Lost World of Mitchell and Kenyon : Edwardian Britain on Film

by ; ;
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-10-22
Publisher(s): British Film Inst
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Summary

The discovery of the Peter Worden Mitchell and Kenyon collection-a trove of 800 films-has been described as film's equivalent of the discovery of Tutankhamen's tomb. The extraordinary "actuality footage" contained in the collection provides an unparalleled social record of everyday life in early-twentieth-century Britain, featuring street scenes, sporting events, parades, local industries, and more. This volume contains essays from leading historians covering film history, popular entertainment, the seaside, transport, sporting events, and the social and economic context of Edwardian Britain. Together they provide a vivid commentary on this unparalleled collection. As this book shows, the discovery of these actuality films has enabled a major re-evaluation of the Mitchell and Kenyon company's contribution to filmmaking in the United Kingdom. As important in their national context as Lumières' are in France or Edison's in the U.S., these films dramatically increase our understanding of the evolution and development of film in its first decade.

Author Biography

Vanessa Toulmin is Research Director, National Fairground Archive at the University of Sheffield, and a leading authority on Victorian entertainment and film. Simon Popple is Principal Lecturer in Film and Media Studies at the University of Teeside. Patrick Russell is Keeper of Non-Fiction at the British Film Institute.

Table of Contents

I Overviews
Introduction to the Mitchell and Kenyon Collection
3(3)
Vanessa Toulmin
Patrick Russell
Simon Popple
Mitchell and Kenyon: A Successful, Pioneering and `Travelled' Partnership of Production
6(6)
Timothy Neal
Vanessa Toulmin
Rebecca Vick
Truth at 10 Frames per Second? Archiving Mitchell and Kenyon
12(9)
Patrick Russell
`A real brake on progress'? Moving Image Technology in the Time of Mitchell and Kenyon
21(12)
Leo Enticknap
II The Films in Context/The Film Text
From the Factory Gate to the `Home Talent' Drama: An International Overview of Local Films in the Silent Era
33(16)
Stephen Bottomore
Pictures of Crowd Splendor: The Mitchell and Kenyon Factory Gate Films
49(10)
Tom Gunning
`We take them and make them': Mitchell and Kenyon and the Travelling Exhibition Showmen
59(10)
Vanessa Toulmin
New Century Pictures: Regional Enterprise in Early British Film Exhibition
69(14)
Richard Brown
Mitchell and Kenyon in the North East
83(10)
David Williams
The Irish Films in the Mitchell and Kenyon Collection
93(10)
Robert Monks
Mitchell and Kenyon in Wales
103(10)
Dave Berry
Mitchell and Kenyon's Legacy in Scotland -- The Inspiration for a Forgotten Film-making Genre
113(12)
Janet McBain
III The Films as Historical Evidence
`We had fine banners': Street Processions in the Mitchell and Kenyon Films
125(12)
Andrew Prescott
Mitchell and Kenyon: Ceremonial Processions and Folk Traditions
137(13)
John Widdowson
`Startling, realistic, pathetic': The Mitchell and Kenyon `Boer War' Films
150(8)
Simon Popple
The Seaside and the Holiday Crowd
158(11)
John K. Walton
The Football Films
169(12)
David Russell
On the Move in the Streets: Transport Films and the Mitchell and Kenyon Collection
181(10)
Ian Yearsley
Tram Rides and Other Virtual Landscapes
191(10)
Patrick Keiller
Notes on Contributors 201(2)
Index 203

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