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

Streible Endnote 25

A record in the New York Public Library (NYPL) catalog was the sole source of information about this obscure 1969 film. The entry reads: “[Historical films: Variety dancing, series 3] [motion picture].” “Nine short films from the Historical Films Paper Print Collection in the Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division of the Library of Congress.” Deyo, dated as 1907, is one of those works. The demystifying metadata is revealed because NYPL allows registered users to access its legacy catalog. We learn the library purchased a 16mm print from “Historical Films in California in 1969,” part of a nine-reel series of dance performances. In 1991 the library purchased a replacement print from LOC, “due to severe shrinkage and deterioration” of the first. The “A.O.” (archival object) is a 16mm master positive, 195 feet in length, kept in a can in a box in Princeton’s cold storage facility Research Collections and Preservation Consortium (ReCAP). [Variety dancing, series 3], obscure as it is, is also preserved in full at NYPL. Its preservation master is a duplicate negative copied from the A.O. The Kemp Niver Collection at LOC includes a dozen reels titled Historical Films, each a silent compilation of Paper Print films, minimally described. The University of Southern California and Pyramid Films sold and rented Niver compilations, starting with the twenty-six-part series The First Twenty Years. Niver authored and self-published an illustrated book companion, The First Twenty Years: A Segment of Film History, Bebe Bergsten, ed. (Locare Research Group, 1968). See also John Mercer, “Kemp R. Niver and the History of Cinema,” Journal of the University Film Association 23, no. 3 (1971): 71–73.

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