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Oscar Micheaux

Oscar Devereaux Micheaux (US: /mɪˈʃ/ (listen); January 2, 1884 – March 25, 1951) was an author, film director and independent producer of more than 44 films. Although the short-lived Lincoln Motion Picture Company was the first movie company owned and controlled by black filmmakers,[1] Micheaux is regarded as the first major African-American feature filmmaker, a prominent producer of race films, and has been described as "the most successful African-American filmmaker of the first half of the 20th century".[2] He produced both silent films and sound films.

Oscar Micheaux
Micheaux c. 1913
Born
Oscar Devereaux Micheaux

(1884-01-02)January 2, 1884
DiedMarch 25, 1951(1951-03-25) (aged 67)
Occupation(s)Director, author
Spouses
Awards

Early life and education

Micheaux was born on a farm in Metropolis, Illinois, on January 2, 1884.[3] He was the fifth child born to Calvin S. and Belle Michaux, who had a total of 13 children. In his later years, Micheaux added an "e" to his last name. His father was born a slave in Kentucky.[3] Because of his surname, his father's family appears to have been enslaved by French-descended settlers.[citation needed] French Huguenot refugees had settled in Virginia in 1700; their descendants took slaves west when they migrated into Kentucky after the American Revolutionary War.

In his later years, Micheaux wrote about the social oppression he experienced as a young boy. His parents moved to the city so that the children could receive a better education. Micheaux attended a well-established school for several years before the family eventually ran into money troubles and were forced to return to the farm. The discontented Micheaux became rebellious and his struggles caused problems within his family. His father was not happy with him and sent him away to do marketing in the city. Micheaux found pleasure in this job because he was able to speak to many new people and learned social skills that he would later reflect in his films.[3]

When Micheaux was 17 years old, he moved to Chicago to live with his older brother, then working as a waiter. Micheaux became dissatisfied with what he viewed as his brother's way of living "the good life". He rented his own place and found work in the stockyards, which he found difficult.[3] He moved from the stockyards to the steel mills, holding down many different jobs.

After being "swindled out of two dollars" by an employment agency, Micheaux decided to become his own boss. His first business was a shoeshine stand, which he set up at a wealthy African American barbershop, away from Chicago competition. He learned the basic strategies of business and started to save money. He became a Pullman porter on the major railroads,[3] at that time considered prestigious employment for African Americans because it was relatively stable, well paid, and secure, and it enabled travel and interaction with new people. This job was an informal education for Micheaux. He profited financially, and also gained contacts and knowledge about the world through traveling as well as a greater understanding for business. When he left the position, he had seen much of the United States, had a couple of thousand dollars saved in his bank account, and had made a number of connections with wealthy white people who helped his future endeavors.

Micheaux moved to Gregory County, South Dakota,[4] where he bought land and worked as a homesteader.[3] This experience inspired his first novels and films.[5] His neighbors on the frontier were predominately blue collar whites. "Some recall that [Micheaux] rarely sat at a table with his blue collar white neighbors." Micheaux's years as a homesteader allowed him to learn more about human relations and farming. While farming, Micheaux wrote articles and submitted them to the press. The Chicago Defender published one of his earliest articles.[3] His homestead failed and he was forced to sell it in 1911.[6] The next year, he began his publishing career when Woodruff Press of Lincoln, Nebraska published The Conquest. He began work on a second book, The Forged Note, and from 1914 to 1918 traveled among Lincoln, Gregory County, and Sioux City, Iowa marketing his work.[6] While in Sioux City, he lived in and was influenced by the West 7th Street neighborhood where the town's African-American community had a strong presence.[6]

Writing and film career

 
Oscar Micheaux in 1919.

Micheaux decided to concentrate on writing and, eventually, filmmaking, a new industry. He wrote seven novels.[3]

In 1913, 1,000 copies of his first book, The Conquest: The Story of a Negro Pioneer, were printed.[3] He published the book anonymously, for unknown reasons. He based it on his experiences as a homesteader and the failure of his first marriage and it was largely autobiographical. Although character names have been changed, the protagonist is named Oscar Devereaux. His theme was about African Americans realizing their potential and succeeding in areas where they had not felt they could. The book outlines the difference between city lifestyles of Negroes and the life he decided to lead as a lone Negro out on the far West as a pioneer. He discusses the culture of doers who want to accomplish and those who see themselves as victims of injustice and hopelessness and who do not want to try to succeed, but instead like to pretend to be successful while living the city lifestyle in poverty. He had become frustrated with getting some members of his race to populate the frontier and make something of themselves, with real work and property investment. He wrote over 100 letters to fellow Negroes in the East beckoning them to come West, but only his older brother eventually took his advice. One of Micheaux's fundamental beliefs was that hard work and enterprise would make any person rise to respect and prominence no matter his or her race.

In 1918, his novel The Homesteader, dedicated to his mother, attracted the attention of George Johnson, the manager of the Lincoln Motion Picture Company in Los Angeles. After Johnson offered to make The Homesteader into a new feature film, negotiations and paperwork became inharmonious.[3] Micheaux wanted to be directly involved in the adaptation of his book as a movie, but Johnson resisted and never produced the film.

Instead, Micheaux founded the Micheaux Film & Book Company of Sioux City; its first project was the production of The Homesteader as a feature film. Micheaux had a major career as a film producer and director: He produced over 40 films, which drew audiences throughout the U.S. as well as internationally.[3] Micheaux contacted wealthy academic connections from his earlier career as a porter, and sold stock for his company at $75 to $100 a share.[3] Micheaux hired actors and actresses and decided to have the premiere in Chicago. The film and Micheaux received high praise from film critics. One article credited Micheaux with "a historic breakthrough, a creditable, dignified achievement".[3] Some members of the Chicago clergy criticized the film as libelous. The Homesteader became known as Micheaux's breakout film; it helped him become widely known as a writer and a filmmaker.

In addition to writing and directing his own films, Micheaux also adapted the works of different writers for his silent pictures. Many of his films were open, blunt and thought-provoking regarding certain racial issues of that time. He once commented: "It is only by presenting those portions of the race portrayed in my pictures, in the light and background of their true state, that we can raise our people to greater heights."[3] Financial hardships during the Great Depression eventually made it impossible for Micheaux to keep producing films, and he returned to writing.[3]

Films

Micheaux's first novel The Conquest was adapted to film and re-titled The Homesteader.[7] This film, which met with critical and commercial success, was released in 1919. It revolves around a man named Jean Baptiste, called the Homesteader, who falls in love with many white women but resists marrying one out of his loyalty to his race. Baptiste sacrifices love to be a key symbol for his fellow African Americans. He looks for love among his own people and marries an African-American woman. Relations between them deteriorate. Eventually, Baptiste is not allowed to see his wife. She kills her father for keeping them apart and commits suicide. Baptiste is accused of the crime, but is ultimately cleared. An old love helps him through his troubles. After he learns that she is a mulatto and thus part African, they marry. This film deals extensively with race relationships.

Micheaux's second silent film was Within Our Gates, produced in 1920.[7] Although sometimes considered his response to the film The Birth of a Nation, Micheaux said that he created it independently as a response to the widespread social instability following World War I. Within Our Gates revolved around the main character, Sylvia Landry, a mixed-race school teacher played by actress Evelyn Preer. In a flashback, Sylvia is shown growing up as the adopted daughter of a sharecropper. When her father confronts their white landlord over money, a fight ensues. The landlord is shot by another white man, but Sylvia's adoptive father is accused and lynched with her adoptive mother.

Sylvia is almost raped by the landowner's brother but discovers that he is her biological father. Micheaux always depicts African Americans as being serious and reaching for higher education. Before the flashback scene, we see that Sylvia travels to Boston, seeking funding for her school, which serves black children. They are underserved by the segregated society. On her journey, she is hit by the car of a rich white woman. Learning about Landry's cause, the woman decides to give her school $50,000.

In the film, Micheaux depicts educated and professional people in black society as light-skinned, representing the elite status of some of the mixed-race people who comprised the majority of African Americans free before the Civil War. Poor people are represented as dark-skinned and with more undiluted African ancestry. Mixed-race people also feature as some of the villains. The film is set within the Jim Crow era. It contrasted the experiences for African Americans who stayed in rural areas and others who had migrated to cities and become urbanized. Micheaux explored the suffering of African Americans in the present day, without explaining how the situation arose in history. Some feared that this film would cause even more unrest within society, and others believed it would open the public's eyes to the unjust treatment of blacks by whites.[7] Protests against the film continued until the day it was released.[7] Because of its controversial status, the film was banned from some theaters.[7]

Micheaux adapted two works by Charles W. Chesnutt, which he released under their original titles: The Conjure Woman (1926) and The House Behind the Cedars (1927). The latter, which dealt with issues of mixed race and passing, created so much controversy when reviewed by the Film Board of Virginia that he was forced to make cuts to have it shown. He remade this story as a sound film in 1932, releasing it with the title Veiled Aristocrats. The silent version of the film is believed to have been lost.

Themes

Micheaux's films were made during a time of great change in the African-American community.[8] His films featured contemporary black life. He dealt with racial relationships between blacks and whites, and the challenges for blacks when trying to achieve success in the larger society. His films were used to oppose and discuss the racial injustice that African Americans received. Topics such as lynching, job discrimination, rape, mob violence, and economic exploitation were depicted in his films.[9] These films also reflect his ideologies and autobiographical experiences.[3]

Micheaux sought to create films that would counter negative portrayals of African Americans in films by white producers, which trafficked in degrading stereotypes. He created complex characters of different classes. His films questioned the value system of both African-American and Euro-American societies, which stirred controversy with the press and state censors.[9]

Style

Critic Barbara Lupack described Micheaux as pursuing moderation with his films and creating a "middle-class cinema".[7] His works were designed to appeal to both middle- and lower-class audiences.

Micheaux said,

My results ... might have been narrow at times, due perhaps to certain limited situations, which I endeavored to portray, but in those limited situations, the truth was the predominant characteristic. It is only by presenting those portions of the race portrayed in my pictures, in the light and background of their true state, that we can raise our people to greater heights. I am too imbued with the spirit of Booker T. Washington to engraft false virtues upon ourselves, to make ourselves that which we are not.[7]

Death

 
Grave of Oscar Micheaux in Great Bend being decorated during the 2005 Oscar Micheaux festival.

Micheaux died on March 25, 1951, in Charlotte, North Carolina, of heart failure. He is buried in Great Bend Cemetery in Great Bend, Kansas, the home of his youth. His gravestone reads: "A man ahead of his time".[9]

Personal

In South Dakota, Micheaux married Orlean McCracken. Her family proved to be complex and burdensome for Micheaux. Unhappy with their living arrangements, Orlean felt that Micheaux did not pay enough attention to her. She gave birth while he was away on business, and was reported to have emptied their bank accounts and fled.[3] Orlean's father sold Micheaux's property and took the money from the sale. After his return, Micheaux tried unsuccessfully to get Orlean and his property back. He married Alice Russell in 1926. Oscar and Alice remained married until his death.[citation needed]

Legacy and honors

The Czar of Black Hollywood

In 2014, Block Starz Music Television released The Czar of Black Hollywood, a documentary film[17] chronicling the early life and career of Oscar Micheaux using Library of Congress archived footage, photos, illustrations and vintage music.[18] The film was announced by American radio host Tom Joyner on his nationally syndicated program, The Tom Joyner Morning Show, as part of a "Little Known Black History Fact" on Micheaux.[19] In an interview with The Washington Times, filmmaker Bayer Mack said he read the 2007 biography Oscar Micheaux: The Great and Only by Patrick McGilligan and was inspired to produce The Czar of Black Hollywood because Micheaux's life mirrored his own.[20][21] Mack told The Huffington Post he was shocked that, in spite of Micheaux's historical significance, there was "virtually nothing out there about [his] life".[22] The film's executive producer, Frances Presley Rice, told the Sun Sentinel that Micheaux was the first "indie movie producer."[23] In 2018, Mack was interviewed by the news site Mic for its "Black Monuments Project", which named Oscar Micheaux as one of its 50 African-Americans deserving of a statue. He said Micheaux embodied "the best of what we all are as Americans" and that the filmmaker was "an inspiration."[24] A historical marker in Roanoke, Virginia commemorates his time living and working in the city as a film producer.[25]

Works

Filmography

Books

  • The Conquest: The Story of a Negro Pioneer. Lincoln, Nebraska: Woodruff Press. 1913. ISBN 978-0803282094. OCLC 254051406.
  • The Forged Note. Lincoln, Nebraska: Western Book Supply Company. 1915. OCLC 2058028.
  • The Homesteader: A Novel. Sioux City, Iowa: Western Book Supply Company. 1917. OCLC 10616358.
  • The Wind from Nowhere. New York: Book Supply Company. 1941. OCLC 682477.
  • The Case of Mrs. Wingate. New York: Book Supply Company. 1944. OCLC 5541463.
  • The Story of Dorothy Stanfield. New York: Book Supply Company. 1946. OCLC 300792169.
  • Masquerade, a Historical Novel. New York: Book Supply Company. 1947. OCLC 300739700.

See also

References

  1. ^ . African American Registry. May 24, 2005. Archived from the original on May 19, 2016. Retrieved February 12, 2009.
  2. ^ Moos, Dan (2005). Outside America: Race, Ethnicity, and the Role of the American West in National Belonging. University Press of New England. p. 53. ISBN 9781584655060. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Betti Carol VanEpps-Taylor, Oscar Micheaux – A Biography: Dakota Homesteader, Author, Pioneer Film Maker, Dakota West, 1999.
  4. ^ "Patent Details - BLM GLO Records".
  5. ^ ""Oscar Micheaux biography", Bio". biography.com. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  6. ^ a b c "Micheaux, Oscar". Sioux City Public Museum. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Lupack, Barbara Tepa (2002). Literary Adaptations in Black American Cinema. ISBN 9781580461030. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  8. ^ "The Journal for MultiMedia History Volume 3~ 2000". Homestead to Lynch Mob: Portrayals of Black Masculinity. 2000. Retrieved November 15, 2014.
  9. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on August 27, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c John W. Ravage, "Micheaux, Oscar.", BlackPast, accessed December 14, 2010,
  11. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (2002). 100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-1-57392-963-9.
  12. ^ World Stamp News www.worldstampnews.com
  13. ^ Allen, Mike (February 21, 2011) "Taubman Museum reduces its annual rates", The Roanoke Times. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
  14. ^ Chow, Andrew R. (December 11, 2019). "See the 25 New Additions to the National Film Registry, From Purple Rain to Clerks". Time. New York, NY. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  15. ^ Zimmerman, Eilene (October 20, 2021). "Capturing the Magic of Movies". The New York Times.
  16. ^ "Academy Museum surpasses the Oscars version of film history - Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times. September 21, 2021.
  17. ^ Paul Day II (December 24, 2014). "The Czar of Black Hollywood (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  18. ^ Movies News Desk (February 12, 2014). "New Documentary Underway on America's First Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux". broadwayworld.com. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  19. ^ "Little Known Black History Fact: Oscar Micheaux". Black America Web. February 13, 2014. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  20. ^ Wetzstein, Cheryl (April 30, 2014). "Black side of silver screen: Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux paved his own path to Hollywood". Washington Times. Retrieved February 25, 2015.
  21. ^ Wetzstein, Cheryl (April 30, 2014). "Love of history spurred rap mogul Bayer L. Mack to make Micheaux documentary". The Washington Times. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  22. ^ Kelly, Kate (August 4, 2014). "New Documentary About Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux". The Huffington Post. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  23. ^ Geggis, Anne (July 10, 2014). "Boca Black Film Festival aims to feature Florida's homegrown talent". tribunedigital-sunsentinel. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  24. ^ "The Black Monuments Project: Oscar Micheaux". Mic.com. Retrieved July 8, 2018.
  25. ^ "Oscar Micheaux Historical Marker".

Further reading

  • Bowser, Pearl; Gaines, Jane; Musser, Charles, eds. (2001). Oscar Micheaux and His Circle: African-American Filmmaking and Race Cinema of the Silent Era. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253339942.
  • Green, Ronald J (2000). Straight Lick: The Cinema of Oscar Micheaux. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana UP. ISBN 978-0253109224. OCLC 237396790.
  • hooks, bell (Summer 1991). "Micheaux: Celebrating Blackness". Black American Literature Forum. 25 (2): 351–360. doi:10.2307/3041692. JSTOR 3041692.
  • Howard, John R. (2009). Faces in the Mirror: Oscar Micheaux and Spike Lee. Fireside Publications. ISBN 9781935517511.
  • Lupack, Barbara Tepa (2004), "Black Pioneer: Oscar Micheaux", in Mazur, Zygmunt; Utz, Richard (eds.), Homo narrans: texts and essays in honor of Jerome Klinkowitz, Cracow, Poland: Jagiellonian University Press, pp. 125–137, ISBN 9788323318965.
  • Lupack, Barbara Tepa (2002). Literary Adaptations in Black American Cinema: From Micheaux to Morrison. Rochester: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-103-0.
  • McGilligan, Patrick (2007). Oscar Micheaux, the Great and Only: The Life of America's First Black Filmmaker. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061982156.
  • VanEpps-Taylor, Betti Carol (1999). Oscar Micheaux: Dakota Homesteader, Author, Pioneer Film Maker: a Biography. Rapid City, SD: Dakota West. ISBN 9781893250031. OCLC 49260537.
  • Yenser, Thomas (1933). Who's Who in Colored America: 1930-1931-1932. Brooklyn: T. Yenser. OCLC 26073112.

External links

  • Works by Oscar Micheaux at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Oscar Micheaux at Internet Archive
  • Works by Oscar Micheaux at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Oscar Micheaux at IMDb
  • UC Berkeley: Moffitt Library: Media Resources Center: "Oscar Micheaux: A Bibliography of Materials in the UC Berkeley Library"
  • J.D. Walker, Ph.D.: Oscar Micheaux: Pioneer Negro (Feature Film)
  • (an article by Richard Corliss)
  • "Within Our Gates (1920) – Oscar Micheaux Silent Film" on YouTube
  • Stace England's channel on YouTube (features clips from some of Micheaux's films)
  • Stace England & The Salt Kings (recorded an album of songs about Micheaux)
  • (page archived at Internet Archive)

oscar, micheaux, oscar, devereaux, micheaux, listen, january, 1884, march, 1951, author, film, director, independent, producer, more, than, films, although, short, lived, lincoln, motion, picture, company, first, movie, company, owned, controlled, black, filmm. Oscar Devereaux Micheaux US m ɪ ˈ ʃ oʊ listen January 2 1884 March 25 1951 was an author film director and independent producer of more than 44 films Although the short lived Lincoln Motion Picture Company was the first movie company owned and controlled by black filmmakers 1 Micheaux is regarded as the first major African American feature filmmaker a prominent producer of race films and has been described as the most successful African American filmmaker of the first half of the 20th century 2 He produced both silent films and sound films Oscar MicheauxMicheaux c 1913BornOscar Devereaux Micheaux 1884 01 02 January 2 1884Metropolis Illinois U S DiedMarch 25 1951 1951 03 25 aged 67 Charlotte North Carolina U S Occupation s Director authorSpousesOrlean McCracken m 1910 Alice B Russell m 1926 AwardsDirectors Guild of America Awards 1986 Golden Jubilee Special AwardHollywood Walk of Fame 6721 Hollywood Boulevard Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Writing and film career 3 Films 4 Themes 5 Style 6 Death 7 Personal 8 Legacy and honors 8 1 The Czar of Black Hollywood 9 Works 9 1 Filmography 9 2 Books 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life and education EditMicheaux was born on a farm in Metropolis Illinois on January 2 1884 3 He was the fifth child born to Calvin S and Belle Michaux who had a total of 13 children In his later years Micheaux added an e to his last name His father was born a slave in Kentucky 3 Because of his surname his father s family appears to have been enslaved by French descended settlers citation needed French Huguenot refugees had settled in Virginia in 1700 their descendants took slaves west when they migrated into Kentucky after the American Revolutionary War In his later years Micheaux wrote about the social oppression he experienced as a young boy His parents moved to the city so that the children could receive a better education Micheaux attended a well established school for several years before the family eventually ran into money troubles and were forced to return to the farm The discontented Micheaux became rebellious and his struggles caused problems within his family His father was not happy with him and sent him away to do marketing in the city Micheaux found pleasure in this job because he was able to speak to many new people and learned social skills that he would later reflect in his films 3 When Micheaux was 17 years old he moved to Chicago to live with his older brother then working as a waiter Micheaux became dissatisfied with what he viewed as his brother s way of living the good life He rented his own place and found work in the stockyards which he found difficult 3 He moved from the stockyards to the steel mills holding down many different jobs After being swindled out of two dollars by an employment agency Micheaux decided to become his own boss His first business was a shoeshine stand which he set up at a wealthy African American barbershop away from Chicago competition He learned the basic strategies of business and started to save money He became a Pullman porter on the major railroads 3 at that time considered prestigious employment for African Americans because it was relatively stable well paid and secure and it enabled travel and interaction with new people This job was an informal education for Micheaux He profited financially and also gained contacts and knowledge about the world through traveling as well as a greater understanding for business When he left the position he had seen much of the United States had a couple of thousand dollars saved in his bank account and had made a number of connections with wealthy white people who helped his future endeavors Micheaux moved to Gregory County South Dakota 4 where he bought land and worked as a homesteader 3 This experience inspired his first novels and films 5 His neighbors on the frontier were predominately blue collar whites Some recall that Micheaux rarely sat at a table with his blue collar white neighbors Micheaux s years as a homesteader allowed him to learn more about human relations and farming While farming Micheaux wrote articles and submitted them to the press The Chicago Defender published one of his earliest articles 3 His homestead failed and he was forced to sell it in 1911 6 The next year he began his publishing career when Woodruff Press of Lincoln Nebraska published The Conquest He began work on a second book The Forged Note and from 1914 to 1918 traveled among Lincoln Gregory County and Sioux City Iowa marketing his work 6 While in Sioux City he lived in and was influenced by the West 7th Street neighborhood where the town s African American community had a strong presence 6 Writing and film career Edit Oscar Micheaux in 1919 Micheaux decided to concentrate on writing and eventually filmmaking a new industry He wrote seven novels 3 In 1913 1 000 copies of his first book The Conquest The Story of a Negro Pioneer were printed 3 He published the book anonymously for unknown reasons He based it on his experiences as a homesteader and the failure of his first marriage and it was largely autobiographical Although character names have been changed the protagonist is named Oscar Devereaux His theme was about African Americans realizing their potential and succeeding in areas where they had not felt they could The book outlines the difference between city lifestyles of Negroes and the life he decided to lead as a lone Negro out on the far West as a pioneer He discusses the culture of doers who want to accomplish and those who see themselves as victims of injustice and hopelessness and who do not want to try to succeed but instead like to pretend to be successful while living the city lifestyle in poverty He had become frustrated with getting some members of his race to populate the frontier and make something of themselves with real work and property investment He wrote over 100 letters to fellow Negroes in the East beckoning them to come West but only his older brother eventually took his advice One of Micheaux s fundamental beliefs was that hard work and enterprise would make any person rise to respect and prominence no matter his or her race In 1918 his novel The Homesteader dedicated to his mother attracted the attention of George Johnson the manager of the Lincoln Motion Picture Company in Los Angeles After Johnson offered to make The Homesteader into a new feature film negotiations and paperwork became inharmonious 3 Micheaux wanted to be directly involved in the adaptation of his book as a movie but Johnson resisted and never produced the film Instead Micheaux founded the Micheaux Film amp Book Company of Sioux City its first project was the production of The Homesteader as a feature film Micheaux had a major career as a film producer and director He produced over 40 films which drew audiences throughout the U S as well as internationally 3 Micheaux contacted wealthy academic connections from his earlier career as a porter and sold stock for his company at 75 to 100 a share 3 Micheaux hired actors and actresses and decided to have the premiere in Chicago The film and Micheaux received high praise from film critics One article credited Micheaux with a historic breakthrough a creditable dignified achievement 3 Some members of the Chicago clergy criticized the film as libelous The Homesteader became known as Micheaux s breakout film it helped him become widely known as a writer and a filmmaker In addition to writing and directing his own films Micheaux also adapted the works of different writers for his silent pictures Many of his films were open blunt and thought provoking regarding certain racial issues of that time He once commented It is only by presenting those portions of the race portrayed in my pictures in the light and background of their true state that we can raise our people to greater heights 3 Financial hardships during the Great Depression eventually made it impossible for Micheaux to keep producing films and he returned to writing 3 Films EditMicheaux s first novel The Conquest was adapted to film and re titled The Homesteader 7 This film which met with critical and commercial success was released in 1919 It revolves around a man named Jean Baptiste called the Homesteader who falls in love with many white women but resists marrying one out of his loyalty to his race Baptiste sacrifices love to be a key symbol for his fellow African Americans He looks for love among his own people and marries an African American woman Relations between them deteriorate Eventually Baptiste is not allowed to see his wife She kills her father for keeping them apart and commits suicide Baptiste is accused of the crime but is ultimately cleared An old love helps him through his troubles After he learns that she is a mulatto and thus part African they marry This film deals extensively with race relationships Micheaux s second silent film was Within Our Gates produced in 1920 7 Although sometimes considered his response to the film The Birth of a Nation Micheaux said that he created it independently as a response to the widespread social instability following World War I Within Our Gates revolved around the main character Sylvia Landry a mixed race school teacher played by actress Evelyn Preer In a flashback Sylvia is shown growing up as the adopted daughter of a sharecropper When her father confronts their white landlord over money a fight ensues The landlord is shot by another white man but Sylvia s adoptive father is accused and lynched with her adoptive mother Sylvia is almost raped by the landowner s brother but discovers that he is her biological father Micheaux always depicts African Americans as being serious and reaching for higher education Before the flashback scene we see that Sylvia travels to Boston seeking funding for her school which serves black children They are underserved by the segregated society On her journey she is hit by the car of a rich white woman Learning about Landry s cause the woman decides to give her school 50 000 In the film Micheaux depicts educated and professional people in black society as light skinned representing the elite status of some of the mixed race people who comprised the majority of African Americans free before the Civil War Poor people are represented as dark skinned and with more undiluted African ancestry Mixed race people also feature as some of the villains The film is set within the Jim Crow era It contrasted the experiences for African Americans who stayed in rural areas and others who had migrated to cities and become urbanized Micheaux explored the suffering of African Americans in the present day without explaining how the situation arose in history Some feared that this film would cause even more unrest within society and others believed it would open the public s eyes to the unjust treatment of blacks by whites 7 Protests against the film continued until the day it was released 7 Because of its controversial status the film was banned from some theaters 7 Micheaux adapted two works by Charles W Chesnutt which he released under their original titles The Conjure Woman 1926 and The House Behind the Cedars 1927 The latter which dealt with issues of mixed race and passing created so much controversy when reviewed by the Film Board of Virginia that he was forced to make cuts to have it shown He remade this story as a sound film in 1932 releasing it with the title Veiled Aristocrats The silent version of the film is believed to have been lost Themes EditMicheaux s films were made during a time of great change in the African American community 8 His films featured contemporary black life He dealt with racial relationships between blacks and whites and the challenges for blacks when trying to achieve success in the larger society His films were used to oppose and discuss the racial injustice that African Americans received Topics such as lynching job discrimination rape mob violence and economic exploitation were depicted in his films 9 These films also reflect his ideologies and autobiographical experiences 3 Micheaux sought to create films that would counter negative portrayals of African Americans in films by white producers which trafficked in degrading stereotypes He created complex characters of different classes His films questioned the value system of both African American and Euro American societies which stirred controversy with the press and state censors 9 Style EditCritic Barbara Lupack described Micheaux as pursuing moderation with his films and creating a middle class cinema 7 His works were designed to appeal to both middle and lower class audiences Micheaux said My results might have been narrow at times due perhaps to certain limited situations which I endeavored to portray but in those limited situations the truth was the predominant characteristic It is only by presenting those portions of the race portrayed in my pictures in the light and background of their true state that we can raise our people to greater heights I am too imbued with the spirit of Booker T Washington to engraft false virtues upon ourselves to make ourselves that which we are not 7 Death Edit Grave of Oscar Micheaux in Great Bend being decorated during the 2005 Oscar Micheaux festival Micheaux died on March 25 1951 in Charlotte North Carolina of heart failure He is buried in Great Bend Cemetery in Great Bend Kansas the home of his youth His gravestone reads A man ahead of his time 9 Personal EditIn South Dakota Micheaux married Orlean McCracken Her family proved to be complex and burdensome for Micheaux Unhappy with their living arrangements Orlean felt that Micheaux did not pay enough attention to her She gave birth while he was away on business and was reported to have emptied their bank accounts and fled 3 Orlean s father sold Micheaux s property and took the money from the sale After his return Micheaux tried unsuccessfully to get Orlean and his property back He married Alice Russell in 1926 Oscar and Alice remained married until his death citation needed Legacy and honors EditThe Oscar Micheaux Society at Duke University continues to honor his work and educate about his legacy 3 1987 Micheaux was recognized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 1989 the Directors Guild of America honored Micheaux 10 with a Golden Jubilee Special Award The Producers Guild of America created an annual award in his name In 1989 the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame gave him a posthumous award 10 Gregory South Dakota holds an annual Oscar Micheaux Film Festival 10 In 2001 Oscar Micheaux Golden Anniversary Festival March 24 25 Great Bend Kansas In 2002 scholar Molefi Kete Asante included Oscar Micheaux on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans 11 On June 22 2010 the US Postal Service issued a 44 cent Oscar Micheaux commemorative stamp 12 In 2011 the Taubman Museum of Art in Roanoke Virginia created a category for donors the Micheaux Society in honor of Micheaux 13 Midnight Ramble Oscar Micheaux and the Story of Race Movies 1994 is a documentary whose title refers to the early 20th century practice of some segregated cinemas of screening films for African American audiences only at matinees and midnight The documentary was produced by Pamela Thomas directed by Pearl Bowser and Bestor Cram and written by Clyde Taylor It was first aired on the PBS show The American Experience in 1994 and released in 2004 In 2019 Micheaux s film Body and Soul was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry for being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 14 The Oscar Micheaux Award for excellence was established The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures has an exhibition devoted to his works 15 16 The Czar of Black Hollywood Edit In 2014 Block Starz Music Television released The Czar of Black Hollywood a documentary film 17 chronicling the early life and career of Oscar Micheaux using Library of Congress archived footage photos illustrations and vintage music 18 The film was announced by American radio host Tom Joyner on his nationally syndicated program The Tom Joyner Morning Show as part of a Little Known Black History Fact on Micheaux 19 In an interview with The Washington Times filmmaker Bayer Mack said he read the 2007 biography Oscar Micheaux The Great and Only by Patrick McGilligan and was inspired to produce The Czar of Black Hollywood because Micheaux s life mirrored his own 20 21 Mack told The Huffington Post he was shocked that in spite of Micheaux s historical significance there was virtually nothing out there about his life 22 The film s executive producer Frances Presley Rice told the Sun Sentinel that Micheaux was the first indie movie producer 23 In 2018 Mack was interviewed by the news site Mic for its Black Monuments Project which named Oscar Micheaux as one of its 50 African Americans deserving of a statue He said Micheaux embodied the best of what we all are as Americans and that the filmmaker was an inspiration 24 A historical marker in Roanoke Virginia commemorates his time living and working in the city as a film producer 25 Works EditFilmography Edit The Homesteader 1919 lost Within Our Gates 1920 The Brute 1920 lost The Symbol of the Unconquered 1920 The Gunsaulus Mystery 1921 lost The Dungeon 1922 lost The Hypocrite 1922 lost Uncle Jasper s Will 1922 lost The Virgin of the Seminole 1922 lost Deceit 1923 unknown Birthright 1924 lost A Son of Satan 1924 lost Body and Soul 1925 Marcus Garland 1925 lost The Conjure Woman 1926 adapted from novel by Charles W Chesnutt lost The Devil s Disciple 1926 unknown The Spider s Web 1926 The Millionaire 1927 The Broken Violin 1928 The House Behind the Cedars 1927 adapted from novel by Charles W Chesnutt lost Thirty Years Later 1928 lost When Men Betray 1929 lost The Wages of Sin 1929 lost Easy Street 1930 lost A Daughter of the Congo 1930 lost Darktown Revue 1931 The Exile 1931 Veiled Aristocrats 1932 fragments lost Ten Minutes to Live 1932 Black Magic 1932 The Girl from Chicago 1932 Ten Minutes to Kill 1933 Phantom of Kenwood 1933 Harlem After Midnight 1934 lost Murder in Harlem 1935 Temptation 1936 Underworld 1937 God s Step Children 1938 Swing 1938 Lying Lips 1939 Birthright 1939 The Notorious Elinor Lee 1940 The Betrayal 1948 lost Books Edit The Conquest The Story of a Negro Pioneer Lincoln Nebraska Woodruff Press 1913 ISBN 978 0803282094 OCLC 254051406 The Forged Note Lincoln Nebraska Western Book Supply Company 1915 OCLC 2058028 The Homesteader A Novel Sioux City Iowa Western Book Supply Company 1917 OCLC 10616358 The Wind from Nowhere New York Book Supply Company 1941 OCLC 682477 The Case of Mrs Wingate New York Book Supply Company 1944 OCLC 5541463 The Story of Dorothy Stanfield New York Book Supply Company 1946 OCLC 300792169 Masquerade a Historical Novel New York Book Supply Company 1947 OCLC 300739700 See also EditDeanna MichauxReferences Edit The Lincoln Motion Picture Company a First for Black Cinema African American Registry May 24 2005 Archived from the original on May 19 2016 Retrieved February 12 2009 Moos Dan 2005 Outside America Race Ethnicity and the Role of the American West in National Belonging University Press of New England p 53 ISBN 9781584655060 Retrieved March 13 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Betti Carol VanEpps Taylor Oscar Micheaux A Biography Dakota Homesteader Author Pioneer Film Maker Dakota West 1999 Patent Details BLM GLO Records Oscar Micheaux biography Bio biography com Retrieved November 9 2015 a b c Micheaux Oscar Sioux City Public Museum Retrieved September 12 2022 a b c d e f g Lupack Barbara Tepa 2002 Literary Adaptations in Black American Cinema ISBN 9781580461030 Retrieved November 9 2015 The Journal for MultiMedia History Volume 3 2000 Homestead to Lynch Mob Portrayals of Black Masculinity 2000 Retrieved November 15 2014 a b c Oscar Micheaux grave Archived from the original on August 27 2013 Retrieved August 14 2013 a b c John W Ravage Micheaux Oscar BlackPast accessed December 14 2010 Asante Molefi Kete 2002 100 Greatest African Americans A Biographical Encyclopedia Amherst NY Prometheus Books ISBN 978 1 57392 963 9 World Stamp News www worldstampnews com Allen Mike February 21 2011 Taubman Museum reduces its annual rates The Roanoke Times Retrieved February 21 2011 Chow Andrew R December 11 2019 See the 25 New Additions to the National Film Registry From Purple Rain to Clerks Time New York NY Retrieved December 11 2019 Zimmerman Eilene October 20 2021 Capturing the Magic of Movies The New York Times Academy Museum surpasses the Oscars version of film history Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times September 21 2021 Paul Day II December 24 2014 The Czar of Black Hollywood 2014 IMDb Retrieved November 9 2015 Movies News Desk February 12 2014 New Documentary Underway on America s First Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux broadwayworld com Retrieved November 9 2015 Little Known Black History Fact Oscar Micheaux Black America Web February 13 2014 Retrieved November 9 2015 Wetzstein Cheryl April 30 2014 Black side of silver screen Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux paved his own path to Hollywood Washington Times Retrieved February 25 2015 Wetzstein Cheryl April 30 2014 Love of history spurred rap mogul Bayer L Mack to make Micheaux documentary The Washington Times Retrieved November 9 2015 Kelly Kate August 4 2014 New Documentary About Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux The Huffington Post Retrieved November 9 2015 Geggis Anne July 10 2014 Boca Black Film Festival aims to feature Florida s homegrown talent tribunedigital sunsentinel Retrieved November 9 2015 The Black Monuments Project Oscar Micheaux Mic com Retrieved July 8 2018 Oscar Micheaux Historical Marker Further reading EditBowser Pearl Gaines Jane Musser Charles eds 2001 Oscar Micheaux and His Circle African American Filmmaking and Race Cinema of the Silent Era Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253339942 Green Ronald J 2000 Straight Lick The Cinema of Oscar Micheaux Bloomington Indiana Indiana UP ISBN 978 0253109224 OCLC 237396790 hooks bell Summer 1991 Micheaux Celebrating Blackness Black American Literature Forum 25 2 351 360 doi 10 2307 3041692 JSTOR 3041692 Howard John R 2009 Faces in the Mirror Oscar Micheaux and Spike Lee Fireside Publications ISBN 9781935517511 Lupack Barbara Tepa 2004 Black Pioneer Oscar Micheaux in Mazur Zygmunt Utz Richard eds Homo narrans texts and essays in honor of Jerome Klinkowitz Cracow Poland Jagiellonian University Press pp 125 137 ISBN 9788323318965 Lupack Barbara Tepa 2002 Literary Adaptations in Black American Cinema From Micheaux to Morrison Rochester University of Rochester Press ISBN 978 1 58046 103 0 McGilligan Patrick 2007 Oscar Micheaux the Great and Only The Life of America s First Black Filmmaker New York HarperCollins ISBN 9780061982156 VanEpps Taylor Betti Carol 1999 Oscar Micheaux Dakota Homesteader Author Pioneer Film Maker a Biography Rapid City SD Dakota West ISBN 9781893250031 OCLC 49260537 Yenser Thomas 1933 Who s Who in Colored America 1930 1931 1932 Brooklyn T Yenser OCLC 26073112 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oscar Micheaux Wikisource has original works by or about Oscar Micheaux Works by Oscar Micheaux at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Oscar Micheaux at Internet Archive Works by Oscar Micheaux at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Oscar Micheaux at IMDb UC Berkeley Moffitt Library Media Resources Center Oscar Micheaux A Bibliography of Materials in the UC Berkeley Library J D Walker Ph D Oscar Micheaux Pioneer Negro Feature Film Time Black Cinema Micheaux Must Go On an article by Richard Corliss Within Our Gates 1920 Oscar Micheaux Silent Film on YouTube Stace England s channel on YouTube features clips from some of Micheaux s films Stace England amp The Salt Kings recorded an album of songs about Micheaux United States Postal Service Oscar Micheaux commemorative stamp page archived at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oscar Micheaux amp oldid 1150159197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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