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Biograph Company

The Biograph Company, also known as the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company, was a motion picture company founded in 1895 and active until 1916. It was the first company in the United States devoted entirely to film production and exhibition, and for two decades was one of the most prolific, releasing over 3000 short films and 12 feature films.[1][2] During the height of silent film as a medium, Biograph was the most prominent U.S. film studio and one of the most respected and influential studios worldwide, only rivaled by Germany's UFA, Sweden's Svensk Filmindustri and France's Pathé. The company was home to pioneering director D. W. Griffith and such actors as Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish, and Lionel Barrymore.

Biograph Company
IndustryMotion pictures
Founded1895
FounderWilliam Kennedy Dickson
Defunct1916
Headquarters,
Area served
United States, Europe
Key people
ProductsSilent films

Founding edit

 
William Kennedy Dickson in 1891, later the founder of the Biograph Company, while working for Thomas A. Edison, prior to the formation of Dickson's own film studio

The company was started by William Kennedy Dickson, an inventor at Thomas Edison's laboratory who helped pioneer the technology of capturing moving images on film. Dickson left Edison in April 1895, joining with inventors Herman Casler, Henry Marvin and businessman Elias Koopman to incorporate the American Mutoscope Company in New Jersey on December 30, 1895.[3] The firm manufactured the Mutoscope and made flip-card movies for it as a rival to Edison's Kinetoscope for individual "peep shows", making the company Edison's chief competitor in the nickelodeon market. In the summer of 1896 the Biograph projector was released, offering superior image quality to Edison's Vitascope projector. The company soon became a leader in the film industry, with distribution and production subsidiaries around the world, including the British Mutoscope Co. In 1899 it changed its name to the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company, and in 1908 to simply the Biograph Company.[4]

 
Still from Biograph's film The Temptation of St. Anthony (1900) with actress in body suit, a scene of simulated nudity in early American cinema decades before the creation of the Motion Picture Production Code

To avoid violating Edison's motion picture patents, Biograph cameras from 1895 to 1902 used a large-format film, measuring 2+2332 inches (69 mm) wide, with an image area of 2 by 2+12 inches (51 mm × 64 mm), four times that of Edison's 35 mm format. The camera used friction feed instead of Edison's sprocket feed to guide the film to the aperture. The camera itself punched a sprocket hole on each side of the frame as the film was exposed at 30 frames per second.[5][6] A patent case victory in March 1902 allowed Biograph and other producers and distributors to use the less expensive 35 mm format without an Edison license, although Biograph did not completely phase out 68 mm production until autumn of 1903.[7] Biograph offered prints in both formats to exhibitors until 1905, when it discontinued the larger format.[8][9] Commenting on the 1902 Biograph Company short film The Flying Train, Ashley Swinnerton of the Museum of Modern Art said that the 68 mm format has become "of particular interest to researchers ... because the large image area affords stunning visual clarity and quality."[10]

Biograph films before 1903, were mostly "actualities," documentary film footage of actual persons, places and events, each film usually less than two minutes long, such as the one of the Empire State Express, which premiered on October 12, 1896, in New York City.[11] The occasional narrative film, usually a comedy, was typically shot in one scene, with no editing. Spurred on by competition from Edison and British and European producers, Biograph production from 1903 onward was increasingly dominated by narratives. As the stories became more complex the films became longer, with multiple scenes to tell the story, although an individual scene was still usually presented in one shot without editing. Biograph's production of actualities ended by 1908 in favor of the narrative film.

Studio edit

 
Biograph's first studio was similar to Edison's Black Maria, pictured here, only located ...
 
... on the roof of 841 Broadway in Manhattan

The company's first studio was located on the roof of 841 Broadway at 13th St. in Manhattan, known then as the Hackett Carhart Building and today as the Roosevelt Building. The set-up was similar to Thomas Edison's "Black Maria" in West Orange, New Jersey, with the studio itself being mounted on circular tracks to be able to get the best possible sunlight (as of 1988 the foundations of this machinery were still extant). The company moved in 1906 to a converted brownstone mansion at 11 East 14th Street near Union Square, a building that was razed in the 1960s.[12] This was Biograph's first indoor studio, and the first movie studio in the world to rely exclusively on artificial light. Biograph moved again in 1913, as it entered feature-film production, to a new state-of-the-art studio on 175th Street in the Bronx. Among the first projects filmed there was Chocolate Dynamite, which was shot in late August 1913 and was a split-reel comedy short, not a feature-film release.[13]

There was the problem of the underground "duping" business, where people would illegally duplicate a copyrighted movie and then remove the title screen with the company and copyright notice and sell it to theaters. In order to make the theater audience aware that they were watching an American Biograph movie (regardless of whether it was illegally "duped" or not) the AB logo would be prominently placed in random parts of the movie.[14]

Rise of D. W. Griffith edit

 
Biograph moved into this Manhattan brownstone in 1906 and continued to produce films there until 1913

Director D. W. Griffith joined Biograph in 1908 as a writer and actor, but within months became its principal director. In 1908, the company's head director Wallace McCutcheon grew ill, and his son Wallace McCutcheon Jr. took his place but was not able to make a successful film for the company.[15] As a result of these failed productions, studio head Henry Marvin gave the position of head director to Griffith, whose first film was The Adventures of Dollie.[15] Griffith helped establish many of the conventions of narrative film, including cross-cutting to show events occurring simultaneously in different places, the flashback, the fade-in/fade-out, the interposition of closeups within a scene, and a moderated acting style more suitable for film. Although Griffith did not invent these techniques, he made them a regular part of the film vocabulary. His prolific output—often one new film a week—and willingness to experiment in many different genres helped the company become a major commercial success. Many early movie stars were Biograph performers, including Mary Pickford, Lionel Barrymore, Lillian Gish, Dorothy Gish, Robert Harron, Arthur V. Johnson, Florence Auer, Robert G. Vignola, Owen Moore, Alan Hale Sr., Florence Lawrence, Blanche Sweet, Harry Carey, James Kirkwood Sr., Mabel Normand, Henry B. Walthall, Mae Marsh, and Dorothy Davenport. Mack Sennett honed his craft as an actor and director of comedies at Biograph. After debuting at Biograph, Mary Pickford also became a top star at the studio and would soon be known to audiences as "The Biograph Girl".[16]

In January 1910, Griffith and Lee Dougherty with the rest of the Biograph acting company travelled to Los Angeles. While the purpose of the trip was to shoot Ramona in authentic locations, it was also to determine the suitability of the West Coast as a place for a permanent studio. The group set up a small facility at Washington Street and Grand Avenue. After this, Griffith and his players decided to go a little further north to a small village they had heard about that was friendly and had beautiful floral scenery. They decided to travel there and fell in love with this little place called Hollywood. Biograph then made the first film ever in Hollywood called In Old California, a Latino melodrama about the early days of Mexico-owned California.[17] Griffith and the Biograph troupe filmed other short movies at various locations, then traveled back to New York. After the East Coast film community heard about Hollywood, other companies began to migrate there. Biograph's little film launched Hollywood as the future movie capital of the world. It opened a studio at Pico and Georgia streets in downtown Los Angeles (where the Los Angeles Convention Center now stands) in 1911, and sent a film crew to work there each year until 1916.

PLAY partial copy of The Wanderer (1913) directed by Griffith for Biograph; runtime time 00:06:23.

Griffith left Biograph in October 1913 after finishing Judith of Bethulia, unhappy with the company's resistance to larger budgets, feature film production or giving onscreen credit to him and the cast. With him went many of the Biograph actors, his cameraman Billy Bitzer and his production crew. As a final slight to Griffith, Biograph delayed release of Judith of Bethulia until March 1914, to avoid a profit-sharing arrangement the company had with him.[18]

Decline edit

In December 1908 Biograph joined Edison in forming the Motion Picture Patents Company in an attempt to control the industry and shut out smaller producers.[19] The "Edison Trust," as it was nicknamed, was made up of Edison, Biograph, Essanay Studios, Kalem Company, George Kleine Productions, Lubin Studios, Georges Méliès, Pathé, Selig Studios and Vitagraph Studios, and dominated distribution through the General Film Co. The Motion Picture Patents Co. and the General Film Co. were found guilty of antitrust violation in October 1915 and dissolved.[20]

Shielded by the Trust, Biograph had been slow to enter feature film production. It contracted with the theatrical firm of Klaw & Erlanger in 1913 to produce movie versions of the latter's plays. Its first released feature, Classmates, came out in February 1914, after 69 other American features had been released in 1912–13.[21] Distribution was hampered by Biograph using a special perforation pattern on the Klaw & Erlanger features that was incompatible with standard projectors, forcing exhibitors to lease specialized equipment from Biograph in order to show the films. With the exodus of the studio's best actors to Griffith, Biograph was unable to develop a marketable star system as the independent companies were doing, and after the Trust's fall, Biograph found itself behind the times. The Biograph Co. released its last new feature-length films in 1915 and its last new short films in 1916.[22] Biograph spent the remainder of the silent era reissuing its old films, and leasing its Bronx studio to other producers.

 
Still from Biograph's film Sherlock Holmes Baffled (1903)

When the company fell on financial hard times, the Biograph Studio facilities and film laboratory in the Bronx were acquired by one of Biograph Company's creditors, the Empire Trust Company, although some of the ex-Biograph staff were retained to manage the studio and laboratory facilities. Herbert Yates acquired the Biograph Studios facilities and film laboratory in 1928. Biograph Studios facilities and film laboratory were made a subsidiary of his Consolidated Film Industries in 1928.[23][24] The studio facilities and laboratory burned down in 1980.[25]

In 1939, Iris Barry, founder of the film department at the Museum of Modern Art, acquired 900 cans of film from the Actinograph Corp. Bronx Biograph studio and laboratory facitlies, which was closing its film vault and planning to destroy all the film. One uncompleted film, Lime Kiln Field Day (1913), with an all African American cast, was found among the many cans of film, and shown at MOMA in November 2014.

From 1954 to 1957, Sterling Television Company distributed a package of 100 quarter-hour television shows titled Movie Museum, featuring Biograph, Edison and other early films from the vaults of the Museum of Modern Art and the George Eastman House.

Filmography edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Elias Savada, ed. (1995). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Film Beginnings, 1893–1910 — A Work in Progress: v. A. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-3021-3.
  2. ^ Lauritzen, Einar; Lundquist, Gunnar (1976). American Film-Index 1908–1915: Motion Pictures, July 1908 – December 1915. distributed by Akademiebokhandeln, University of Stockholm. Stockholm: Film-Index. ISBN 91-7410-001-7.
  3. ^ New Jersey. Dept. of State (1900). Corporations of New Jersey: List of Certificates Filed in the Department of State During the Year 1895–1899 Inclusive. MacCrellish & Quigley. p. 30.
  4. ^ Slide, Anthony (1998). The New Historical Dictionary of the American Film Industry. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-3426-X.
  5. ^ Billy Bitzer. . The Operating Cameraman. No. Spring 1995. Society of Camera Operators. Archived from the original on November 1, 2004. Retrieved November 30, 2004.
  6. ^ Musser, Charles (1994). The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 303–313. ISBN 0-520-08533-7.
  7. ^ "Continued Legal Battles". A Guide to Motion Picture Catalogs by American Producers and Distributors. Rutgers University.
  8. ^ Gunning, Tom (December 12, 1993). D. W. Griffith and the Origins of American Narrative Film: The Early Years at Biograph. University of Illinois Press. p. 88. ISBN 0-252-06366-X. Accessed via Google Print.
  9. ^ Vaidhyanathan, Siva (April 1, 2003). Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How It Threatens Creativity. New York University Press. p. 88. ISBN 0-8147-8807-6. Accessed via Google Print.
  10. ^ Swinnerton, Ashley (August 6, 2020). "Film Vault Summer Camp, Week One: First Programs". moma.org. Museum of Modern Art.
  11. ^ SilentEra entry
  12. ^ Alleman, Richard (1988), The Movie Lover's Guide to New York, New York: Harper & Row, ISBN 0060960809, p. 147–148
  13. ^ Graham, Cooper C.; Higgins, Steve; Mancini, Elaine; Viera, João Luiz. Entry for "Chocolate Dynamite", D. W. Griffith and the Biograph Company. Metuchen, New Jersey and London: The Scarecrow Press, 1985, p. 210. Retrieved via Internet Archive (San Francisco, California), June 15, 2023. Refer to Wikipedia page for Chocolate Dynamite to see a 1913 photograph of the new glass-inclosed studio at Biograph's Bronx facilities.
  14. ^ Griffith, Richard; Mayer, Arthur; Bowser, Eileen. The Movies, Simon & Schuster (1981 edition)
  15. ^ a b . starpulse.com. Archived from the original on August 30, 2008.
  16. ^ "Mary Pickford, Silent Movie Star". goldensilents.com. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
  17. ^ Robertson, Patrick (2001). Film Facts. New York: Billboard Books. p. 21. ISBN 0-8230-7943-0. Although In Old California was the first movie shot specifically in Hollywood, Biograph had already filmed A Daring Hold-Up in Southern California in Los Angeles in 1906. Niver, Kemp R. (1971). Biograph Bulletins, 1896–1908. Los Angeles: Locare Research Group. p. 262. The Selig Polyscope Company made pictures in the Los Angeles area in 1908 and 1909, and began construction of a movie studio in Edendale, just east of Hollywood, in 1909.
  18. ^ Bowser, Eileen (1990). The Transformation of Cinema 1907–1915. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 253. ISBN 0-520-08534-5.
  19. ^ "Motion Picture Patents Company". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. from the original on May 8, 2006. Retrieved April 13, 2007.
  20. ^ "Company Records Series – Motion Picture Patents Company". The Thomas A. Edison Papers. from the original on May 25, 2007. Retrieved April 13, 2007.
  21. ^ Hanson, Patricia King, ed. (1989). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures: Feature Films, 1911–1920. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-06301-5.
  22. ^ Lauritzen, Einar; Gunnar Lundquist (1984). American Film-Index, 1916–1920: Motion Pictures, January 1916 – December 1920. Distributed by Tonnheims (Huddinge, Sweden). Stockholm, Sweden: Film-Index. ISBN 91-86568-01-9.
  23. ^ Tuska, Jon (1999). The Vanishing Legion: A History of Mascot Pictures, 1927–1935. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 42. ISBN 0-7864-0749-2. The last trade of Biograph stock was reported by The New York Times on December 27, 1928, p. 39. The Biograph trademarks were legally abandoned by 1942. 15 USC 1127. The last of the Biograph film copyrights expired in 1945, without any of them having been renewed for a second term. Hurst, Walter E. (1992–1994). Film Superlist: Motion Pictures in the U.S. Public Domain. Hollywood, California: Hollywood Film Archive. ISBN 0-911370-73-0.
  24. ^ "Screen News Here and in Hollywood". The New York Times. September 27, 1939. p. 29. Empire Trust Company, one of Biograph's creditors, had acquired the Bronx studio but retained some of the Biograph staff to manage it. Empire Trust later reassigned the management of the studios to one of its own subsidiaries, The Actinograph Corp., which held it until 1948. R.H. Hammer, Biograph's ex-general manager going back to its Griffith days, donated what remained of Biograph's film collection to the Museum of Modern Art in 1939, around the time Actinograph Corp. closed its Biograph Bronx studio and laboratory facilities. Iris Barry, "Why Wait for Posterity?" Hollywood Quarterly, January 1946, pp. 131–137. Reprinted in Hollywood Quarterly: Film Culture in Postwar America, 1945–1957.
  25. ^ "Bronx Blaze Damages Old Biograph Studios," The New York Times, July 9, 1980, p. B4.

External links edit

  • Jennifer M. Wood. "Biograph's Biography". MovieMaker. Vol. 10, no. Winter 2004.
  • . The Projection Box. Archived from the original on November 9, 2004. Retrieved November 29, 2004.
  • The Manic Barber from the Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, G. William Jones Film and Video Collection
  • Arrival of Emigrants [i.e. Immigrants], Ellis Island by Biograph Company, 1906

biograph, company, also, known, american, mutoscope, motion, picture, company, founded, 1895, active, until, 1916, first, company, united, states, devoted, entirely, film, production, exhibition, decades, most, prolific, releasing, over, 3000, short, films, fe. The Biograph Company also known as the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company was a motion picture company founded in 1895 and active until 1916 It was the first company in the United States devoted entirely to film production and exhibition and for two decades was one of the most prolific releasing over 3000 short films and 12 feature films 1 2 During the height of silent film as a medium Biograph was the most prominent U S film studio and one of the most respected and influential studios worldwide only rivaled by Germany s UFA Sweden s Svensk Filmindustri and France s Pathe The company was home to pioneering director D W Griffith and such actors as Mary Pickford Lillian Gish and Lionel Barrymore Biograph CompanyIndustryMotion picturesFounded1895FounderWilliam Kennedy DicksonDefunct1916HeadquartersBroadway at 13th Street in Manhattan New York City United StatesArea servedUnited States EuropeKey peopleHerman Casler inventor Henry Marvin inventor Elias Koopman businessman D W Griffith director Mary Pickford actress Blanche Sweet actress Lillian Gish actress Lionel Barrymore actor Henry B Walthall actor ProductsSilent films Contents 1 Founding 2 Studio 3 Rise of D W Griffith 4 Decline 5 Filmography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksFounding edit nbsp William Kennedy Dickson in 1891 later the founder of the Biograph Company while working for Thomas A Edison prior to the formation of Dickson s own film studio The company was started by William Kennedy Dickson an inventor at Thomas Edison s laboratory who helped pioneer the technology of capturing moving images on film Dickson left Edison in April 1895 joining with inventors Herman Casler Henry Marvin and businessman Elias Koopman to incorporate the American Mutoscope Company in New Jersey on December 30 1895 3 The firm manufactured the Mutoscope and made flip card movies for it as a rival to Edison s Kinetoscope for individual peep shows making the company Edison s chief competitor in the nickelodeon market In the summer of 1896 the Biograph projector was released offering superior image quality to Edison s Vitascope projector The company soon became a leader in the film industry with distribution and production subsidiaries around the world including the British Mutoscope Co In 1899 it changed its name to the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company and in 1908 to simply the Biograph Company 4 nbsp Still from Biograph s film The Temptation of St Anthony 1900 with actress in body suit a scene of simulated nudity in early American cinema decades before the creation of the Motion Picture Production Code To avoid violating Edison s motion picture patents Biograph cameras from 1895 to 1902 used a large format film measuring 2 23 32 inches 69 mm wide with an image area of 2 by 2 1 2 inches 51 mm 64 mm four times that of Edison s 35 mm format The camera used friction feed instead of Edison s sprocket feed to guide the film to the aperture The camera itself punched a sprocket hole on each side of the frame as the film was exposed at 30 frames per second 5 6 A patent case victory in March 1902 allowed Biograph and other producers and distributors to use the less expensive 35 mm format without an Edison license although Biograph did not completely phase out 68 mm production until autumn of 1903 7 Biograph offered prints in both formats to exhibitors until 1905 when it discontinued the larger format 8 9 Commenting on the 1902 Biograph Company short film The Flying Train Ashley Swinnerton of the Museum of Modern Art said that the 68 mm format has become of particular interest to researchers because the large image area affords stunning visual clarity and quality 10 Biograph films before 1903 were mostly actualities documentary film footage of actual persons places and events each film usually less than two minutes long such as the one of the Empire State Express which premiered on October 12 1896 in New York City 11 The occasional narrative film usually a comedy was typically shot in one scene with no editing Spurred on by competition from Edison and British and European producers Biograph production from 1903 onward was increasingly dominated by narratives As the stories became more complex the films became longer with multiple scenes to tell the story although an individual scene was still usually presented in one shot without editing Biograph s production of actualities ended by 1908 in favor of the narrative film Studio editMain article Biograph Studios nbsp Biograph s first studio was similar to Edison s Black Maria pictured here only located nbsp on the roof of 841 Broadway in Manhattan The company s first studio was located on the roof of 841 Broadway at 13th St in Manhattan known then as the Hackett Carhart Building and today as the Roosevelt Building The set up was similar to Thomas Edison s Black Maria in West Orange New Jersey with the studio itself being mounted on circular tracks to be able to get the best possible sunlight as of 1988 the foundations of this machinery were still extant The company moved in 1906 to a converted brownstone mansion at 11 East 14th Street near Union Square a building that was razed in the 1960s 12 This was Biograph s first indoor studio and the first movie studio in the world to rely exclusively on artificial light Biograph moved again in 1913 as it entered feature film production to a new state of the art studio on 175th Street in the Bronx Among the first projects filmed there was Chocolate Dynamite which was shot in late August 1913 and was a split reel comedy short not a feature film release 13 There was the problem of the underground duping business where people would illegally duplicate a copyrighted movie and then remove the title screen with the company and copyright notice and sell it to theaters In order to make the theater audience aware that they were watching an American Biograph movie regardless of whether it was illegally duped or not the AB logo would be prominently placed in random parts of the movie 14 Rise of D W Griffith edit nbsp Biograph moved into this Manhattan brownstone in 1906 and continued to produce films there until 1913 Director D W Griffith joined Biograph in 1908 as a writer and actor but within months became its principal director In 1908 the company s head director Wallace McCutcheon grew ill and his son Wallace McCutcheon Jr took his place but was not able to make a successful film for the company 15 As a result of these failed productions studio head Henry Marvin gave the position of head director to Griffith whose first film was The Adventures of Dollie 15 Griffith helped establish many of the conventions of narrative film including cross cutting to show events occurring simultaneously in different places the flashback the fade in fade out the interposition of closeups within a scene and a moderated acting style more suitable for film Although Griffith did not invent these techniques he made them a regular part of the film vocabulary His prolific output often one new film a week and willingness to experiment in many different genres helped the company become a major commercial success Many early movie stars were Biograph performers including Mary Pickford Lionel Barrymore Lillian Gish Dorothy Gish Robert Harron Arthur V Johnson Florence Auer Robert G Vignola Owen Moore Alan Hale Sr Florence Lawrence Blanche Sweet Harry Carey James Kirkwood Sr Mabel Normand Henry B Walthall Mae Marsh and Dorothy Davenport Mack Sennett honed his craft as an actor and director of comedies at Biograph After debuting at Biograph Mary Pickford also became a top star at the studio and would soon be known to audiences as The Biograph Girl 16 In January 1910 Griffith and Lee Dougherty with the rest of the Biograph acting company travelled to Los Angeles While the purpose of the trip was to shoot Ramona in authentic locations it was also to determine the suitability of the West Coast as a place for a permanent studio The group set up a small facility at Washington Street and Grand Avenue After this Griffith and his players decided to go a little further north to a small village they had heard about that was friendly and had beautiful floral scenery They decided to travel there and fell in love with this little place called Hollywood Biograph then made the first film ever in Hollywood called In Old California a Latino melodrama about the early days of Mexico owned California 17 Griffith and the Biograph troupe filmed other short movies at various locations then traveled back to New York After the East Coast film community heard about Hollywood other companies began to migrate there Biograph s little film launched Hollywood as the future movie capital of the world It opened a studio at Pico and Georgia streets in downtown Los Angeles where the Los Angeles Convention Center now stands in 1911 and sent a film crew to work there each year until 1916 source source source source source PLAY partial copy of The Wanderer 1913 directed by Griffith for Biograph runtime time 00 06 23 Griffith left Biograph in October 1913 after finishing Judith of Bethulia unhappy with the company s resistance to larger budgets feature film production or giving onscreen credit to him and the cast With him went many of the Biograph actors his cameraman Billy Bitzer and his production crew As a final slight to Griffith Biograph delayed release of Judith of Bethulia until March 1914 to avoid a profit sharing arrangement the company had with him 18 Decline editIn December 1908 Biograph joined Edison in forming the Motion Picture Patents Company in an attempt to control the industry and shut out smaller producers 19 The Edison Trust as it was nicknamed was made up of Edison Biograph Essanay Studios Kalem Company George Kleine Productions Lubin Studios Georges Melies Pathe Selig Studios and Vitagraph Studios and dominated distribution through the General Film Co The Motion Picture Patents Co and the General Film Co were found guilty of antitrust violation in October 1915 and dissolved 20 Shielded by the Trust Biograph had been slow to enter feature film production It contracted with the theatrical firm of Klaw amp Erlanger in 1913 to produce movie versions of the latter s plays Its first released feature Classmates came out in February 1914 after 69 other American features had been released in 1912 13 21 Distribution was hampered by Biograph using a special perforation pattern on the Klaw amp Erlanger features that was incompatible with standard projectors forcing exhibitors to lease specialized equipment from Biograph in order to show the films With the exodus of the studio s best actors to Griffith Biograph was unable to develop a marketable star system as the independent companies were doing and after the Trust s fall Biograph found itself behind the times The Biograph Co released its last new feature length films in 1915 and its last new short films in 1916 22 Biograph spent the remainder of the silent era reissuing its old films and leasing its Bronx studio to other producers nbsp Still from Biograph s film Sherlock Holmes Baffled 1903 When the company fell on financial hard times the Biograph Studio facilities and film laboratory in the Bronx were acquired by one of Biograph Company s creditors the Empire Trust Company although some of the ex Biograph staff were retained to manage the studio and laboratory facilities Herbert Yates acquired the Biograph Studios facilities and film laboratory in 1928 Biograph Studios facilities and film laboratory were made a subsidiary of his Consolidated Film Industries in 1928 23 24 The studio facilities and laboratory burned down in 1980 25 In 1939 Iris Barry founder of the film department at the Museum of Modern Art acquired 900 cans of film from the Actinograph Corp Bronx Biograph studio and laboratory facitlies which was closing its film vault and planning to destroy all the film One uncompleted film Lime Kiln Field Day 1913 with an all African American cast was found among the many cans of film and shown at MOMA in November 2014 From 1954 to 1957 Sterling Television Company distributed a package of 100 quarter hour television shows titled Movie Museum featuring Biograph Edison and other early films from the vaults of the Museum of Modern Art and the George Eastman House Filmography editList of Biograph films released in 1909 List of Biograph films released in 1910See also edit nbsp Companies portal Biograph Studios Biograph Theater Cinema of the United States History of cinema List of film formats List of Hollywood movie studiosReferences edit Elias Savada ed 1995 The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Film Beginnings 1893 1910 A Work in Progress v A Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 3021 3 Lauritzen Einar Lundquist Gunnar 1976 American Film Index 1908 1915 Motion Pictures July 1908 December 1915 distributed by Akademiebokhandeln University of Stockholm Stockholm Film Index ISBN 91 7410 001 7 New Jersey Dept of State 1900 Corporations of New Jersey List of Certificates Filed in the Department of State During the Year 1895 1899 Inclusive MacCrellish amp Quigley p 30 Slide Anthony 1998 The New Historical Dictionary of the American Film Industry Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 3426 X Billy Bitzer The Biograph Camera The Operating Cameraman No Spring 1995 Society of Camera Operators Archived from the original on November 1 2004 Retrieved November 30 2004 Musser Charles 1994 The Emergence of Cinema The American Screen to 1907 Berkeley California University of California Press pp 303 313 ISBN 0 520 08533 7 Continued Legal Battles A Guide to Motion Picture Catalogs by American Producers and Distributors Rutgers University Gunning Tom December 12 1993 D W Griffith and the Origins of American Narrative Film The Early Years at Biograph University of Illinois Press p 88 ISBN 0 252 06366 X Accessed via Google Print Vaidhyanathan Siva April 1 2003 Copyrights and Copywrongs The Rise of Intellectual Property and How It Threatens Creativity New York University Press p 88 ISBN 0 8147 8807 6 Accessed via Google Print Swinnerton Ashley August 6 2020 Film Vault Summer Camp Week One First Programs moma org Museum of Modern Art SilentEra entry Alleman Richard 1988 The Movie Lover s Guide to New York New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0060960809 p 147 148 Graham Cooper C Higgins Steve Mancini Elaine Viera Joao Luiz Entry for Chocolate Dynamite D W Griffith and the Biograph Company Metuchen New Jersey and London The Scarecrow Press 1985 p 210 Retrieved via Internet Archive San Francisco California June 15 2023 Refer to Wikipedia page for Chocolate Dynamite to see a 1913 photograph of the new glass inclosed studio at Biograph s Bronx facilities Griffith Richard Mayer Arthur Bowser Eileen The Movies Simon amp Schuster 1981 edition a b D W Griffith Biography starpulse com Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Mary Pickford Silent Movie Star goldensilents com Retrieved July 24 2019 Robertson Patrick 2001 Film Facts New York Billboard Books p 21 ISBN 0 8230 7943 0 Although In Old California was the first movie shot specifically in Hollywood Biograph had already filmed A Daring Hold Up in Southern California in Los Angeles in 1906 Niver Kemp R 1971 Biograph Bulletins 1896 1908 Los Angeles Locare Research Group p 262 The Selig Polyscope Company made pictures in the Los Angeles area in 1908 and 1909 and began construction of a movie studio in Edendale just east of Hollywood in 1909 Bowser Eileen 1990 The Transformation of Cinema 1907 1915 Berkeley University of California Press p 253 ISBN 0 520 08534 5 Motion Picture Patents Company Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Archived from the original on May 8 2006 Retrieved April 13 2007 Company Records Series Motion Picture Patents Company The Thomas A Edison Papers Archived from the original on May 25 2007 Retrieved April 13 2007 Hanson Patricia King ed 1989 The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Feature Films 1911 1920 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 06301 5 Lauritzen Einar Gunnar Lundquist 1984 American Film Index 1916 1920 Motion Pictures January 1916 December 1920 Distributed by Tonnheims Huddinge Sweden Stockholm Sweden Film Index ISBN 91 86568 01 9 Tuska Jon 1999 The Vanishing Legion A History of Mascot Pictures 1927 1935 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 42 ISBN 0 7864 0749 2 The last trade of Biograph stock was reported by The New York Times on December 27 1928 p 39 The Biograph trademarks were legally abandoned by 1942 15 USC 1127 The last of the Biograph film copyrights expired in 1945 without any of them having been renewed for a second term Hurst Walter E 1992 1994 Film Superlist Motion Pictures in the U S Public Domain Hollywood California Hollywood Film Archive ISBN 0 911370 73 0 Screen News Here and in Hollywood The New York Times September 27 1939 p 29 Empire Trust Company one of Biograph s creditors had acquired the Bronx studio but retained some of the Biograph staff to manage it Empire Trust later reassigned the management of the studios to one of its own subsidiaries The Actinograph Corp which held it until 1948 R H Hammer Biograph s ex general manager going back to its Griffith days donated what remained of Biograph s film collection to the Museum of Modern Art in 1939 around the time Actinograph Corp closed its Biograph Bronx studio and laboratory facilities Iris Barry Why Wait for Posterity Hollywood Quarterly January 1946 pp 131 137 Reprinted in Hollywood Quarterly Film Culture in Postwar America 1945 1957 Bronx Blaze Damages Old Biograph Studios The New York Times July 9 1980 p B4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to American Mutoscope and Biograph Company Jennifer M Wood Biograph s Biography MovieMaker Vol 10 no Winter 2004 Mutoscope and Biograph The Projection Box Archived from the original on November 9 2004 Retrieved November 29 2004 The Manic Barber from the Southern Methodist University Central University Libraries G William Jones Film and Video Collection Arrival of Emigrants i e Immigrants Ellis Island by Biograph Company 1906 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Biograph Company amp oldid 1183363812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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