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H. A. Forsyth

Henry Albert ('Bert') Forsyth, known professionally as H. A. Forsyth (and informally as Bert Forsyth), was a pioneer of Australian film production during the silent era. From about 1907 to 1909 Forsyth worked as a travelling picture showman, screening the film Robbery Under Arms in Australian country towns. In 1910 his company, Southern Cross Motion Pictures, produced and released two successful motion pictures, Thunderbolt and Moonlite, based on incidents in the careers of the bushrangers Frederick Ward and Andrew Scott. For these projects Forsyth worked with Jack Gavin, who directed both films and acted in the lead roles. In January 1913 the New South Wales Government banned Forsyth's bushranger films (as part of a wider ban on the bushranging genre). At various stages in his career Bert Forsyth also managed theatres that screened motion pictures.

Bert Forsyth (H. A. Forsyth)
Portrait of H. A. Forsyth (published in November 1910).
Born
Henry Albert Forsyth

(1872-10-08)8 October 1872
Died18 May 1959(1959-05-18) (aged 86)
Occupationfilm producer
Spouse(s)(1) Marie Hammond
(2) Mary Willett
(3) Nancy Duncan
ParentAllen Forsyth & Sarah LaFranchi (née Standen)

Biography

Early years

Henry Albert Forsyth was born on 8 October 1872 at Bushman's Lead in the Central West of New South Wales (renamed Parkes in 1873), the son of Allen Forsyth and Sarah LaFranchi (née Standen).[1] Before the birth of her son Sarah had been married to Antonio ('Peter') LaFranchi, so Bert had six older half-sisters. LaFranchi had abandoned his family in about 1868 when he travelled to the gold-fields near Warwick in Queensland to attend to the affairs of his brother (who died in August that year). During LaFranchi's absence Sarah formed a relationship with Allen Forsyth, with whom she had two sons, Allen Edgar ('Eddie') born in 1871 and Henry Albert ('Bert') born the following year. By about 1873 Peter LaFranchi had returned to the district and he and Sarah resumed their relationship, with Bert and his brother being raised within the LaFranchi household at Grenfell. Sarah and Peter LaFranchi had three more daughters, but the marriage finally broke down by about 1880. Sarah subsequently formed a relationship with Lars Madsen by whom she had four sons, born from 1881 to 1888 at Cudgellico and Young.[2]

Bert Forsyth's interest in bushrangers probably began as a childhood fascination. The goldfields of the Forbes, Grenfell and Young districts had been a focus of outlaw activity only a decade before his birth. The famous bushranger Ben Hall was shot dead in May 1865, in a police ambush near Billabong Creek, south-west of Parkes.[3] In his formative years young Bert Forsyth would have been aware of stories of famous bushrangers who had operated in the district, such as Hall, Frank Gardiner, Johnny Gilbert and Jack O'Meally, and probably met people with first-hand accounts (both positive and negative) of their activities.[4]

Forsyth was an expert horseman.[5] Lines of verse written about Forsyth, published in the Sydney Sportsman newspaper in 1911, make reference to his horsemanship: "He's been a rider of renown, / And owned and trained his prads, you know".[6]

Forsyth may have had experience as an actor. Lines of the verse in the Sydney Sportsman suggest he performed in a stage-play of Robbery Under Arms, which had been adapted for the stage by Alfred Dampier and Garnet Walch in 1890 and proved to be a popular theatrical production over many years in Australia.[7] The verse reads: "In Boldrewood's great piece he played. / They say that he was all the rage / As in a bright red shirt arrayed / He strutted up and down the stage".[6]

First marriage

Bert Forsyth and Marie Hammond were married on 14 May 1900 in Sydney (according to the rites of the Roman Catholic church).[8] The couple lived in the Newcastle suburb of Hamilton. After their marriage (according to Forsyth's later testimony) the couple "were happy for about two months", but then he noticed his wife was beginning to "drink to excess". Later Marie told him she was going to Sydney, as living at Hamilton was "too quiet". One day, when Forsyth arrived home, he found his wife had left. Forsyth met with his wife in Sydney on a number of occasions in the following years, but each time she refused to return to live with him.[9]

In January 1906 Forsyth travelled to America "on business" (probably to San Francisco).[9] In the early morning of 18 April 1906 a major earthquake struck California, with its epicentre near San Francisco, causing considerable damage and loss of life.[10] The opening lines of the verse published in the Sydney Sportsman implies Forsyth was managing a theatre in San Francisco at the time of the earthquake, which destroyed the building: "He's been up to all sorts of games / He ran a show in 'Frisco town; / This man, 'twas he brought on the 'quake / Which tumbled flat his theatre down".[6] Forsyth returned to Australia later that year.[9] In a later newspaper article, Forsyth is described as a man "who has considerable globe trotting experience".[11]

In December 1906 after his return from America, Forsyth applied for a divorce from his wife Marie on the ground of desertion. At the time he was working as an insurance agent. After Forsyth had testified to the court, outlining the basis for his petition, a decree nisi was granted.[9] Forsyth's divorce from Marie was finalised in February 1908.[12]

Travelling picture show

For three years (probably 1907 to 1909) Forsyth worked as a travelling moving picture showman, touring the film Robbery Under Arms "into every nook and corner of Australia". Two motion picture versions of Robbery Under Arms had been produced in 1907, one by the Tait brothers and the other by Charles MacMahon, but the particular version that was toured by Forsyth has not been determined. Forsyth later recalled having "as many as three or four people on the job to get the film through" the old projector machine. He added: "Two dozen stoppages and breaks was a common occurrence; the lighting obtained from the limelight was certainly very soft and restful to the eye, but at times little could be seen of the picture". Notwithstanding the difficulties and shortcomings, Forsyth later claimed the audiences "were carried away with enthusiasm at the wonderful exhibition they saw". Forsyth exhibited Robbery Under Arms "over and over again at the same places" and often "the return visits drew larger houses than on the first occasion".[13]

Theatre management

By 1909 Bert Forsyth was managing the Regent Music Hall in Regent Street, Redfern, the first building in the Sydney suburbs utilised for the screening of motion pictures. The brother of Forsyth's ex-wife, Herbert Hammond, also worked at the Regent Music Hall as a projector operator.[13][14] The theatre had begun showing films by July 1907.[15]

On the evening of 29 April 1910 the film Robbery Under Arms was shown in the Masonic Hall in Cobar, in the central west of New South Wales. Advertised as "Forsyth's Stirring Picture Drama", the film was brought to Cobar by Herbert Hammond. The screening "drew a good house" but was considered to be "a very indifferent show" by the writer for the local newspaper. The writer commented: "The light was poor, the pictures small and the programme ended about 9.30 – a combination of features which Cobar people dislike".[16][A]

Film production

Thunderbolt

 
A still from the Thunderbolt film: Jess Anson in a state of collapse after learning her fiancé, Frederick Ward, had been imprisoned for cattle duffing (attended by her parents and Dr. Jenkins).

Forsyth's first moving picture production was Thunderbolt, based on incidents in the career of the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt (Frederick Ward). Thunderbolt was portrayed by Jack Gavin (who is also credited as the director of the film) and Forsyth himself took on the role of William Monckton, the bushranger's young acolyte.[17][18] Ruby Butler played the dual roles of Jess Anson (Fred Ward's fiancée) and the Aboriginal girl Sunday.[19] The camera operator was Alfred J. Moulton, who had cinematography experience working for Pathé Frères (that had a branch office in Sydney).[18][20][B]

Thunderbolt was filmed in and around Lithgow during a two-to-three week period in October 1910. The Lithgow district "was specially selected by reason of the suitability of its surroundings". During the shooting of the film miners at Lithgow were on strike and a number were recruited as extras and "used in minor parts, such as bushrangers and mounted troopers". The footage depicting the death of Thunderbolt was filmed at a place known as "the second junction bridge" on the road between Bowenfels and Rydal. For the scenes that involved firearms, cartridges were used with the lead removed and replaced with soap. During the filming of the death of Captain Thunderbolt, the actor Jack Gavin later recalled that "the hard soap pellets had perforated my clothes in many places".[18][20]

The completed film was reported to be a four-reel movie of over three thousand feet in length.[21][20] A later article in Sydney's The Arrow newspaper claimed Thunderbolt was the first four-reel film ever produced (at a time when the average length of a dramatic film was from 800 to 900 feet).[22] An article in November 1910 in Sydney's The Newsletter described the completed Thunderbolt as a film that was "admirably produced, being as clear and as distinct as any yet shown in Australia".[17] In mid-November Forsyth had an advertisement published in The Sun newspaper addressed "To Showmen", advising of the availability of his newly finished film Thunderbolt ("The Film That Draws the Crowd").[21] Thunderbolt was first screened in mid-December 1910 in the Queen's Theatre in Pitt Street in Sydney.[23] In early December 1910 it was reported that the film depicting Thunderbolt the bushranger was "proving a big draw wherever exhibited, in fact a perfect money spinner", and Southern Cross Motion Pictures "is troubled to supply the demand made upon their film department". Forsyth, the manager, advised that "they have several other bushranging films in course of preparation".[11]

Moonlite

 
On location filming Moonlite: "Mr. H. A. Forsyth gives instruction in the art and practice of using a gun" (The Sun, 5 January 1911).

Forsyth's film about Thunderbolt was followed by another based on the career of Captain Moonlite (Andrew Scott). The screenplay for Moonlite was written by Forsyth and the cinematography carried out by A. J. Moulton.[24][25] In a later interview Jack Gavin claimed his wife Agnes was also involved in writing the screenplay.[20] Moonlite was filmed using the same ensemble of actors in the major roles, with Gavin taking the role of Captain Moonlite and credited as the director of the film. Ruby Butler played 'Ruth Clarke', the love-interest in the film, and Forsyth also acted in the production. Gavin's wife Agnes played the role of the Aboriginal woman 'Bunda Bunda'.[20][24]

The filming of Moonlite was carried out from November to mid-December 1910 and was reported to have involved over 200 people.[26][27] Another account states that the production involved "over 50 actors" and twenty horses.[28]

The film was shot at various locations in and around Sydney and Lithgow. Some of the Sydney locations used in the film were the Grosvenor Hotel, Sydney Harbour off Pyrmont (near Glebe Island), Lane Cove River and Parramatta River.[28][25] In one of the scenes filmed in late November 1910, Jack Gavin as Moonlite makes his escape from the police by jumping from a vessel into Sydney Harbour. A suitable vessel had been found, anchored near Glebe Island. After Gavin dived from the poop deck of the vessel, 18 feet into the water, "to the horror of his confreres, a shark was noticed making for him". Forsyth, "with admirable presence of mind", grabbed a dog and threw it overboard "to distract the attention of the monster of the deep, and at the same time shouting instructions to all hands to fire off revolvers containing blank cartridges". The distractions were successful and Gavin was pulled aboard.[29]

The finished film was 3,750 feet in length and was reported to have been produced at a cost of over a thousand pounds.[26][30]

In late December 1910 Southern Cross Motion Pictures, under Forsyth's management, opened a new theatre in Sydney on the corner of Rawson Place and Pitt Street (opposite Central Railway Station). The theatre was rudimentary, basically an open-air enclosure where films could be shown.[31] An advance screening of Moonlite was shown at the Rawson Place theatre on 30 December 1910 to "representatives of the press and a number of gentlemen interested in biographical work".[26] The theatre was officially opened the following night with the first public screening of Forsyth's new motion picture, Moonlite.[31] During January 1911 Thunderbolt was also shown, as well as another locally-made film, Fred Fox, the Snake King, featuring the handling of snakes near Sydney.[32][33] Later that month Southern Cross Pictures introduced new material, described as a "series of historical, dramatic, and humorous moving pictures". Films shown in mid-January included titles such as A Little Child Shall Lead Them and A Romance of the Rockies.[34] In March 1911, "in addition to the usual instalment" of motion pictures, the Southern Cross Picture Palace included sheep shearing exhibitions and contests "between shearers who have the reputation of being 'ringers'".[35]

 
Caricature of Bert Forsyth ("a well-known Picture Showman"), published in Sydney Sportsman, 22 February 1911.

The Miner's Gift

A comment in an interview given by Jack Gavin in 1923 suggests Forsyth may have travelled overseas in 1911 after Moonlite was made and being shown around the country: "Forsyth, having made considerable money, went on a world's tour".[20] If so, he had returned by about November 1911 to produce another film.

The Miner's Gift was probably filmed in about November 1911; it was being shown at the Hippodrome cinema in Newtown from 11 to 13 December 1911.[36] The Miner's Gift was a film of three thousand feet length with the subtitle The Fight for Fortune, described as "The Australian Mining Drama". It was shown in late December 1911 at Herbert's Pictures at Islington in Newcastle.[37] It was shown at the Pictoria cinema in Maitland on Saturday, 30 December 1911. The film was presented with "a special lecturer" in attendance.[38] An article about the screening of the film at Benalla in late May 1915 described the plot as incorporating "love, robbery, and an apparent murder by a tribe of blacks, culminating in the burning of a bush home and the rescue therefrom of a digger's sweetheart and a Chinaman".[39]

On 18 December 1911 a notice was published in The Age newspaper announcing that H. A. Forsyth of the Southern Cross Film Company had arrived in Melbourne "with the company's latest production", the film The Miner's Gift. The advertisement recommended: "Showmen, get busy and book this money getter".[40]

The bushranger ban

Bert Forsyth and Mary ('Marie') Willett were married on 2 March 1912 at St. Stephen's Presbyterian church in Phillip Street in Sydney.[41] Marie Willett had been an actress with William Anderson's Dramatic Company, a touring theatre group.[42]

In May 1912 it was reported that Forsyth was managing Arcade Pictures at Newtown.[43] By July 1912 Forsyth was negotiating to extend the Arcade Picture Palace to have its frontage on King Street by incorporating the site of the adjoining Hatte's Arcade. In August 1912 it was reported that Arcade Pictures at Newtown was to be formed into a company.[44]

In November 1912 regulations were gazetted in New South Wales "to govern the screening of cinematograph films" under the "Theatres and Public Halls Act, 1908". The new regulations specifically banned the exhibition of "successful crime such as bushranging, robberies, or other act of lawlessness, which might reasonably be considered as having an injurious influence on youthful minds". Motion picture programmes, together with a synopsis of each item, were required to be submitted to the police for inspection and approval (with a possible further requirement to screen the films "for the information of the police"). The regulations allowed for a penalty of up to £20 for a breach of the regulations.[45][46]

The Federated Picture Showmen's Association of New South Wales responded by issuing a lengthy circular arguing against the new censorship regulations.[47] A subsequent statement by the Acting Colonial Secretary Frederick Flowers made it apparent the regulations were primarily targetting films that depicted "bushranging episodes", where the police are "frequently represented as acting in the most ridiculous and incompetent manner, and often as creators of crime".[48] Flowers' statement supported the view by many in the industry that the negative representations of police in these films was a prime motivator of the changes.[49]

In late January 1913 the New South Wales Colonial Secretary James McGowen used his powers under section 27 of the "Theatres and Public Halls Act, 1908" to specifically prohibit the exhibition "of the cinematograph films entitled 'Thunderbolt' and 'Moonlite'".[50] Section 27 authorised the Minister to prohibit "the holding of any public entertainment" (such as motion pictures) "if the Minister is of the opinion that it is fitting for the preservation of good manners and decorum".[51]

The banning of bushranger-themed films by government regulation in New South Wales coincided with a period of industry restructuring, with the large cinema exhibitors and film distribution network in Australia favouring American imports, leading to a decline in independent theatres and touring circuits and a reluctance to support Australian film production.[52]

In September 1913 Forsyth was recorded as a theatrical agent and manager of the Star Picture Palace at Parramatta.[53]

The war years and after

Forsyth's occupation was recorded as an "Amusements Manager" when he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force at Holsworthy in late-September 1915 (a week short of his 43rd birthday). His next of kin was recorded as his wife Mary, then living at 20 Linthorpe Street in Newtown. Forsyth was placed in the 5th Squadron (2nd Remount Unit) and embarked for overseas service in November 1915.[54] The Remount units were given the task of training and caring for the Australian horses during the Sinai and Palestine campaigns. Enlisted men placed in the Remount units were often older (with a maximum age of 50), a high proportion of whom were Boer War veterans and expert horsemen.[55] In March 1916 Forsyth suffered from a sprained knee and was hospitalised in Egypt. He rejoined his unit at the Heliopolis Camp near Cairo in May, but was demobilised in June 1916 and returned to Australia aboard the hospital ship H.S. Itonus.[54]

After the war ended Forsyth was employed as a "film exchange officer" by Harry Musgrove's First National Films and Australasian Films.[56][57] Film exchanges were film distribution businesses that rented out motion pictures to theatres, a business process that suited flexible and frequent program changes.[58]

In 1923 Forsyth was responsible for organising a song competition for The Manly Daily newspaper which offered prizes of £50 to compose a musical score to match the lyrics of Manly By the Sea, written by Mr. H. C. Bailey of Waterloo. The short-listed entries were presented in a series of concerts.[59][60] The first of ten concerts was held at the Dungowan Theatre in early March, presenting six of the selected compositions for adjudication.[61] Later that year Forsyth organised an art competition for The Manly Daily on the theme of "Beauties of Manly", culminating in an exhibition which opened in December 1923.[62]

A branch of the Australian Natives' Association was formed at Manly in July 1924, with H. A. Forsyth as its vice-president.[63]

Later years

By 1930 Bert Forsyth was living in Botany Street in Bondi Junction, in Sydney's eastern suburbs. His occupation was recorded as an agent on the 1930 electoral roll.[64]

Evidence from electoral rolls indicate that Forsyth had separated from his second wife. From about the mid-1930s Forsyth and a woman named Nancy Duncan were living in a de facto relationship (with Nancy listed on the rolls as 'Nancy Forsyth'). The couple eventually married in May 1959, four months before Bert Forsyth's death. By 1937 Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living at 257 Victoria Street in Darlinghurst. Bert's occupation was recorded as an agent on the 1937 electoral roll.[65] By March 1940, when Forsyth enlisted in the Citizen Military Forces, his occupation was recorded as "Auditor Clerk" and he and Nancy were still living in Victoria Street, Darlinghurst.[66]

Forsyth enlisted in the Australian Military Forces at Paddington in March 1940, and was placed in the Citizen Forces. His enlistment record shows his date of birth as 8 October 1878, so his age was recorded as 62 years. Forsyth was actually aged 68 years, so he probably gave false information to stay within a required upper age limit. On the section for the next of kin, the name originally entered was "Marie Forsyth", but "Marie" was crossed out and "Nancy" written above (the change initialled by Forsyth).[66]

Forsyth was initially attached to the "Artillery Wing" at Liverpool, but in late May was transferred to Pay Corps at the Moore Park Showgrounds. He was promoted to Corporal in December 1940. In January 1943 Forsyth was discharged from the Army; his record was notated: "Services no longer required, there being no suitable vacancy in which his services could be utilised in view of his age".[66] By 1943 Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living at 32 Cook Road in Centennial Park. Bert's occupation was recorded as a soldier in the information collected for the 1943 electoral roll.[67]

By December 1945 Forsyth was living at Killcare, on the New South Wales Central Coast.[66] In 1949 the electoral roll shows that Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living in Killcare Road, Killcare, with Bert recorded as having "no occupation".[68]

On 2 January 1959 Forsyth and Nancy Duncan were married in Sydney (his third marriage).[69][2]

Bert Forsyth died on 18 May 1959 at Gosford on the Central Coast of New South Wales, aged 86 years.[70][2] He was buried in the Anglican section of the Point Clare cemetery at Gosford.[71]

Filmography

  • Thunderbolt (1910) – producer, actor.
  • Moonlite (1910) (a.k.a. Captain Moonlite) – producer, writer, actor.
  • The Miner's Gift (1911) – "a story of early Australian mining days".[72]

Notes

A.^ The motion picture Robbery Under Arms, screened at Cobar in April 1910, was either the Tait Brothers version or the MacMahon version. The fact that it was advertised in the Cobar Herald as "Forsyth's Stirring Picture Drama" probably indicates that Forsyth was well-known in the district as a travelling showman who in recent years had toured this film. Also, a travelling picture showman would tend to have a proprietorial attitude to the films they screened. In the early years of exhibiting moving pictures in Australia a film "was sold by the producer straight out to a showman, who when he had shown it sufficiently, sold it to another showman".[73]. In 1910 Forsyth was probably still managing the Regent Street theatre in Redfern, but at that time his employee Herbert Hammond may have been touring films in country towns.
B.^ Alfred J. Moulton was born in 1873 in the Mount Gambier district of South Australia. He was a pioneer cinematographer in Australia, being employed for four years by Pathé Frères, the French film equipment and production company.[74] In October 1909 Pathé Frères was contracted by the Western Australia government "for cinematograph pictures of scenes and industries" for the purposes of advertising the "great natural resources" of the state.[75] Soon afterwards Moulton travelled to Kalgoorlie "for the purpose of taking biograph pictures illustrating the gold mining industry".[76] Moulton also worked for Wests Pictures Ltd.[77] Moulton lived at Summer Hill in Sydney and died in July 1924, aged 51 years, at the Lewisham Private Hospital "after a short illness".[74]

References

  1. ^ NSW birth registration: Henry A. Forsyth; reg. no. 9788/1872; reg. district: Forbes.
  2. ^ a b c Family records, Ancestry.com.
  3. ^ The Ben Hall Sites - Ben Hall's Death Site, H01827, New South Wales State Heritage Register, Heritage NSW website, Department of Planning and Environment, accessed 25 December 2022.
  4. ^ White, Charles (1903). History of Australian Bushranging: 1863-1880, Ben Hall to the Kelly Gang. Sydney NSW: Angus and Robertson.
  5. ^ H. A. (Bert) Forsyth, NFSA (National Film and Sound Archive) website, accessed 23 December 2022.
  6. ^ a b c Bert Forsyth, Sydney Sportsman, 22 February 1911, page 4.
  7. ^ Robbery Under Arms, The Herald (Melbourne), 1 March 1890, page 2; "Robbery Under Arms", Table Talk (Melbourne), 6 June 1901, page 23.
  8. ^ NSW marriage registration: Henry A. Forsyth & Marie Hammond; reg. no. 2871/1900; reg. district: Sydney.
  9. ^ a b c d "Having a Good Time", Evening News (Sydney), 13 December 1906, page 5.
  10. ^ The Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake, H01827, USGS website (U.S. Geological Survey), USGS Earthquake Hazards Program, accessed 25 December 2022.
  11. ^ a b Theatrical Gossip, The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People (Sydney), 3 December 1910, page 3.
  12. ^ In Divorce, Sydney Morning Herald, 19 February 1908, page 6.
  13. ^ a b Australian Picture Production of Other Days, Everyones (Sydney), Vol. 4 No. 286 (26 August 1925), page 50.
  14. ^ A breath of the past..., Everyones (Sydney), Vol. 4 No. 290 (23 September 1925), page 47.
  15. ^ The Regent-street Music Hall..., Evening News (Sydney), 22 July 1907, page 8.
  16. ^ Robbery Under Arms (advertisement), Cobar Herald, 29 April 1910, page 4; Robbery Under Arms, Cobar Herald, 29 April 1910, page 5; The "Robbery Under Arms" picture..., Cobar Herald, 3 May 1910, page 2.
  17. ^ a b Thunderbolt – Moving Pictures, The Newsletter (Sydney), 19 November 1910, page 9.
  18. ^ a b c Cinematography in Lithgow, Lithgow Mercury, 2 November 1910, page 2.
  19. ^ Theatrical Gossip, The Newsletter (Sydney), 3 December 1910,page 2.
  20. ^ a b c d e f When the Australian-Produced Picture Made Big Money, Everyones (Sydney), Vol. 3 No. 166 (9 May 1923), page 166.
  21. ^ a b To Showmen: Thunderbolt (advertisement), The Sun (Sydney), 19 November 1910, page 3.
  22. ^ An Australian Producer, Arrow (Sydney), 12 August 1916, page 3.
  23. ^ Thunderbolt (advertisement), Sunday Sun (Sydney), 13 November 1910, page 7.
  24. ^ a b Southern Cross Picture Palace, Sydney Sportsman, 28 December 1910, page 8.
  25. ^ a b Southern Cross Pictures, Sunday Times (Sydney), 1 January 1911, page 2.
  26. ^ a b c "Moonlite" Private View, The Sun (Sydney), 31 December 1910, page 5.
  27. ^ H. A. Forsyth, of the Southern Cross Film Enterprise..., Referee (Sydney), 14 December 1910, page 16.
  28. ^ a b Making a Thriller: The Moving Picture Craze, The Sun (Sydney), 5 January 1911, page 8.
  29. ^ The Perils of a Biograph Artist, The Newsletter (Sydney), 3 December 1910, page 2.
  30. ^ Moonlite (advertisement), Brisbane Courier, 4 March 1911, page 2.
  31. ^ a b Southern Cross Motion Pictures, Sydney Morning Herald, 31 December 1910, page 14; Moonlite Motion Pictures, The Sun (Sydney), 2 January 1911, page 4; "Moonlite", Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 2 January 1911, page 9.
  32. ^ Southern Cross Pictures, Sunday Times (Sydney), 15 January 1911, page 2; Stage Song and Show, The Sun (Sydney), 16 January 1911, page 3.
  33. ^ Southern Cross Pictures, Truth (Sydney), 15 January 1911, page 2.
  34. ^ Southern Cross Pictures, Sunday Times (Sydney), 22 January 1911, page 2.
  35. ^ Strutters' Page, The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People (Sydney), 18 March 1911, page 2.
  36. ^ The Hippodrome, King-street, Truth (Sydney), 10 December 1911, page 2.
  37. ^ Herbert's Pictures, Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate, 27 December 1911, page 12.
  38. ^ Pictoria, Maitland Daily Mercury, 30 December 1911, page 2.
  39. ^ Latest Picture Entertainment, North Eastern Ensign (Benalla, Vic.), 4 June 1915, page 3.
  40. ^ To Showmen, The Age (Melbourne), 18 December 1911, page 12.
  41. ^ Marriages, The Age (Melbourne), 30 March 1912, page 5.
  42. ^ "When London Sleeps", Colac Herald, 12 May 1909, page 3; King's Theatre, The Argus (Melbourne), 6 February 1911, page 9.
  43. ^ Theatrical Gossip, The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People (Sydney), 4 May 1912, page 3.
  44. ^ Theatrical Gossip, The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People (Sydney), 27 July 1912, page 2; Successful Picture Show, The Newsletter (Sydney), 31 August 1912, page 4.
  45. ^ Censoring Films: Regulations Gazetted, Evening News (Sydney), 6 November 1912, page 7.
  46. ^ Couzens (2019), page 104.
  47. ^ Showmen's Case: Arguments Against Censorship, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 20 November 1912, page 11.
  48. ^ Film Censorship, Evening News (Sydney), 20 November 1912, page 9.
  49. ^ Andrew James Couzens (2019), page 104.
  50. ^ Notice, New South Wales Police Gazette and Weekly Record of Crime (Sydney), 29 January 1913 (Issue No. 5), page 55.
  51. ^ Theatres and Public Halls Act 1908 No. 13, Section 27, NSW Legislation website, New South Wales Government; accessed 31 December 2022.
  52. ^ Andrew James Couzens (2019), page 105-106.
  53. ^ Parramatta Court: The Picture Doorkeeper, Cumberland Argus and Fruitgrowers Advocate (Parramatta), 24 September 1913, page 1.
  54. ^ a b World War I service record: "Forsyth Henry Albert : SERN 1295 : POB Parkes NSW : POE Holsworthy NSW : NOK (wife) Forsyth Mary". National Archives of Australia. B2455. 4019249. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  55. ^ Ross Mallett (2005), Remount Service, First AIF Order of Battle 1914-1918 website, accessed 23 December 2022.
  56. ^ Personalities: H. A. ("Bert") Forsyth, Everyones (Sydney), Vol. 3 No. 143 (29 November 1922), page 20.
  57. ^ First National Films, The Age (Melbourne), 30 November 1920, page 8.
  58. ^ Max Joseph Alvarez (2005), 'The Origins of the Film Exchange', Film History: An International Journal, Vol. 17, No. 4, Indiana University Press, pages 431-465.
  59. ^ Personalities: H. A. ("Bert") Forsyth, Everyones (Sydney), Vol. 3 No. 154 (14 February 1923), page 28.
  60. ^ Song Competition, Gosford Times and Wyong District Advocate, 22 February 1923, page 8.
  61. ^ Manly Song Competition, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 8 March 1923, page 7.
  62. ^ Art Exhibition, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 17 December 1923, page 9; "Beauties of Manly", The Sun (Sydney), 23 December 1923, page 4.
  63. ^ A.N.A. at Manly, The Sun (Sydney), 16 July 1924, page 16.
  64. ^ 1930 Electoral Roll, electorates: Wentworth (Commonwealth), Bondi (State); subdivision of Bondi; page 42.
  65. ^ 1937 Electoral Roll, electorates: East Sydney (Commonwealth), King (State); subdivision of Darlinghurst West; page 39.
  66. ^ a b c d World War II service record: "Forsyth Henry Albert : Service No. N71922 : Date of Birth: 08 Oct 1878 : Place of Birth: Parkes NSW : Place of enlistment: Paddington NSW : Next of Kin: Forsyth Nancy". National Archives of Australia. B884. 5602774. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  67. ^ 1943 Electoral Roll, electorates: Watson (Commonwealth), Waverley (State); subdivision of Centennial Park; page 7.
  68. ^ 1949 Electoral Roll, electorates: Robertson (Commonwealth), Hawkesbury (State); subdivision of Woy Woy; page 29.
  69. ^ NSW marriage registration: Henry Albert Forsyth & Nancy Duncan; reg. no. 10/1959; reg. district: Sydney.
  70. ^ NSW death registration: Henry Albert Forsyth; reg. no. 11398/1959; reg. district: Gosford.
  71. ^ Point Clare Cemetery, published by the Central Coast Family History Society Inc., page 41.
  72. ^ Olympic, Daily Mercury (Mackay, Qld.), 16 August 1915, page 7.
  73. ^ Who's Who in the Movies, Table Talk (Melbourne), 18 October 1928, page 24
  74. ^ a b Obituary: Mr. A. J. Moulton, Border Watch (Mount Gambier), 2 September 1924, page 3.
  75. ^ Big Cinematograph Contract, Truth (Perth), 16 October 1909, page 6.
  76. ^ Forty Years Ago: From the "Miner" of October 27, 1909, Kalgoorlie Miner, 27 October 1949, page 4.
  77. ^ Glaciarium - West's Pictures, Sunday Times (Sydney), 5 March 1911, page 2.
Sources
  • Andrew James Couzens (2019), A Cultural History of the Bushranger Legend in Theatres and Cinemas, 1828-2017, London: Anthem Press (ISBN 1-78-308892-3).

Further reading

  • Andrew James Couzens (2019), A Cultural History of the Bushranger Legend in Theatres and Cinemas, 1828-2017, London: Anthem Press (ISBN 1-78-308892-3).
  • William D. Routt (December 2001), 'More Australian than Aristotelian: The Australian Bushranger Film, 1904-1914', Senses of Cinema website / online journal, Issue 18.

External links

forsyth, henry, albert, bert, forsyth, known, professionally, informally, bert, forsyth, pioneer, australian, film, production, during, silent, from, about, 1907, 1909, forsyth, worked, travelling, picture, showman, screening, film, robbery, under, arms, austr. Henry Albert Bert Forsyth known professionally as H A Forsyth and informally as Bert Forsyth was a pioneer of Australian film production during the silent era From about 1907 to 1909 Forsyth worked as a travelling picture showman screening the film Robbery Under Arms in Australian country towns In 1910 his company Southern Cross Motion Pictures produced and released two successful motion pictures Thunderbolt and Moonlite based on incidents in the careers of the bushrangers Frederick Ward and Andrew Scott For these projects Forsyth worked with Jack Gavin who directed both films and acted in the lead roles In January 1913 the New South Wales Government banned Forsyth s bushranger films as part of a wider ban on the bushranging genre At various stages in his career Bert Forsyth also managed theatres that screened motion pictures Bert Forsyth H A Forsyth Portrait of H A Forsyth published in November 1910 BornHenry Albert Forsyth 1872 10 08 8 October 1872Parkes New South Wales AustraliaDied18 May 1959 1959 05 18 aged 86 Gosford New South Wales AustraliaOccupationfilm producerSpouse s 1 Marie Hammond 2 Mary Willett 3 Nancy DuncanParentAllen Forsyth amp Sarah LaFranchi nee Standen Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 First marriage 1 3 Travelling picture show 1 4 Theatre management 1 5 Film production 1 5 1 Thunderbolt 1 5 2 Moonlite 1 5 3 The Miner s Gift 1 5 4 The bushranger ban 1 6 The war years and after 1 7 Later years 2 Filmography 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography EditEarly years Edit Henry Albert Forsyth was born on 8 October 1872 at Bushman s Lead in the Central West of New South Wales renamed Parkes in 1873 the son of Allen Forsyth and Sarah LaFranchi nee Standen 1 Before the birth of her son Sarah had been married to Antonio Peter LaFranchi so Bert had six older half sisters LaFranchi had abandoned his family in about 1868 when he travelled to the gold fields near Warwick in Queensland to attend to the affairs of his brother who died in August that year During LaFranchi s absence Sarah formed a relationship with Allen Forsyth with whom she had two sons Allen Edgar Eddie born in 1871 and Henry Albert Bert born the following year By about 1873 Peter LaFranchi had returned to the district and he and Sarah resumed their relationship with Bert and his brother being raised within the LaFranchi household at Grenfell Sarah and Peter LaFranchi had three more daughters but the marriage finally broke down by about 1880 Sarah subsequently formed a relationship with Lars Madsen by whom she had four sons born from 1881 to 1888 at Cudgellico and Young 2 Bert Forsyth s interest in bushrangers probably began as a childhood fascination The goldfields of the Forbes Grenfell and Young districts had been a focus of outlaw activity only a decade before his birth The famous bushranger Ben Hall was shot dead in May 1865 in a police ambush near Billabong Creek south west of Parkes 3 In his formative years young Bert Forsyth would have been aware of stories of famous bushrangers who had operated in the district such as Hall Frank Gardiner Johnny Gilbert and Jack O Meally and probably met people with first hand accounts both positive and negative of their activities 4 Forsyth was an expert horseman 5 Lines of verse written about Forsyth published in the Sydney Sportsman newspaper in 1911 make reference to his horsemanship He s been a rider of renown And owned and trained his prads you know 6 Forsyth may have had experience as an actor Lines of the verse in the Sydney Sportsman suggest he performed in a stage play of Robbery Under Arms which had been adapted for the stage by Alfred Dampier and Garnet Walch in 1890 and proved to be a popular theatrical production over many years in Australia 7 The verse reads In Boldrewood s great piece he played They say that he was all the rage As in a bright red shirt arrayed He strutted up and down the stage 6 First marriage Edit Bert Forsyth and Marie Hammond were married on 14 May 1900 in Sydney according to the rites of the Roman Catholic church 8 The couple lived in the Newcastle suburb of Hamilton After their marriage according to Forsyth s later testimony the couple were happy for about two months but then he noticed his wife was beginning to drink to excess Later Marie told him she was going to Sydney as living at Hamilton was too quiet One day when Forsyth arrived home he found his wife had left Forsyth met with his wife in Sydney on a number of occasions in the following years but each time she refused to return to live with him 9 In January 1906 Forsyth travelled to America on business probably to San Francisco 9 In the early morning of 18 April 1906 a major earthquake struck California with its epicentre near San Francisco causing considerable damage and loss of life 10 The opening lines of the verse published in the Sydney Sportsman implies Forsyth was managing a theatre in San Francisco at the time of the earthquake which destroyed the building He s been up to all sorts of games He ran a show in Frisco town This man twas he brought on the quake Which tumbled flat his theatre down 6 Forsyth returned to Australia later that year 9 In a later newspaper article Forsyth is described as a man who has considerable globe trotting experience 11 In December 1906 after his return from America Forsyth applied for a divorce from his wife Marie on the ground of desertion At the time he was working as an insurance agent After Forsyth had testified to the court outlining the basis for his petition a decree nisi was granted 9 Forsyth s divorce from Marie was finalised in February 1908 12 Travelling picture show Edit For three years probably 1907 to 1909 Forsyth worked as a travelling moving picture showman touring the film Robbery Under Arms into every nook and corner of Australia Two motion picture versions of Robbery Under Arms had been produced in 1907 one by the Tait brothers and the other by Charles MacMahon but the particular version that was toured by Forsyth has not been determined Forsyth later recalled having as many as three or four people on the job to get the film through the old projector machine He added Two dozen stoppages and breaks was a common occurrence the lighting obtained from the limelight was certainly very soft and restful to the eye but at times little could be seen of the picture Notwithstanding the difficulties and shortcomings Forsyth later claimed the audiences were carried away with enthusiasm at the wonderful exhibition they saw Forsyth exhibited Robbery Under Arms over and over again at the same places and often the return visits drew larger houses than on the first occasion 13 Theatre management Edit By 1909 Bert Forsyth was managing the Regent Music Hall in Regent Street Redfern the first building in the Sydney suburbs utilised for the screening of motion pictures The brother of Forsyth s ex wife Herbert Hammond also worked at the Regent Music Hall as a projector operator 13 14 The theatre had begun showing films by July 1907 15 On the evening of 29 April 1910 the film Robbery Under Arms was shown in the Masonic Hall in Cobar in the central west of New South Wales Advertised as Forsyth s Stirring Picture Drama the film was brought to Cobar by Herbert Hammond The screening drew a good house but was considered to be a very indifferent show by the writer for the local newspaper The writer commented The light was poor the pictures small and the programme ended about 9 30 a combination of features which Cobar people dislike 16 A Film production Edit Thunderbolt Edit A still from the Thunderbolt film Jess Anson in a state of collapse after learning her fiance Frederick Ward had been imprisoned for cattle duffing attended by her parents and Dr Jenkins Forsyth s first moving picture production was Thunderbolt based on incidents in the career of the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt Frederick Ward Thunderbolt was portrayed by Jack Gavin who is also credited as the director of the film and Forsyth himself took on the role of William Monckton the bushranger s young acolyte 17 18 Ruby Butler played the dual roles of Jess Anson Fred Ward s fiancee and the Aboriginal girl Sunday 19 The camera operator was Alfred J Moulton who had cinematography experience working for Pathe Freres that had a branch office in Sydney 18 20 B Thunderbolt was filmed in and around Lithgow during a two to three week period in October 1910 The Lithgow district was specially selected by reason of the suitability of its surroundings During the shooting of the film miners at Lithgow were on strike and a number were recruited as extras and used in minor parts such as bushrangers and mounted troopers The footage depicting the death of Thunderbolt was filmed at a place known as the second junction bridge on the road between Bowenfels and Rydal For the scenes that involved firearms cartridges were used with the lead removed and replaced with soap During the filming of the death of Captain Thunderbolt the actor Jack Gavin later recalled that the hard soap pellets had perforated my clothes in many places 18 20 The completed film was reported to be a four reel movie of over three thousand feet in length 21 20 A later article in Sydney s The Arrow newspaper claimed Thunderbolt was the first four reel film ever produced at a time when the average length of a dramatic film was from 800 to 900 feet 22 An article in November 1910 in Sydney s The Newsletter described the completed Thunderbolt as a film that was admirably produced being as clear and as distinct as any yet shown in Australia 17 In mid November Forsyth had an advertisement published in The Sun newspaper addressed To Showmen advising of the availability of his newly finished film Thunderbolt The Film That Draws the Crowd 21 Thunderbolt was first screened in mid December 1910 in the Queen s Theatre in Pitt Street in Sydney 23 In early December 1910 it was reported that the film depicting Thunderbolt the bushranger was proving a big draw wherever exhibited in fact a perfect money spinner and Southern Cross Motion Pictures is troubled to supply the demand made upon their film department Forsyth the manager advised that they have several other bushranging films in course of preparation 11 Moonlite Edit On location filming Moonlite Mr H A Forsyth gives instruction in the art and practice of using a gun The Sun 5 January 1911 Forsyth s film about Thunderbolt was followed by another based on the career of Captain Moonlite Andrew Scott The screenplay for Moonlite was written by Forsyth and the cinematography carried out by A J Moulton 24 25 In a later interview Jack Gavin claimed his wife Agnes was also involved in writing the screenplay 20 Moonlite was filmed using the same ensemble of actors in the major roles with Gavin taking the role of Captain Moonlite and credited as the director of the film Ruby Butler played Ruth Clarke the love interest in the film and Forsyth also acted in the production Gavin s wife Agnes played the role of the Aboriginal woman Bunda Bunda 20 24 The filming of Moonlite was carried out from November to mid December 1910 and was reported to have involved over 200 people 26 27 Another account states that the production involved over 50 actors and twenty horses 28 The film was shot at various locations in and around Sydney and Lithgow Some of the Sydney locations used in the film were the Grosvenor Hotel Sydney Harbour off Pyrmont near Glebe Island Lane Cove River and Parramatta River 28 25 In one of the scenes filmed in late November 1910 Jack Gavin as Moonlite makes his escape from the police by jumping from a vessel into Sydney Harbour A suitable vessel had been found anchored near Glebe Island After Gavin dived from the poop deck of the vessel 18 feet into the water to the horror of his confreres a shark was noticed making for him Forsyth with admirable presence of mind grabbed a dog and threw it overboard to distract the attention of the monster of the deep and at the same time shouting instructions to all hands to fire off revolvers containing blank cartridges The distractions were successful and Gavin was pulled aboard 29 The finished film was 3 750 feet in length and was reported to have been produced at a cost of over a thousand pounds 26 30 In late December 1910 Southern Cross Motion Pictures under Forsyth s management opened a new theatre in Sydney on the corner of Rawson Place and Pitt Street opposite Central Railway Station The theatre was rudimentary basically an open air enclosure where films could be shown 31 An advance screening of Moonlite was shown at the Rawson Place theatre on 30 December 1910 to representatives of the press and a number of gentlemen interested in biographical work 26 The theatre was officially opened the following night with the first public screening of Forsyth s new motion picture Moonlite 31 During January 1911 Thunderbolt was also shown as well as another locally made film Fred Fox the Snake King featuring the handling of snakes near Sydney 32 33 Later that month Southern Cross Pictures introduced new material described as a series of historical dramatic and humorous moving pictures Films shown in mid January included titles such as A Little Child Shall Lead Them and A Romance of the Rockies 34 In March 1911 in addition to the usual instalment of motion pictures the Southern Cross Picture Palace included sheep shearing exhibitions and contests between shearers who have the reputation of being ringers 35 Caricature of Bert Forsyth a well known Picture Showman published in Sydney Sportsman 22 February 1911 The Miner s Gift Edit A comment in an interview given by Jack Gavin in 1923 suggests Forsyth may have travelled overseas in 1911 after Moonlite was made and being shown around the country Forsyth having made considerable money went on a world s tour 20 If so he had returned by about November 1911 to produce another film The Miner s Gift was probably filmed in about November 1911 it was being shown at the Hippodrome cinema in Newtown from 11 to 13 December 1911 36 The Miner s Gift was a film of three thousand feet length with the subtitle The Fight for Fortune described as The Australian Mining Drama It was shown in late December 1911 at Herbert s Pictures at Islington in Newcastle 37 It was shown at the Pictoria cinema in Maitland on Saturday 30 December 1911 The film was presented with a special lecturer in attendance 38 An article about the screening of the film at Benalla in late May 1915 described the plot as incorporating love robbery and an apparent murder by a tribe of blacks culminating in the burning of a bush home and the rescue therefrom of a digger s sweetheart and a Chinaman 39 On 18 December 1911 a notice was published in The Age newspaper announcing that H A Forsyth of the Southern Cross Film Company had arrived in Melbourne with the company s latest production the film The Miner s Gift The advertisement recommended Showmen get busy and book this money getter 40 The bushranger ban Edit Bert Forsyth and Mary Marie Willett were married on 2 March 1912 at St Stephen s Presbyterian church in Phillip Street in Sydney 41 Marie Willett had been an actress with William Anderson s Dramatic Company a touring theatre group 42 In May 1912 it was reported that Forsyth was managing Arcade Pictures at Newtown 43 By July 1912 Forsyth was negotiating to extend the Arcade Picture Palace to have its frontage on King Street by incorporating the site of the adjoining Hatte s Arcade In August 1912 it was reported that Arcade Pictures at Newtown was to be formed into a company 44 In November 1912 regulations were gazetted in New South Wales to govern the screening of cinematograph films under the Theatres and Public Halls Act 1908 The new regulations specifically banned the exhibition of successful crime such as bushranging robberies or other act of lawlessness which might reasonably be considered as having an injurious influence on youthful minds Motion picture programmes together with a synopsis of each item were required to be submitted to the police for inspection and approval with a possible further requirement to screen the films for the information of the police The regulations allowed for a penalty of up to 20 for a breach of the regulations 45 46 The Federated Picture Showmen s Association of New South Wales responded by issuing a lengthy circular arguing against the new censorship regulations 47 A subsequent statement by the Acting Colonial Secretary Frederick Flowers made it apparent the regulations were primarily targetting films that depicted bushranging episodes where the police are frequently represented as acting in the most ridiculous and incompetent manner and often as creators of crime 48 Flowers statement supported the view by many in the industry that the negative representations of police in these films was a prime motivator of the changes 49 In late January 1913 the New South Wales Colonial Secretary James McGowen used his powers under section 27 of the Theatres and Public Halls Act 1908 to specifically prohibit the exhibition of the cinematograph films entitled Thunderbolt and Moonlite 50 Section 27 authorised the Minister to prohibit the holding of any public entertainment such as motion pictures if the Minister is of the opinion that it is fitting for the preservation of good manners and decorum 51 The banning of bushranger themed films by government regulation in New South Wales coincided with a period of industry restructuring with the large cinema exhibitors and film distribution network in Australia favouring American imports leading to a decline in independent theatres and touring circuits and a reluctance to support Australian film production 52 In September 1913 Forsyth was recorded as a theatrical agent and manager of the Star Picture Palace at Parramatta 53 The war years and after Edit Forsyth s occupation was recorded as an Amusements Manager when he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force at Holsworthy in late September 1915 a week short of his 43rd birthday His next of kin was recorded as his wife Mary then living at 20 Linthorpe Street in Newtown Forsyth was placed in the 5th Squadron 2nd Remount Unit and embarked for overseas service in November 1915 54 The Remount units were given the task of training and caring for the Australian horses during the Sinai and Palestine campaigns Enlisted men placed in the Remount units were often older with a maximum age of 50 a high proportion of whom were Boer War veterans and expert horsemen 55 In March 1916 Forsyth suffered from a sprained knee and was hospitalised in Egypt He rejoined his unit at the Heliopolis Camp near Cairo in May but was demobilised in June 1916 and returned to Australia aboard the hospital ship H S Itonus 54 After the war ended Forsyth was employed as a film exchange officer by Harry Musgrove s First National Films and Australasian Films 56 57 Film exchanges were film distribution businesses that rented out motion pictures to theatres a business process that suited flexible and frequent program changes 58 In 1923 Forsyth was responsible for organising a song competition for The Manly Daily newspaper which offered prizes of 50 to compose a musical score to match the lyrics of Manly By the Sea written by Mr H C Bailey of Waterloo The short listed entries were presented in a series of concerts 59 60 The first of ten concerts was held at the Dungowan Theatre in early March presenting six of the selected compositions for adjudication 61 Later that year Forsyth organised an art competition for The Manly Daily on the theme of Beauties of Manly culminating in an exhibition which opened in December 1923 62 A branch of the Australian Natives Association was formed at Manly in July 1924 with H A Forsyth as its vice president 63 Later years Edit By 1930 Bert Forsyth was living in Botany Street in Bondi Junction in Sydney s eastern suburbs His occupation was recorded as an agent on the 1930 electoral roll 64 Evidence from electoral rolls indicate that Forsyth had separated from his second wife From about the mid 1930s Forsyth and a woman named Nancy Duncan were living in a de facto relationship with Nancy listed on the rolls as Nancy Forsyth The couple eventually married in May 1959 four months before Bert Forsyth s death By 1937 Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living at 257 Victoria Street in Darlinghurst Bert s occupation was recorded as an agent on the 1937 electoral roll 65 By March 1940 when Forsyth enlisted in the Citizen Military Forces his occupation was recorded as Auditor Clerk and he and Nancy were still living in Victoria Street Darlinghurst 66 Forsyth enlisted in the Australian Military Forces at Paddington in March 1940 and was placed in the Citizen Forces His enlistment record shows his date of birth as 8 October 1878 so his age was recorded as 62 years Forsyth was actually aged 68 years so he probably gave false information to stay within a required upper age limit On the section for the next of kin the name originally entered was Marie Forsyth but Marie was crossed out and Nancy written above the change initialled by Forsyth 66 Forsyth was initially attached to the Artillery Wing at Liverpool but in late May was transferred to Pay Corps at the Moore Park Showgrounds He was promoted to Corporal in December 1940 In January 1943 Forsyth was discharged from the Army his record was notated Services no longer required there being no suitable vacancy in which his services could be utilised in view of his age 66 By 1943 Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living at 32 Cook Road in Centennial Park Bert s occupation was recorded as a soldier in the information collected for the 1943 electoral roll 67 By December 1945 Forsyth was living at Killcare on the New South Wales Central Coast 66 In 1949 the electoral roll shows that Bert and Nancy Forsyth were living in Killcare Road Killcare with Bert recorded as having no occupation 68 On 2 January 1959 Forsyth and Nancy Duncan were married in Sydney his third marriage 69 2 Bert Forsyth died on 18 May 1959 at Gosford on the Central Coast of New South Wales aged 86 years 70 2 He was buried in the Anglican section of the Point Clare cemetery at Gosford 71 Filmography EditThunderbolt 1910 producer actor Moonlite 1910 a k a Captain Moonlite producer writer actor The Miner s Gift 1911 a story of early Australian mining days 72 Notes EditA The motion picture Robbery Under Arms screened at Cobar in April 1910 was either the Tait Brothers version or the MacMahon version The fact that it was advertised in the Cobar Herald as Forsyth s Stirring Picture Drama probably indicates that Forsyth was well known in the district as a travelling showman who in recent years had toured this film Also a travelling picture showman would tend to have a proprietorial attitude to the films they screened In the early years of exhibiting moving pictures in Australia a film was sold by the producer straight out to a showman who when he had shown it sufficiently sold it to another showman 73 In 1910 Forsyth was probably still managing the Regent Street theatre in Redfern but at that time his employee Herbert Hammond may have been touring films in country towns B Alfred J Moulton was born in 1873 in the Mount Gambier district of South Australia He was a pioneer cinematographer in Australia being employed for four years by Pathe Freres the French film equipment and production company 74 In October 1909 Pathe Freres was contracted by the Western Australia government for cinematograph pictures of scenes and industries for the purposes of advertising the great natural resources of the state 75 Soon afterwards Moulton travelled to Kalgoorlie for the purpose of taking biograph pictures illustrating the gold mining industry 76 Moulton also worked for Wests Pictures Ltd 77 Moulton lived at Summer Hill in Sydney and died in July 1924 aged 51 years at the Lewisham Private Hospital after a short illness 74 References Edit NSW birth registration Henry A Forsyth reg no 9788 1872 reg district Forbes a b c Family records Ancestry com The Ben Hall Sites Ben Hall s Death Site H01827 New South Wales State Heritage Register Heritage NSW website Department of Planning and Environment accessed 25 December 2022 White Charles 1903 History of Australian Bushranging 1863 1880 Ben Hall to the Kelly Gang Sydney NSW Angus and Robertson H A Bert Forsyth NFSA National Film and Sound Archive website accessed 23 December 2022 a b c Bert Forsyth Sydney Sportsman 22 February 1911 page 4 Robbery Under Arms The Herald Melbourne 1 March 1890 page 2 Robbery Under Arms Table Talk Melbourne 6 June 1901 page 23 NSW marriage registration Henry A Forsyth amp Marie Hammond reg no 2871 1900 reg district Sydney a b c d Having a Good Time Evening News Sydney 13 December 1906 page 5 The Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake H01827 USGS website U S Geological Survey USGS Earthquake Hazards Program accessed 25 December 2022 a b Theatrical Gossip The Newsletter an Australian Paper for Australian People Sydney 3 December 1910 page 3 In Divorce Sydney Morning Herald 19 February 1908 page 6 a b Australian Picture Production of Other Days Everyones Sydney Vol 4 No 286 26 August 1925 page 50 A breath of the past Everyones Sydney Vol 4 No 290 23 September 1925 page 47 The Regent street Music Hall Evening News Sydney 22 July 1907 page 8 Robbery Under Arms advertisement Cobar Herald 29 April 1910 page 4 Robbery Under Arms Cobar Herald 29 April 1910 page 5 The Robbery Under Arms picture Cobar Herald 3 May 1910 page 2 a b Thunderbolt Moving Pictures The Newsletter Sydney 19 November 1910 page 9 a b c Cinematography in Lithgow Lithgow Mercury 2 November 1910 page 2 Theatrical Gossip The Newsletter Sydney 3 December 1910 page 2 a b c d e f When the Australian Produced Picture Made Big Money Everyones Sydney Vol 3 No 166 9 May 1923 page 166 a b To Showmen Thunderbolt advertisement The Sun Sydney 19 November 1910 page 3 An Australian Producer Arrow Sydney 12 August 1916 page 3 Thunderbolt advertisement Sunday Sun Sydney 13 November 1910 page 7 a b Southern Cross Picture Palace Sydney Sportsman 28 December 1910 page 8 a b Southern Cross Pictures Sunday Times Sydney 1 January 1911 page 2 a b c Moonlite Private View The Sun Sydney 31 December 1910 page 5 H A Forsyth of the Southern Cross Film Enterprise Referee Sydney 14 December 1910 page 16 a b Making a Thriller The Moving Picture Craze The Sun Sydney 5 January 1911 page 8 The Perils of a Biograph Artist The Newsletter Sydney 3 December 1910 page 2 Moonlite advertisement Brisbane Courier 4 March 1911 page 2 a b Southern Cross Motion Pictures Sydney Morning Herald 31 December 1910 page 14 Moonlite Motion Pictures The Sun Sydney 2 January 1911 page 4 Moonlite Daily Telegraph Sydney 2 January 1911 page 9 Southern Cross Pictures Sunday Times Sydney 15 January 1911 page 2 Stage Song and Show The Sun Sydney 16 January 1911 page 3 Southern Cross Pictures Truth Sydney 15 January 1911 page 2 Southern Cross Pictures Sunday Times Sydney 22 January 1911 page 2 Strutters Page The Newsletter an Australian Paper for Australian People Sydney 18 March 1911 page 2 The Hippodrome King street Truth Sydney 10 December 1911 page 2 Herbert s Pictures Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 27 December 1911 page 12 Pictoria Maitland Daily Mercury 30 December 1911 page 2 Latest Picture Entertainment North Eastern Ensign Benalla Vic 4 June 1915 page 3 To Showmen The Age Melbourne 18 December 1911 page 12 Marriages The Age Melbourne 30 March 1912 page 5 When London Sleeps Colac Herald 12 May 1909 page 3 King s Theatre The Argus Melbourne 6 February 1911 page 9 Theatrical Gossip The Newsletter an Australian Paper for Australian People Sydney 4 May 1912 page 3 Theatrical Gossip The Newsletter an Australian Paper for Australian People Sydney 27 July 1912 page 2 Successful Picture Show The Newsletter Sydney 31 August 1912 page 4 Censoring Films Regulations Gazetted Evening News Sydney 6 November 1912 page 7 Couzens 2019 page 104 Showmen s Case Arguments Against Censorship Daily Telegraph Sydney 20 November 1912 page 11 Film Censorship Evening News Sydney 20 November 1912 page 9 Andrew James Couzens 2019 page 104 Notice New South Wales Police Gazette and Weekly Record of Crime Sydney 29 January 1913 Issue No 5 page 55 Theatres and Public Halls Act 1908 No 13 Section 27 NSW Legislation website New South Wales Government accessed 31 December 2022 Andrew James Couzens 2019 page 105 106 Parramatta Court The Picture Doorkeeper Cumberland Argus and Fruitgrowers Advocate Parramatta 24 September 1913 page 1 a b World War I service record Forsyth Henry Albert SERN 1295 POB Parkes NSW POE Holsworthy NSW NOK wife Forsyth Mary National Archives of Australia B2455 4019249 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Ross Mallett 2005 Remount Service First AIF Order of Battle 1914 1918 website accessed 23 December 2022 Personalities H A Bert Forsyth Everyones Sydney Vol 3 No 143 29 November 1922 page 20 First National Films The Age Melbourne 30 November 1920 page 8 Max Joseph Alvarez 2005 The Origins of the Film Exchange Film History An International Journal Vol 17 No 4 Indiana University Press pages 431 465 Personalities H A Bert Forsyth Everyones Sydney Vol 3 No 154 14 February 1923 page 28 Song Competition Gosford Times and Wyong District Advocate 22 February 1923 page 8 Manly Song Competition Daily Telegraph Sydney 8 March 1923 page 7 Art Exhibition Daily Telegraph Sydney 17 December 1923 page 9 Beauties of Manly The Sun Sydney 23 December 1923 page 4 A N A at Manly The Sun Sydney 16 July 1924 page 16 1930 Electoral Roll electorates Wentworth Commonwealth Bondi State subdivision of Bondi page 42 1937 Electoral Roll electorates East Sydney Commonwealth King State subdivision of Darlinghurst West page 39 a b c d World War II service record Forsyth Henry Albert Service No N71922 Date of Birth 08 Oct 1878 Place of Birth Parkes NSW Place of enlistment Paddington NSW Next of Kin Forsyth Nancy National Archives of Australia B884 5602774 Retrieved 25 December 2022 1943 Electoral Roll electorates Watson Commonwealth Waverley State subdivision of Centennial Park page 7 1949 Electoral Roll electorates Robertson Commonwealth Hawkesbury State subdivision of Woy Woy page 29 NSW marriage registration Henry Albert Forsyth amp Nancy Duncan reg no 10 1959 reg district Sydney NSW death registration Henry Albert Forsyth reg no 11398 1959 reg district Gosford Point Clare Cemetery published by the Central Coast Family History Society Inc page 41 Olympic Daily Mercury Mackay Qld 16 August 1915 page 7 Who s Who in the Movies Table Talk Melbourne 18 October 1928 page 24 a b Obituary Mr A J Moulton Border Watch Mount Gambier 2 September 1924 page 3 Big Cinematograph Contract Truth Perth 16 October 1909 page 6 Forty Years Ago From the Miner of October 27 1909 Kalgoorlie Miner 27 October 1949 page 4 Glaciarium West s Pictures Sunday Times Sydney 5 March 1911 page 2 SourcesAndrew James Couzens 2019 A Cultural History of the Bushranger Legend in Theatres and Cinemas 1828 2017 London Anthem Press ISBN 1 78 308892 3 Further reading EditAndrew James Couzens 2019 A Cultural History of the Bushranger Legend in Theatres and Cinemas 1828 2017 London Anthem Press ISBN 1 78 308892 3 William D Routt December 2001 More Australian than Aristotelian The Australian Bushranger Film 1904 1914 Senses of Cinema website online journal Issue 18 External links EditH A Forsyth at IMDb H A Forsyth at National Film and Sound Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title H A Forsyth amp oldid 1140088430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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