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HARLEM THEATRE (1968) Screening at UNION DOCS!

FIRST EVER PUBLIC SCREENING IN AMERICA!

I’m unabashedly going to plug this event like crazy all week:

Four years ago, I located a fascinating, thought-to-be lost documentary that led me to meet a whole cast of extraordinary people. I’m thrilled that HARLEM THEATRE, on its 50th ANNIVERSARY, will finally receive its FIRST EVER public screening in America!

Furthermore! actor-activists George Lee Miles and Gary Bolling, who feature in the movie, will be in attendance to tell the story behind the film, and how Harlem’s New Lafayette Theatre formed to resist racial and social oppression.

This movie could not receive a timelier screening.

Seen boxing in the above clip is George Lee Miles, rehearsing Ed Bullins’s play “How Do You Do,” to be performed at a Black Panthers’ fundraiser.

Thanks to Ira Gallen who saved the film, Jenny Miller (Union Docs), and Steve Macfarlane for making this event possible!

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Art Institute of Chicago: “Nothing Personal”

This week I’m in Chicago!

“Nothing Personal”

During my visit to the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC), I was delighted to stumble upon a provocative exhibition relating to one of my favorite movies: Cheryl Dunye’s The Watermelon Woman (1996). The exhibit “Nothing Personal” interrogates the politics of the archive and includes the fictional, photographic archive of Fae Richards (Lisa Marie Bronson), who is an elusive, but central character in Dunye’s movie. For the movie, artist Zoe Leonard created an archive charting Fae Richards’s life. It’s these fabricated documents that are now on display at the AIC.

The Watermelon Woman follows young Black, lesbian filmmaker Cheryl (Cheryl Dunye), who works in a video store in Philadelphia with her best friend, and occasional camera assistant, Tamara (Valarie Walker). When she’s not working, Cheryl is making a documentary film about the late Fae Richards, a Black actress who featured in Hollywood 1930s movies playing “Mammie” roles and who only ever received credit as the “Watermelon Woman.” Over the course of her research Cheryl discovers that Richards was romantically involved with movie director Martha Page – a type of Dorothy Arzner figure. Cheryl shoots her documentary on video, and the clips from her film are intercut with Cheryl’s confessional video diary, real archival footage, and the faux, fabricated footage from Richards’s movies.

Cheryl records her video diary, while surrounded by her archive of Fae Richards memorabilia.

Cheryl records her video diary, while surrounded by her archive of Fae Richards memorabilia. The Watermelon Woman (1996).

During Cheryl’s quest to make her documentary, the film repeatedly and brilliantly challenges archival practices. Cheryl visits a multitude of sites in pursuit of information about Richards’s life. She first pays a visit to Lee Edwards’s home: Edwards is a Black film historian and collector of race movies. While Edwards’s collection is vast, when Cheryl asks him about the Watermelon Woman he tells her “women are not my specialty.” Cheryl and Tamara next visit the public library where at the reference desk they encounter a snooty white male librarian, coded as gay. He tells the women that the library doesn’t hold any reference category on Black women in film.  A further excursion takes Cheryl to the Center for Lesbian Info and Technology (cheekily referred to as C.L.I.T.). This haphazardly organized, comically bureaucratic archive run by an all-volunteer collective holds a few items on Richards’s life, but Cheryl is forbidden from using them in her film (Many of these photographs appear on exhibition today at AIC). While the movie makes a serious political point about the difficulties of conducting research on history’s most marginalized people and explores a Black filmmaker’s complex relationship with America’s exploitative movie heritage, Dunye’s film never loses its sense of cinephilia and fun.

Cheryl

Cheryl is scolded by one of the archivists at C.L.I.T. for attempting to videotape items from the Fae Richards Collection. The Watermelon Woman (1996).

The mise-en-scene of the video store where Cheryl works also resembles something of an archive due to the stacks and stacks of videotapes looming behind the store’s front desk. In addition to archivists, the clerks perform the roles of film curators, programmers, and reviewers. They order and collect the non-mainstream videos they want to see (many of these are lesbian and pornographic). They also advise customers on what movies they should rent, and in the “two for one video deal” Cheryl suggests movies that will complement each other. The Watermelon Woman is a movie indebted to videotape, but it’s also something of a celebration of video’s aesthetic and the medium itself.  In the nineties, the innovations and affordability of the camcorder along with the availability of video rentals permitted a new film culture to flourish and enabled the New Queer Cinema movement. A movement indisputably enriched by Dunye’s contributions.

Cheryl and Tamara working together in the video store. The Watermelon Woman (1996).

Cheryl and Tamara working together in the video store. The Watermelon Woman (1996).

If you watch The Watermelon Woman today you may be struck by how the movie hasn’t dated, and this seems quite a feat given its relationship to videotape! I could almost believe Cheryl and Tamara are out there right now working in the last video store in Philadelphia. But rather than timelessness, perhaps this is a matter of timeliness given the parallels between The Watermelon Woman and Netflix’s hit show Orange is the New Black (2014-). To draw just one superficial comparison, the relationship and banter that Cheryl and Tamara share in the video store very much resembles the friendship and back-and-forth between Taystee and Poussey, who work together in the library in OITNB. Unsurprisingly, I’m not the first person to have made this connection. Journalists have asked Dunye to comment on the similarities between her work and OITNB, especially since Dunye actually made a movie about a women’s prison. Thankfully, Dunye’s nineties movies seem to be receiving greater recognition today. As critic Ruby Rich notes about New Queer Cinema – the term she coined – “the movement…was always eleventy-zillion light-years ahead of the mainstream.” It therefore seems about the right time for the AIC to put on this exhibition that partly pays homage to The Watermelon Woman.

You can currently stream The Watermelon Woman on Amazon Prime.

Nighthawks

Another highlight of my visit to the AIC was encountering Edward Hopper’s celebrated painting Nighthawks (1947).

Edward Hopper

What you don’t get a sense of from reproductions of the painting is the luminosity of the yellow. I stood four rooms back and could still see the brightly lit diner glowing in the distance.

Nighthawks Glowing in the Distance. On Display at AIC.

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Geek Moment: Film Footage of Virginia Van Upp at Rita Hayworth’s Wedding

So, I’m having a geek moment:

Below is the only piece of film footage I have found featuring Hollywood actress-screenwriter-producer, Virginia Van Upp. While Van Upp appeared in several early films as a child actress, many of these titles are now lost, or only exist as fragments. Although Van Upp was happy to swap acting for writing and producing, it seems she still retained some aspirations to act. She reportedly completed a screen test for one of the movies that she wrote entitled, Honeymoon in Bali (1939).  Van Upp also planned to appear as an extra in The Loves of Carmen (1948). In 1983, Van Upp herself was portrayed by actress Jane Hallaren in the television movie Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess.

Note on footage:

In 1949, Van Upp attended Rita Hayworths’s wedding to Prince Aly Khan in Cannes. I noticed Van Upp in the below Pathé newsreel at around: 32 seconds. During the wedding ceremony Van Upp is standing by the wall on the far right, wearing a large, bonkers black hat and black-and-white patterned dress. Van Upp also appears again standing outside the wedding venue. You really get a sense of how petite she was – something reporters would often emphasize.

Hayworth and Van Upp were close friends. Van Upp wrote the screenplay to Cover Girl (1944) and produced and wrote Gilda (1946)both are two of Hayworth’s most memorable movies. For various labor reasons Van Upp did not receive writing credit for Gilda; this greatly angered Columbia Pictures studio boss Harry Cohn, who thought Van Upp more than deserved full credit.

Thanks to Pathé for making the footage accessible to the public!

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Direct to Your TV: NYU’s “University Broadcast Lab” (1969 -1983)

ubl

For the 50th Anniversary of NYU Tisch School of the Arts my colleague and I have been commissioned to research the history of the School. We’re primarily focusing on locating and preserving audio-visual materials that record early faculty and student contributions. So far we’ve made some pretty exciting discoveries!

One portion of the School’s history that is proving particularly intriguing pertains to a series of programs made for a long-term project entitled “University Broadcast Lab.”

Between 1969-81 an extremely productive collaboration existed between the non-commercial, local station WNYC-TV and a 26-week color television course taught by Professors Richard Goggin and Irving Falk. For a number of months a year WNYC-TV would twice-weekly broadcast on Channel 31 the original and imaginative output made by students of this class. The first episode to air was entitled “Feiffer and Friends,” written and featuring -then student – Billy Crystal.

To exemplify the scope, innovation, and ambition of these television programs I’ve included below a random sampling of titles along with their descriptions:

  • Chase Newhart’s Beat the Draft (taping date: Jan 14 1970, air date: 10:30 pm, Jan 25 1970). This satiric program is a take-off on the game show format  – the winner gets a deferment, the loser is drafted to fight in Vietnam.
  • Bob Ackerman and Don Brockway’s Inside Television (air date: Feb 22 1971). This comedy-satire takes the viewer on a tour of the inside of his television set where he will learn about the work of dedicated people (called “Nurns”) who make their homes inside electronic devices. The Nurns explain the gadgets inside the TV set and give their opinions on some of the shows viewers watch.
  • Sheva Farkas’s We the People (air date: Mar 15 1971). An original drama about the confusion of ideas and the lack of ability to either compromise or listen to opposite points of view, the program revolves around the issues of racism, radicalism and the war in Vietnam.
  • Electa Brown and John Homs’s What? Your Favorite Subject is Math – The Village Charrette (May 24 1971). Brown interviews Patricia Flynn, Chairman of the Greenwich Village Charrette Steering Committee and Charles Patrick Bell, a 7-year-old first grader at P.S. 3 in the Village.

Continue reading

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Columbia Pictures, Rita Hayworth, and Virginia Van Upp

In my continued search for materials relating to Hollywood screenwriter-producer Virginia Van Upp, I was last week fortunate enough to visit the American Heritage Center (AHC) in Laramie, Wyoming, where I made some exciting discoveries.

The AHC holds an extensive collection of materials concerning the day-to-day operation of Columbia Pictures (1929 -1974). Van Upp worked at Columbia between the years 1941 – 1947. Her most successful movie at the studio was Gilda (1946), which she both wrote and produced. She briefly returned to work for the studio in 1951, assisting Rita Hayworth with the production of Affair in Trinidad.

The Columbia Pictures Collection at the AHC primarily consists of daily teletypes transmitted between the New York and Los Angeles offices. In these communications studio producers discuss particular films, publicity stunts, music rights, but above all else: Rita Hayworth! Discussions about Hayworth concern her films, contracts, clothes, travel arrangements, future productions, relationships….etc.

In addition to the teletypes, the collection also contains a few “Story Conference” transcriptions in which writers and producers discuss problems with various scripts and films. Among these records I found a few pages pertaining to the making of Gilda.

A big THANK YOU to the archivists at the AHC, all of whom are amazing.

My next port of call will be the Margaret Herrick Library in Los Angeles.

 

 

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About the Documentary HARLEM THEATRE (1968)

HARLEM THEATRE (1968) is a ninety-minute documentary that was made for German television by filmmaker Klaus Wildenhahn. The movie, filmed just after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., follows Harlem’s New Lafayette Theatre members as they rehearse for their upcoming season and run politically radical workshops in the community.

Founded by actor-director Robert Macbeth, the New Lafayette Theatre was a significant institution within the Black Power Movement. Ed Bullins, the theatre’s playwright-in-residence was the Black Panther’s Minister of Culture. In addition to recording the theatre’s workshops, the movie contains street interviews with Harlem’s residents, and scenes from the Black Panther fundraising event held at Fillmore East for Eldridge Cleaver.

NLT

New Lafayette Theatre 1968, Company Members: J.E. Gaines, Beverly   , Bill Lathan, Yvette Hawkins, Roscoe Orman, George Miles, Helen Ellis, Roberta Raysor, Gary Bolling, Sam Wright, Estelle Evans, Bette Howard, Whitman Mayo, Peggy Kirkpatrick, Kris Keiser, Robert Macbeth, Ed Bullins

The movie is a powerful political and historical document that speaks to today’s concerns regarding justice for black people, police brutality, and the instrumentality of art to bring about change. Today’s renewed interest in the Black Panthers also makes the film timely. Until 2018 the film had never screened publicly outside of Central Europe. (16MM, B/W, English Language)

Here is a clip from HARLEM THEATRE in which Robert Macbeth discusses Black theatre as a subversive force.

This clip was transferred by film collector, Ira Gallen, from a print of the film that has since been lost/destroyed. The only known of surviving ninety minute, English language print of HARLEM THEATRE exists in an archive. If you would like to find out more about this film please email me.

[MAJOR UPDATE: In early 2018, on the movie’s 50th anniversary, Ira Gallen contacted me to say he had managed to locate the print within his storage unit. He generously agreed to finance the film’s digitization and it is now available for screenings].

Some of the Many Outstanding Moments From the Movie:

  • A young Ed Bullins reading for the first time to the NLT members the prologue to one of his most famous plays In the Wine Time. The theater would go on to perform the play that winter.
  • Black Panther leader Bobby Seale delivering a speech at a fundraiser held at Fillmore East.
  • Robert Macbeth’s “Method” workshops.
  • George Lee Miles, Gary Bolling and Helen Ellis rehearsing for their performance of Bullins’s play How Do You Do.
  • A humorous sequence in which Macbeth, Ellis, and Roscoe Orman appear on the Sonny Fox show and are interviewed by New York Times theater critic Stewart Klein.
  • Street interviews and scenes with people in Harlem (including Jackie Robinson, baseball player, civil rights activist, co-founder of Freedom Bank).
  • Scenes of street parties and people dancing to the Jazzmobile.
  • The theatre company led workshops held for the children in the community. Improvisation scenarios were often politically charged: Two twelve year old boys are asked to act out a scene in which they are political prisoners of the state who have been sentenced to death.

NEW LAFAYETTE THEATRE Project website!

Former New Lafayette Theatre Actor: Gary Bolling. 

Here are two snippets from an interview I conducted with former NLT actor Gary Bolling who appears in HARLEM THEATRE. In addition to his extensive theater work Gary has featured in several movies including the spectacular Losing Ground (1982, dir. Kathleen Collins) that previewed at the Lincoln Center this Spring (distributed by the wonderful Milestone Films). In the interview Gary spoke about his time at the NLT, and the rewards and dangers of acting with the Free Southern Theatre in the Sixties.

Interviewed last year, 2014.

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I Love My Radio

I’m currently curating a playlist of promotional telecommunication films for the Library of Congress. Here is a still from the animated short More Than Meets the Eye (1952) made by United Productions of America (the same company responsible for Mr. Magoo). In every domestic space someone is listening to a radio set.

Other films promoting radio sets, radio shows, and advertising airtime established the convention of presenting montages of white families enjoying domestic bliss with their radio sets. Sponsored telecommunication films 1935-1960. Continue reading

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How Americans Came to View Old Movies

Eric Hoyt’s original focus and smart approach provides a new perspective on what we may have considered familiar film history.

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Eric Hoyt, Hollywood Vault: Film Libraries Before Home Video, University of California Press, 2014, 288 pp.

As a film historian I think about movies a lot, however I’ve never been more conscious of the physical size and weight of film until a recent visit to a collector’s apartment in Manhattan. Standing in his kitchenette – one of the many rooms given over to his film collection – he explained: “I removed the stove for more space. I couldn’t use it anyway because the heat would damage the film. Now I just microwave everything.” I returned a look that expressed something of both awe and concern. The space, effort, and cost required to preserve film proves considerable so if you’re not storing it out of love it needs to have value. While individuals may be susceptible to the former, the latter motivates corporations. “When did old movies become valuable?” This is the question Eric Hoyt asks at the start of his book Hollywood Vault, which traces the changing valuation of film libraries across six decades from their emergence in the silent era through to their acquisition by conglomerates in the late sixties (2). Continue reading

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Something Horrifying For The Kids

I’m currently curating a playlist of promotional telecommunication films for the Library of Congress.

Here are some stills from the terrifying film Adventure in Telezonia (1950) that traumatized generations of Americans while teaching them how to use the telephone. In the movie a young boy travels to the seemingly post-apocalyptic world of Telezonia so that he can learn how to use the telephone, so that he can find his lost dog, so that he can get the hell out of Telezonia!

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And, cut to shot of female switchboard operators…

Bell Telephone sponsored films (1935 – 1960)
For many more of the same see Caroline Martel’s superb Le fantôme de l’opératrice (2004)

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