, Ephemeral Cinema, and New Screen Histories in Canada, Gerda Cammaer and Zoë Druick, eds. (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, forthcoming).

Charles Tepperman is an assistant professor of film studies in the Department of Communication and Culture at the University of Calgary. He received his PhD from the University of Chicago in 2007. His book Amateur Cinema: The Rise of North American Moviemaking, 1923-1960 (University of California Press) will be released in December. Rick Prelinger's blurb tell us that the book not only “vivifies the untold history of amateur cinema, but mobilizes the history and aesthetics of amateur cinema as a wedge to consider complex aspects of cinema as a whole,” including “the nature and incubation of technical innovation, and the practices of personal media-making, mashups and remix."




Jonah Volk made an unscheduled announcement. In the course of his work as a media preservation specialist at the New York Public Library, last week he found the NYPL Theatre on Film and Tape Archive has a print of Follow the Girls, which the 1944 Ten Best list in Movie Makers described as 650 feet, 16mm, Kodachrome, with music on disc, "by Oscar H. Horovitz, ACL, of Newton, Mass."

Follow the Girls records scenes from the Broadway musical of the same name. The NYPL catalog lists "1 videocassette (U-matic, NTSC) (23 min.) : sd., col. ; 3/4 in." Excerpts of "dances and musical numbers are prefaced by general remarks about the genre. Note however that the soundtrack does not necessarily play the actual accompaniment to the excerpts." The catalog lists the show's numbers seen in the Horowtiz films as "Strip flips hip," "Thanks for a lousy evening," "You're perf," "Out for no good," "You don't dance," "Follow the girls," "John Paul Jones," and "I wanna get married."

Although it was a hit on Broadway, running from April 1944 through May 1946, the show and its songs are not well remembered. The Horovitz film, however, carries a somewhat rare distinction, as its ACL leader and Ten Best logo are in full color. The video access copy is available for study at the Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center. The film print is in off-site storage, awaiting preservation.

The Volk announcement of the Horovitz film led me to see if there was more information than could be gleaned in Movie Makers (which we can now keyword search and download via the powerful Lantern search platform). Happily, in 2012 someone set up a website specifically devoted to the memory of Oscar H. Horovitz (1899-1989). "He was an amateur film maker and received more than 100 awards in competition," according to OHHmovie.com. He also kept scrapbooks about his film work, filling 20 boxes. Among the items digitized is his Ten Best certificate for Follow the Girls!
from OHHmovie.com
From 1935 to 1944, Movie Makers altered the name from Ten Best Amateur Films to Ten Best Non Theatrical Films. In 1948, the publication returned to the original name. 


Able to retire in 1949, Horovitz obviously set about his amateur film production in earnest. He won four additional Ten Best recognitions, for Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus (1950), Venezia: Pearl of the Adriatic (1951), Colonial Williamsburg (1954), and Belo Horizonte (1956).  The website also includes an Honorable Mention certificate for Guatemala (1948).

Time to track those down.

And a postscript to the Horovitz story: OHHmovie.com modestly notes "He made many public service films." When I posted a draft of this blog post to the Orphan Film Symposium Facebook group, Rodney Stewart Hillel Tryster reported the Spielberg Jewish Film Archive at Hebrew University of Jerusalem holds films by Horvitz: The Israeli Story (195?) and They Call It Technion (1959?), plus two on the archive's YouTube channel, both advocacy films for Hadassah.

Passport to Life (1954) "Photography and original story by Oscar H. Horovitz," narrated by Martin Bookspan. 32 min. Added title: Operation Ali Baba.  Watch here.

There Is Hope for Thy Children (195?) The only screen credit reads "Photographed by" OHH. 13 min. Watch here.



Kimberly Tarr is Media Preservation Unit Head in the Barbara Goldsmith Preservation and Conservation Department, NYU Libraries, and a 2009 graduate of the NYU Moving Image Archiving and Preservation Program. Her MIAP thesis, "The World She Watched: An Examination of the Adelaide Pearson Travel Films," dealt with a 1930s amateur film collection at Northeast Historic Film that she also helped preserve. She presented that work at the 7th Orphan Film Symposium in 2010 (audio of which can be heard here) and subsequently published "Round the World and Back Again: Mapping the Cultural and Historic Significance of the Adelaide Pearson Film Collection," The Moving Image (Fall 2012).

Robbins Barstow's The Abbakadabba Coopno (1941) is one of four 16mm films Barstow donated to NYU, where he received an M.A. in education and history. The Barstow Movie Collection came to the University Archives in 2008 and also includes Everyone’s Coming to the Guild! (1943, which will be part of our online project), Hudson Guild Farm (1943), and Youth and the Future (1944), a lesson on FDR's Four Freedoms. Barstow made all of these short, silent amateur productions in collaboration with the Hudson Guild Neighborhood House, a community center in Chelsea-Hell's Kitchen, where he and his wife Meg (Margaret Vanderbeek) worked after they were married in 1942.

The Abbakadabba Coopno's subtitle, "The Newark Kid-Stars in Their Real-Life Drama of Christian Farm Work,” reveals its plainspoken theme. The Port Murray, New Jersey farm for city youth was run by a collective of pacificists, many of whom had registered as conscientious objectors before Pearl Harbor. (Barstow was a pacifist but had already been classified as 4-F, medically ineligible for military service.) Abbakadabba's inter-racial cast, showing young men and boys working and playing side by side, was remarkable for its time.

Three frames from Barstow's film. Barstow Movie Collection, University Archives, NYU.
We discussed how best to present the film: in silence? with live musical accompaniment? with a recording of Barstow's voice? In the end we embraced the true amateur aesthetic and trusted it to play with the sound track the filmmaker added 65 years after the fact. The clean 2006 recording by Texas fingerstyle guitarist Bruce Ramsey creates some distance from the 1941 film, but such was Robbins Barstow's choice when he screened it a Northeast Historic Film's 2006 Summer Symposium "The Working Life."

In other research related to this amateur film project, Kim Tarr located 16mm films by Ephraim Horowitz (1916-2012), who won a pair of Ten Best prizes, for EPH 4/27/16, a comic autobiographical piece from 1979, and My New York Experience (1980). Throughout his long life he was active in several New York amateur film clubs as well as the Society of Amateur Cinematographers. Tarr and Dan Erdman have compiled further research about Horowitz, though that will have to wait for a future appearance.



Maria Vinogradova is a doctoral candidate  in cinema studies at New York University. Researching the history of amateur filmmaking in the Soviet Union has required her to find material outside of archives. In general, the official state archives choose not to collect amateur works. Those films that survive are often kept by individuals who prevented them from being discarded by the institutions -- factories, schools, "houses of culture," and others -- that originally facilitated their production.

Na odnoi zemle (On the Same Earth, 1976) by Vladimir Medvedev
Frame from On the Same Earth:
Russian 35mm filmmaker records Japanese Super 8 maker in Montreal.
Courtesy of Vladimir Medvedev.
Maria Vinogradova's notes on this Soviet amateur production can be found here: "Pictures of the West More Colorful than Red." In her introductory remarks at MoMA, Vinogradova reported that the director of the film has not yet seen the digitized copy of his own film, but that he runs a movie house in Moscow and looks forward to presenting it there.

As so often happens at these Orphan Film Symposium events, there was a serendipitous discovery among researchers. Just before showtime, Vinogradova learned from Tepperman that he knew where to find one of the Soviet amateur films she had long been seeking. Turns out that curator and scholar of amateur film Melinda Stone gave him a box of films that included a Russian title. After finishing his dissertation, he passed the box along to Chicago Film Archives. Now CFA has put the movie onlineGift to Mother (ca. 1966) was distributed in the United States by the Society of Amateur Cinematographers, which launched in 1936. Distinct from the ACL, the SAC was a creature of American Cinematographer, the journal of the American Society of Cinematographers, a Hollywood guild.

Gift to Mother. 25 min. In Russian without English subtitles. (Chicago Film Archives)

Clearly there is more research, discovery, preservation, and screening to be done if the worldwide phenomenon of amateur cinema is to be understood.







Volk, Tarr, Vinogradova, Tepperman, Streible, Trainor, Weiss, Hicks-Alcaraz,
exiting MoMA's Titus 2 Theater, November 18, 2014. 


entering MoMA's Titus 2 Theater, pre-show tech run, November 18, 2014.

Nov 22, 2014

An Amateur Cinema League of Nations

Orphans at MoMA: 
An Amateur Cinema League of Nations
November 18, 2014 • 6:30pm • 
Museum of Modern Art • Titus Theater 2

Inaugurating an annual collaboration between the Museum of Modern Art’s To Save and Project Festival of Film Preservation and the Orphan Film Symposium at NYU.

Program by Marissa Hicks-Alcaraz, Dan Streible, and Katie Trainor

Music by Stephen Horne

David Weiss (Northeast Historic Film)
Scarf Dance (Hiram Percy Maxim, 1930) 2'
Up the Moose River in 1928  (Maxim, 1928) 16mm excerpt, 5'
Poem of Montclair (Olin Potter Geer, 1933) 34’  
Two pieces from the man who founded the Amateur Cinema League in 1926, plus the premier of the 2K scan of a day-in-the-life film by an ACL enthusiast from Montclair, New Jersey. Geer wrote about the making of his poem in Movie Makers magazine. 

Dan Streible (NYU Orphan Film Symposium)
Unidentified Theisen No. 1: [Triptych Poem] (maker/s unknown, 1926) 4’
35mm print from the Library of Congress 
Before the Polyvision triple-screen in Napoléon vu par Abel Gance (1927), unidentified filmmakers made this widescreen experiment. Based on the poem “In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea” (1896) by Thomas Bailey Aldrich. 

Charles Tepperman (University of Calgary)
Another Day (Leslie P. Thatcher, 1934) 10’ 
A founder of the Toronto Amateur Film Club earned one of his three Ten Best awards from the ACL’s Movie Makers magazine for this city sinfonietta. Thanks to Josephine Black (Toronto Film and Video Club); Archives of Ontario; John Gledhill at Bit Works, Inc.; and Peter Oleksik (MoMA).  DCP premiere. 

Kimberly Tarr (NYU Libraries) 
The Abbakadabba Coopno (Robbins Barstow, 1941) silent, color and b/w, 15’
with music track by Bruce Ramsey added in 2006
“The Newark Kid-Stars in Their Real-Life Drama of Christian Farm Work”
Premiere of new 16mm print.  Preserved by NYU Libraries (Nancy Cricco, Janet Bunde, and Paula De Stefano) with a National Film Preservation Foundation grant. Thanks to the Barstow family.                                         

Maria Vinogradova (NYU Cinema Studies)
Na odnoi zemle (On the Same Earth, 1976) 10’
Author: Vladimir Medvedev, People’s Film Studio of the House of Culture of Professional Technical Schools of Leningrad (DK Proftekhobrazovania). Script by Boris Goller. 
A Soviet dance ensemble boards the ship Mikhail Kalinin in Leningrad and travels to Montreal, at the time when traveling abroad was akin to flying to the moon. Digital copy from the director’s 35mm print. 



Above is the text handed out to the audience at the MoMA screening on November 18.



  .
Curator Josh Siegel invited us to organize an orphan film / amateur film screening as part of the 12th To Save and Project: The MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation. And he was generous in announcing this as an annual collaboration with the Orphan Film Symposium. Since home movies and amateur films have always been a core part of the symposium, it was a good match.



Joe Gardner at NHF scanned the 16mm print of Poem of Montclair (1933). It begins with these two ACL leaders joined together.


Scarf Dance (Hiram Percy Maxim, 1930) silent, b/w, 16mm, 2',  + other amateur pieces not on the program, including O. P. Geer's Boothbay Harbor (1938) silent, color, 16mm, 1'.





Unidentified Theisen No. 1: [Triptych Poem] (unknown, 1926) b/w, 35mm, 425 feet, 4:44 at 24 fps

      


Nov 2, 2014

Update: How many women filmmakers are represented on the National Film Registry?

"How many women filmmakers are represented on the National Film Registry?"

The question was addressed here nearly five years ago, when the answer was something like 31 out of 525.  As we await the December 2014 naming of the next Registry entries, below is an updated list of 39 titles on the master list of 625 films "registered" from 1989 through 2013. Still about 6% of the total.

The issue of authorship and representation is of course not a simple one. Conventionally, most films have one director, but some have two or more. In independent, experimental, animation, or documentary sectors, the term director is sometimes not used at all. Official credits might say "A film by . . . ". Even if we accept that a director is a film's auteur, we know of cases in which a producer, screenwriter, animation team, performer, or even an uncredited person is better understood as the creative force behind a work. 

The Registry entry "Martha Graham Early Dance Films, 1931-1944" is a case in which the director criterion is less relevant. The four titles included in that entry do not have conventional filmographic credits. For at least one, Lamentation (1943), the solo director's credit is for the cinematographer; but the evidence is clear that there were two cinematographers (husband and wife), and that the extensive photo documentation of Martha Graham dancing "Lamentation" was done by Hera Moselsio. However, clearly the Registry is recognizing the artistry of choreographer-dancer Martha Graham at least as much as (and probably more than) the four short films themselves.  

For several films on the list below, published accounts have, more often than not, omitted a woman's co-directing credit in favor of attributing the film to the male director(s). Grass (1925), for example, is typically attributed to the duo of Cooper & Schoedsack. Little Fugitive (1953) to Morris Engel. A Time for Burning to William C. (or Bill) Jersey (as on the official LOC NFR website, and the Wikipedia entry). Frank Film (1973) to Frank Mouris. Rarely is the opposite true, as when Meshes of the Afternoon is more often attributed solely to Maya Deren.


1. Matrimony's Speed Limit (1913) Alice Guy Blaché
2. Mabel’s Blunder (1914) Mabel Normand
3. The Curse of Quon Gwon (1916) Marion Wong
4. Where Are My Children? (1916) Lois Weber
5. Grass (1925) Merian C. Cooper, Ernest Schoedsack, and Marguerite Harrison
6. The Forgotten Frontier (1930) Marvin Breckinridge
7. A Study in Reds (1932) Miriam Bennett
8. Trance and Dance in Bali (1936-39) Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson
9. Cologne: From the Diary of Ray and Esther (1939) Ray Dowidat and Esther Dowidat
10. Commandment Keeper Church, Beaufort, SC (1940) Zora Neale Hurston and Jane Belo
11. Dance, Girl, Dance (1940) Dorothy Arzner
12.   Men and Dust (1940) Lee Dick
13. Tarantella (1940) Mary Ellen Bute
14. Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid
15. Martha Graham Early Dance Films (1931-1944), includes Lamentation (1943) Simon Moselsio and Herta Moselsio. Herta is not credited in most accounts, but she operated one of the two cameras.
16. In the Street (1948) Helen Levitt, James Agee, and Janice Loeb
17. The Hitch-Hiker (1953) Ida Lupino
18. Glimpse of the Garden (1957) Marie Menken
19. Little Fugitive (1953) Ray Ashley, Morris Engel, and Ruth Orkin
20. The Hole (1962) John Hubley and Faith Hubley
21. The Cool World (1963) Shirley Clarke
22. Through Navajo Eyes (1966) Maxine Tsosie & Mary Jane Tsosie; Susie Benally; and Alta Kahn made films in the series collectively known as Through Navajo Eyes.
23. A Time for Burning (1966) Barbara Connell and Bill Jersey
24. Growing Up Female (1971) Julia Reichert and Jim Klein
25. Frank Film (1973) Caroline Mouris and Frank Mouris
26. Antonia: Portrait of a Woman (1974) Judy Collins and Jill Godmilow
27. The Buffalo Creek Flood (1975) Mimi Pickering
28. Hester Street (1975) Joan Micklin Silver
29. Quasi at the Quackadero (1975) Sally Cruikshank
30. Harlan County, USA (1976) Barbara Kopple
31. Powers of Ten (1978) Ray Eames and Charles Eames
32. The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (1981) Connie Field
33. Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982) Amy Heckerling
34. Fake Fruit Factory (1986) Chick Strand
35. Drums of Winter (1988) Sarah Elder and Leonard Kamerling
36. Samsara: Death and Rebirth in Cambodia (1990) Ellen Bruno
37. Daughters of the Dust (1991) Julie Dash
38. The Red Book (1994) Janie Geiser
39. Scratch and Crow (1995) Helen Hill







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