Thursday, May 31, 2012

Bray Animation Project: 1st Anniversary!

It's been a fun and fruitful year for early animation "historianism." Back in June of 2011, the Bray Animation Project website launched after quite some time in the making. Twelve months later--largely as a direct result--great strides have been made in locating previously lost and unknown Bray cartoons, as well as accessing films that have been held in archives for years. While the website has been a handy research tool for ourselves and our colleagues, it has also proven a useful vehicle for alerting the community at large to our interests. Valuable information and important artifacts have been sent my way thanks to the site, and I'm grateful to everyone for such a warm response.

In the very near future, I expect to announce some very exciting plans that will allow the general public to finally see some of these films in high quality versions. The Bray project is not merely my personal collecting venture; it's an effort that seeks to share the films and present them in context, an effort that will take time and funds.

While we wait for these announcements, I'd like to share some highlights of films that have been located or accessed and copied in this past year. The following are samples of some two dozen or more films that have surfaced since the website's launch...and the trend continues; finds are being made and access is being achieved regularly.

The Old Swimming Hole (1919)

An entry in Wallace Carlson's Us Fellers series at Bray, using his Dreamy Dud character which began earlier at Essanay. New 16mm print of this Bray TV version acquired through the courtesy of Cinémathèque Québécoise.


Bobby Bumps Throwing the Bull (1919)

The last cartoon Earl Hurd produced at Bray. Hurd took Bobby Bumps to Paramount and later Educational, finally retiring the character in 1925 after ten years on the screen. HDCAM transfer of this abridged and amber-tinted 1920s 16mm Filmo Library print acquired through the courtesy of the Library of Congress.


Action of the Human Heart (1920)

This film is one of many animated educational films that were produced at Bray. HDCAM transfer of this 1920s 16mm print acquired through the courtesy of the Library of Congress.


The Dummy (1920)

The late 1910s saw Jerry on the Job, Happy Hooligan, Judge Rummy, and Krazy Kat cartoons being produced for Bray under an agreement with Hearst's failing International Film Service. The deal also saw the production of three little-known Shenanigan Kids cartoons. "Shenanigan" was an alternate name given to the ever-popular Katzenjammer Kids comic strip in the late 1910s.  After the Bray Project launch, artist and animation historian Milton Knight alerted me to the existence of Shenanigans' The Dummy on an old VHS tape--and purely by luck, a 16mm print surfaced soon thereafter. This vintage 1950s print was obtained from a 16mm film print dealer. It was originally struck by a notorious bootlegger who sold timeslot fillers to early television stations.

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On an even more exciting note, I reported to the Bray site's discussion board in April that the Bray Farmer Alfalfa series had finally been collected in full--the first Bray series to be completely reassembled, and an exciting moment. Some of you might be thinking that it would be wonderful to see these films, and you need not worry--it will happen! As a preview of what will soon be announced, please have a look at the two videos below.

Both are versions of Farmer Alfalfa's Revenge (1916). The first is a version that has circulated for decades; while having its original main title, it is an abridged version that was marketed in 100 foot 16mm form by Keystone Manufacturing Corp. in the 1940s. In another twist of luck, a brand new print has been obtained from the circa 1949 Bray TV 16mm negative that has survived in obscurity all these years. While this second print no longer has its original titles, it is complete at almost double the Keystone print's length. As I now have both, it will be no problem at all marrying the original titles with the complete film--which looks great to boot!






Here's looking forward to another fun-filled year of research, important acquisitions, as well as big announcements that will benefit all of us!

-Tom Stathes

Saturday, May 19, 2012

New Tom Stathes Screenings Coming Up!

Hello Friends, To all who live in or will be visiting the NYC area, please take note of two upcoming events that you'll be sure to enjoy!

Old Timey Slap Dash
   
Saturday, May 26th - Old Timey Slap Dash @ 8pm 

:: CARTOONS Tom Stathes 
:::: MUSIC Honest Pete 
:::::: FILM Movie Mike presents classic films ... 
:::::::: DIARY Ellen LaVeyra presents excerpts from a 1920s diary 
:::::::::: POETRY Lauren Raheja 

We're going old school! Really old school! Get psyched, and prepare your costume for an old timey good time with Slap Dash. COSTUMES ARE HIGHLY ENCOURAGED. Free home brewed beer by Honest Pete. 

LaunchPad 721 Franklin Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 
2/3/4/5/C to Franklin Ave. | 8PM | FREE | ALL AGES 

Website: http://slapdash.terribleinformation.org/ | Phone: 718-928-7112 

======== WTF IS SLAP DASH??? ======== Slap Dash is a monthly series that brings together different art forms for a semi-cohesive mixed-media extravaganza. If you make art, and you want to show it off, contact us @ slapdashbk@gmail.com

Facebook event here, folks! I will be screening early 20th century animation (mostly 1910s) in 16mm. This is a nice, free event!
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The Tom Stathes Cartoon Carnival #10: Made in NYC!

    • Friday, June 8, 2012
    • 7:30pm until 9:30pm
       

  • New York City was the birthplace of American cinema with the earliest animated films created in the 1910s. This edition of The Tom Stathes Cartoon Carnival features selections of early and wacky animated cartoons created right here in New York City. Tom’s show, comprising... oddities from the 1910s through 1940s, is presented in 16mm form with a projector–the technology serving as part of the spectacle–in order to demonstrate how film was meant to be enjoyed. Cinephiles, cartoon and comic fans and lovers of all things vintage are sure to enjoy a Cartoon Carnival!

    Please keep in mind films of an early vintage tend to contain politically incorrect themes. Themes in the films do not reflect the sentiments of the exhibitor or the host venue. Due to the age and fragile nature of antique film prints, there may be momentary technical difficulties during the screening.

    Tom Stathes is a Cartoon Cryptozoologist, with a rare film print collection comprised of over 1,000 shorts. His archive consists of everything from Felix the Cat and Farmer Alfalfa to silent reels from Bray Studios and Out of the Inkwell. A native-New Yorker, he turned his passion for the city’s animation legacy into a preservation mission. With his Bray Animation Project, he has worked with several film and comic historians to document the studios invaluable output. For more information go to cartoonsonfilm.com or brayanimation.weebly.com.

    Hosted by Atlas Obscura and the Obscura Society as well as Observatory of Brooklyn.
    Observatory: 543 Union Street #1E, Brooklyn, NY 11215

    Tickets are $12.00 and can be pre-purchased at the Eventbrite page: http://obscura-society-tom-stathes.eventbrite.com/ 
     
    FACEBOOK EVENT HERE.