This page was created by Paul Merchant, Jr.. 

Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Streible Abstract

This analysis of two idiosyncratic works of early cinema considers the materiality of the forms each took, from creation through their restorations in the twenty-first century. Researching the well-known Three American Beauties (Edison, 1906) and the seldom-seen dance film Deyo (American Mutoscope Co., 1897) requires archival investigation and an understanding that the primary, secondary, and reference sources film historians rely upon sometimes contain erroneous reports, contradictory evidence, and misleading metadata. Deyo was shot on high-resolution film, but seen only on Mutoscope machines by a few people. It survives as fragments of 68mm paper rolls, which American Mutoscope and Biograph deposited for copyright ten years later. Three American Beauties survives as unique hand-colored 35mm prints, one of which I found to be a 1907 edition released as Three American Beauties, No. 2. However, a question conjoins these films: is Blanche Deyo, the dancer of 1897, also the “American beauty” of 1906?

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