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Julien Bryan

Julien Hequembourg Bryan (23 May 1899 in Titusville, Pennsylvania – 20 October 1974) was an American photographer, filmmaker, and documentarian. He is best known for documenting the daily life in Poland, Soviet Union, and Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1939, in the leadup to and early days of the Second World War. He was honored with Zasłużony dla Kultury Polskiej" ("Merit for Polish culture") during his last visit in Poland (1974) for showing the truth about the Invasion of Poland.[1]

Julien Bryan
Julien Bryan in 1939 in Warsaw filming Siege
Born
Julien Hequembourg Bryan

(1899-05-23)23 May 1899
Died20 October 1974(1974-10-20) (aged 75)

His documentary film Siege reported on Poland's defense of its capital against Nazi Germany in September 1939. It is stored and viewable online at the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in a digitally restored form in HD.[2]

Before World War II

 
Julien Bryan in 1917 in France writing "Ambulance 464"

Bryan was a son of an elder in the Presbyterian Church with a long missionary tradition.[3]

At seventeen after graduating from high school, he volunteered to serve in the American Field Service for the French Army in World War I, driving an ambulance in Verdun and the Argonne,[4][5] and wrote a book Ambulance 464 about this experience illustrated by his photographs.[6]

He graduated from Princeton University in 1921 and finished Union Theological Seminary, though he chose not to be ordained as a minister. Afterwards he directed YMCA in Brooklyn, NY At this time Bryan started traveling abroad taking photographs, making films and writing travelogues along the way. He funded his travels by giving slideshow lectures about countries he visited[5] and by selling his films to various companies including ERPI.[3] Many of the films from those travels can be found in United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive.[7] Those human-interest movies chronicle travels through China, Caucasus and Georgia (1933), Soviet Union (1930 and 1935), Poland (1936), Germany (1937), Switzerland and the Netherlands (1939). His films and photographs from Nazi Germany chronicled party rallies, daily life on the streets, anti-Jewish propaganda and Nazi leaders. They were incorporated into two ’’March of Time’’ films. His slide lectures were held in concert halls including Carnegie Hall.[5]

World War II

 
Bryan found Polish girl Kazimiera Kostewicz (12) and her dead sister Anna (14), just shot by a German plane in September 1939
 
He continued to photograph the girl as she tried to understand what had just happened
 
Bryan comforted and cried with the girl after photographing her. They met again 20 years later.
 
A Polish boy with his dead mother, killed in the same German air attack as the girl in the previous pictures

Bryan learned about the German invasion of Poland on September 3 while traveling by train to Warsaw. He arrived in Warsaw on September 7 carrying his Leica still camera, Bell & Howell movie camera and 6000 feet of film, just as all foreigners, diplomats and government official were fleeing the capital. He contacted mayor of Warsaw Stefan Starzynski who provided him with a car, guide and interpreter Stefan Radlinski and permit to travel and photograph across Warsaw. In two weeks between September 7 and September 21, he managed to take hundreds of still photographs including color Kodachromes and 5000 feet of motion picture film documenting the Siege of Warsaw and the bombing of the city by German Luftwaffe. He recalled:

As we drove by a small field at the edge of town we were just a few minutes too late to witness a tragic event, the most incredible of all. Seven women had been digging potatoes in a field. There was no flour in their district, and they were desperate for food. Suddenly two German planes appeared from nowhere and dropped two bombs only two hundred yards away on a small home. Two women in the house were killed. The potato diggers dropped flat upon the ground, hoping to be unnoticed. After the bombers had gone, the women returned to their work. They had to have food. But the Nazi fliers were not satisfied with their work. In a few minutes they came back and swooped down to within two hundred feet of the ground, this time raking the field with machine-gun fire. Two of the seven women were killed. The other five escaped somehow. While I was photographing the bodies, a little ten-year old girl came running up and stood transfixed by one of the dead. The woman was her older sister. The child had never before seen death and couldn't understand why her sister would not speak to her...The child looked at us in bewilderment. I threw my arm about her and held her tightly, trying to comfort her. She cried. So did I and the two Polish officers who were with me...[8]

In 2009, the grown-up girl, Kazimiera Mika, spoke about the event and said she was 12 at the time.[9] They first reunited in 1958, when Bryan returned to Warsaw.[2](She married and lived to the age of 93)

Bryan is credited as the only foreign journalist in Warsaw at that time.[10] Through Polish Radio he also made an appeal to the American president Franklin Delano Roosevelt to help civilians targeted by enemy bombers.[11] During his stay in Warsaw he lived in the abandoned Consulate of the United States. He left Warsaw on September 21 after Germans declared a cease-fire to allow citizens of neutral countries to depart by train through East Prussia. In Königsberg fearing confiscation of his material he decided to smuggle out his already developed films. He managed to hide some of his films in souvenir gas mask containers collected by fellow traveler from US,[5] and by one account he hid some movies by wrapping them around his torso.[4]

After arriving in New York in the fall of 1939 Bryan published some of his photographs. Life magazine printed 15 of his images in the October 23 issue[12] and Look Magazine published another 26 in the December 5 issue.[10][13] Bryan produced in 1940 as a short documentary film Siege, released by RKO Radio Pictures.[14] and wrote a book with the same title. The film was nominated for an Academy Award the following year for Best Short Subject, One-reel.[15] Although film Siege is only 10 minutes long, Julien Bryan presented Franklin Delano Roosevelt his 80 minutes long film from fighting Warsaw.[16]

In 1940 Bryan was hired by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA) to make a series of 23 educational movies on Latin American culture and customs. Afterwards State Department hired him to create another five movies about the US.

After World War II

Bryan returned to Poland in 1946. As part of an official UNRRA delegation he revisited Gdańsk and Warsaw. His Kodachrome footage of recently destroyed Gdańsk is probably the first post-war film shot in that city.[17][18]

In 1958 Bryan revisited Poland and published one hundred of his 1939 photographs from Warsaw. Working with daily newspaper Express Wieczorny they launched a big campaign, with a page of the 1939 pictures in each issue, and the words: "Do you recognize yourself, your relatives, your house and street? The Express is helping American photographer Julien Bryan to find the heroes of his film from besieged Warsaw in 1939." Readers who recognized anything in his pictures were asked to come to the newspaper's offices with that information. That way he met and recorded stories of many people in his photographs.[10][11] He wrote about his experiences in Warsaw: 1939 siege, 1959 Warsaw Revisited published in 1959 in Poland.

Siege by Julien Bryan

In 1945, Bryan started the International Film Foundation (IFF) and for the remainder of his career he made short documentary films for the school market. Son Sam Bryan joined IFF in 1960. Bryan died in 1974, just two months after receiving a medal from the Polish government for his still photography. After his death IFF was operated by Sam. In 2003 Sam Bryan donated both his father's still and motion picture footage of wartime Europe to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.[17] Many of his works are currently held by the Library of Congress and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive[7] In 2006 Siege was named to the National Film Registry of the USA by the Librarian of Congress as "a unique, horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war".[15][19] It was also nominated for an Academy Award.

His World War II experiences in Warsaw were fictionalized in the 1978 film ... Gdziekolwiek jesteś Panie Prezydencie (Wherever you may be, Mr. President) by Andrzej Trzos-Rastawiecki [pl]. The role of unnamed "American journalist" based on Julien Bryan was portrayed by Jack Recknitz.[20]

Director Eugeniusz Starky assembled Bryan's 1939 footage, including previously unseen archival material, into the documentary film Korespondent Bryan, premiering in Warsaw in 2010.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Śp. Julien Bryan Kustosz Pamięci Narodowej 2012". YouTube. 2012-06-09. Retrieved 2013-01-05.[dead YouTube link]
  2. ^ a b Eagan, Daniel (21 October 2009). "A Witness to Total War". {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  3. ^ a b "Julien & Sam Bryan and the International Film Foundation". International Film Foundation. 2010-11-30.
  4. ^ a b Edwards, Mike (November 2010) Smithsonian Magazine via Internet Archive. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d . 2010-11-30. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17.
  6. ^ Bryan, Julien (1918). New York City, Macmillan Publishers via Internet Archive. ISBN 1-110-81075-X. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
  7. ^ a b "Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 2010-11-30.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "A ten-year-old Polish girl named Kazimiera Mika mourns the death of her older sister, who was killed in a field in Warsaw during a German air raid. - Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum".
  9. ^ "Wyborcza.pl".
  10. ^ a b c Julien Bryan (September 1959). "Poland in 1939 and in 1959". Look magazine. Archived from the original on 2005-10-28.
  11. ^ a b (in Polish). aktyka.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-07.
  12. ^ Julien Bryan (1939). "Documentary Record of the Last Days of Once Proud Warsaw". Life magazine. pp. 73–77.
  13. ^ Julien Bryan (1939). "Can Hitler's Lightning War Do This To England". Look Magazine: 10–13.
  14. ^ "Siege (1940)". IMDb.
  15. ^ a b "Awards for Siege (1940)". IMDb.
  16. ^ "Wyborcza.pl". warszawa.wyborcza.pl.
  17. ^ a b dor (April 2013). . Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish) (25–04–2013). Archived from the original on 2014-05-02.
  18. ^ Marek Osiecimski (2013-04-23). "Kolorowy Gdańsk z 1946 roku. "To prawdziwe odkrycie"" [Colour 1946 footage of Gdańsk: It's a revelation] (in Polish). Gdańsk: tvn24.pl. TVN 24.
  19. ^ "Librarian of Congress Adds Home Movie, Silent Films and Hollywood Classics to Film Preservation List". Library of Congress. December 27, 2006.
  20. ^ Wacław Świeżyński (2001). "... Gdziekolwiek jesteś Panie Prezydencie". film.gazeta.pl (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Retrieved 2010-08-01.
  21. ^ "Korespondent Bryan Film Premiere". Translated by Karolina Kołtun. Polish Film Institute. 2010. Retrieved 2020-11-03.

External links

  • Biography of Julien Bryan at The Nation
  • Schools to the South on YouTube (circa 1943), short documentary film about education in Latin America, at the Internet Archive
  • Bryan's films held by the USHMM
  • The Julien Hequembourg Bryan papers are available for research at the Hoover Institution Library and Archives.
  • Article and photographs by Julien Bryan in Mar 1940 Popular Mechanics.

julien, bryan, julien, hequembourg, bryan, 1899, titusville, pennsylvania, october, 1974, american, photographer, filmmaker, documentarian, best, known, documenting, daily, life, poland, soviet, union, nazi, germany, between, 1935, 1939, leadup, early, days, s. Julien Hequembourg Bryan 23 May 1899 in Titusville Pennsylvania 20 October 1974 was an American photographer filmmaker and documentarian He is best known for documenting the daily life in Poland Soviet Union and Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1939 in the leadup to and early days of the Second World War He was honored with Zasluzony dla Kultury Polskiej Merit for Polish culture during his last visit in Poland 1974 for showing the truth about the Invasion of Poland 1 Julien BryanJulien Bryan in 1939 in Warsaw filming SiegeBornJulien Hequembourg Bryan 1899 05 23 23 May 1899Titusville Pennsylvania United StatesDied20 October 1974 1974 10 20 aged 75 His documentary film Siege reported on Poland s defense of its capital against Nazi Germany in September 1939 It is stored and viewable online at the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in a digitally restored form in HD 2 Contents 1 Before World War II 2 World War II 3 After World War II 4 References 5 External linksBefore World War II Edit Julien Bryan in 1917 in France writing Ambulance 464 Bryan was a son of an elder in the Presbyterian Church with a long missionary tradition 3 At seventeen after graduating from high school he volunteered to serve in the American Field Service for the French Army in World War I driving an ambulance in Verdun and the Argonne 4 5 and wrote a book Ambulance 464 about this experience illustrated by his photographs 6 He graduated from Princeton University in 1921 and finished Union Theological Seminary though he chose not to be ordained as a minister Afterwards he directed YMCA in Brooklyn NY At this time Bryan started traveling abroad taking photographs making films and writing travelogues along the way He funded his travels by giving slideshow lectures about countries he visited 5 and by selling his films to various companies including ERPI 3 Many of the films from those travels can be found in United States Holocaust Memorial Museum s Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive 7 Those human interest movies chronicle travels through China Caucasus and Georgia 1933 Soviet Union 1930 and 1935 Poland 1936 Germany 1937 Switzerland and the Netherlands 1939 His films and photographs from Nazi Germany chronicled party rallies daily life on the streets anti Jewish propaganda and Nazi leaders They were incorporated into two March of Time films His slide lectures were held in concert halls including Carnegie Hall 5 World War II Edit Bryan found Polish girl Kazimiera Kostewicz 12 and her dead sister Anna 14 just shot by a German plane in September 1939 He continued to photograph the girl as she tried to understand what had just happened Bryan comforted and cried with the girl after photographing her They met again 20 years later A Polish boy with his dead mother killed in the same German air attack as the girl in the previous pictures Bryan learned about the German invasion of Poland on September 3 while traveling by train to Warsaw He arrived in Warsaw on September 7 carrying his Leica still camera Bell amp Howell movie camera and 6000 feet of film just as all foreigners diplomats and government official were fleeing the capital He contacted mayor of Warsaw Stefan Starzynski who provided him with a car guide and interpreter Stefan Radlinski and permit to travel and photograph across Warsaw In two weeks between September 7 and September 21 he managed to take hundreds of still photographs including color Kodachromes and 5000 feet of motion picture film documenting the Siege of Warsaw and the bombing of the city by German Luftwaffe He recalled As we drove by a small field at the edge of town we were just a few minutes too late to witness a tragic event the most incredible of all Seven women had been digging potatoes in a field There was no flour in their district and they were desperate for food Suddenly two German planes appeared from nowhere and dropped two bombs only two hundred yards away on a small home Two women in the house were killed The potato diggers dropped flat upon the ground hoping to be unnoticed After the bombers had gone the women returned to their work They had to have food But the Nazi fliers were not satisfied with their work In a few minutes they came back and swooped down to within two hundred feet of the ground this time raking the field with machine gun fire Two of the seven women were killed The other five escaped somehow While I was photographing the bodies a little ten year old girl came running up and stood transfixed by one of the dead The woman was her older sister The child had never before seen death and couldn t understand why her sister would not speak to her The child looked at us in bewilderment I threw my arm about her and held her tightly trying to comfort her She cried So did I and the two Polish officers who were with me 8 In 2009 the grown up girl Kazimiera Mika spoke about the event and said she was 12 at the time 9 They first reunited in 1958 when Bryan returned to Warsaw 2 She married and lived to the age of 93 Bryan is credited as the only foreign journalist in Warsaw at that time 10 Through Polish Radio he also made an appeal to the American president Franklin Delano Roosevelt to help civilians targeted by enemy bombers 11 During his stay in Warsaw he lived in the abandoned Consulate of the United States He left Warsaw on September 21 after Germans declared a cease fire to allow citizens of neutral countries to depart by train through East Prussia In Konigsberg fearing confiscation of his material he decided to smuggle out his already developed films He managed to hide some of his films in souvenir gas mask containers collected by fellow traveler from US 5 and by one account he hid some movies by wrapping them around his torso 4 After arriving in New York in the fall of 1939 Bryan published some of his photographs Life magazine printed 15 of his images in the October 23 issue 12 and Look Magazine published another 26 in the December 5 issue 10 13 Bryan produced in 1940 as a short documentary film Siege released by RKO Radio Pictures 14 and wrote a book with the same title The film was nominated for an Academy Award the following year for Best Short Subject One reel 15 Although film Siege is only 10 minutes long Julien Bryan presented Franklin Delano Roosevelt his 80 minutes long film from fighting Warsaw 16 In 1940 Bryan was hired by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter American Affairs OCIAA to make a series of 23 educational movies on Latin American culture and customs Afterwards State Department hired him to create another five movies about the US A Polish Army soldier and civilians including Orthodox Jews defending their capital city against Nazi Germany A still from one of Bryan s chronicles of the Siege of Warsaw Warsaw after German bombardmentAfter World War II EditBryan returned to Poland in 1946 As part of an official UNRRA delegation he revisited Gdansk and Warsaw His Kodachrome footage of recently destroyed Gdansk is probably the first post war film shot in that city 17 18 In 1958 Bryan revisited Poland and published one hundred of his 1939 photographs from Warsaw Working with daily newspaper Express Wieczorny they launched a big campaign with a page of the 1939 pictures in each issue and the words Do you recognize yourself your relatives your house and street The Express is helping American photographer Julien Bryan to find the heroes of his film from besieged Warsaw in 1939 Readers who recognized anything in his pictures were asked to come to the newspaper s offices with that information That way he met and recorded stories of many people in his photographs 10 11 He wrote about his experiences in Warsaw 1939 siege 1959 Warsaw Revisited published in 1959 in Poland source source source Siege by Julien Bryan In 1945 Bryan started the International Film Foundation IFF and for the remainder of his career he made short documentary films for the school market Son Sam Bryan joined IFF in 1960 Bryan died in 1974 just two months after receiving a medal from the Polish government for his still photography After his death IFF was operated by Sam In 2003 Sam Bryan donated both his father s still and motion picture footage of wartime Europe to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 17 Many of his works are currently held by the Library of Congress and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum s Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive 7 In 2006 Siege was named to the National Film Registry of the USA by the Librarian of Congress as a unique horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war 15 19 It was also nominated for an Academy Award His World War II experiences in Warsaw were fictionalized in the 1978 film Gdziekolwiek jestes Panie Prezydencie Wherever you may be Mr President by Andrzej Trzos Rastawiecki pl The role of unnamed American journalist based on Julien Bryan was portrayed by Jack Recknitz 20 Director Eugeniusz Starky assembled Bryan s 1939 footage including previously unseen archival material into the documentary film Korespondent Bryan premiering in Warsaw in 2010 21 References Edit Sp Julien Bryan Kustosz Pamieci Narodowej 2012 YouTube 2012 06 09 Retrieved 2013 01 05 dead YouTube link a b Eagan Daniel 21 October 2009 A Witness to Total War a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help a b Julien amp Sam Bryan and the International Film Foundation International Film Foundation 2010 11 30 a b Capturing Warsaw at the Dawn of World War II Edwards Mike November 2010 Smithsonian Magazine via Internet Archive Retrieved October 28 2021 a b c d United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2010 11 30 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 AMBULANCE 464 Encore des Blesses Bryan Julien 1918 New York City Macmillan Publishers via Internet Archive ISBN 1 110 81075 X Retrieved October 28 2021 a b Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2010 11 30 permanent dead link A ten year old Polish girl named Kazimiera Mika mourns the death of her older sister who was killed in a field in Warsaw during a German air raid Collections Search United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Wyborcza pl a b c Julien Bryan September 1959 Poland in 1939 and in 1959 Look magazine Archived from the original on 2005 10 28 a b Julien Bryan 1899 1974 in Polish aktyka com Archived from the original on 2011 07 07 Julien Bryan 1939 Documentary Record of the Last Days of Once Proud Warsaw Life magazine pp 73 77 Julien Bryan 1939 Can Hitler s Lightning War Do This To England Look Magazine 10 13 Siege 1940 IMDb a b Awards for Siege 1940 IMDb Wyborcza pl warszawa wyborcza pl a b dor April 2013 Nieznany kolorowy film z Gdanska z 1946 Uratowany przez fundacje Spielberga Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish 25 04 2013 Archived from the original on 2014 05 02 Marek Osiecimski 2013 04 23 Kolorowy Gdansk z 1946 roku To prawdziwe odkrycie Colour 1946 footage of Gdansk It s a revelation in Polish Gdansk tvn24 pl TVN 24 Librarian of Congress Adds Home Movie Silent Films and Hollywood Classics to Film Preservation List Library of Congress December 27 2006 Waclaw Swiezynski 2001 Gdziekolwiek jestes Panie Prezydencie film gazeta pl in Polish Gazeta Wyborcza Retrieved 2010 08 01 Korespondent Bryan Film Premiere Translated by Karolina Koltun Polish Film Institute 2010 Retrieved 2020 11 03 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julien Bryan Wikisource has original text related to this article Author Julien Hequembourg Bryan Biography of Julien Bryan at The Nation Schools to the South on YouTube circa 1943 short documentary film about education in Latin America at the Internet Archive Bryan s films held by the USHMM Films produced and or distributed by the International Film Foundation or Julien Bryan The Julien Hequembourg Bryan papers are available for research at the Hoover Institution Library and Archives Article and photographs by Julien Bryan in Mar 1940 Popular Mechanics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julien Bryan amp oldid 1096300893, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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