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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 28

As with Deyo, the shifting iterations of Annabelle Moore’s flag dance films reveal the complexities of material and textual expressions of a work. From the US Copyright Office: Annabelle in Flag Dance, American Mutoscope Co.; December 18, 1896; Flag Dance, American Mutoscope & Biograph Co.; May 21, 1903. The AMB records do not use the copyright titles. They refer to the same film, no. 35, as Flag Dance by Annabelle (AM&B database and Photo Catalog) and A Flag Dance (AMB Picture Catalogue). AMB reregistered Flag Dance for copyright in 1903 (dropping Annabelle’s name). It deposited duplicate 35mm paper rolls of the whole film. Kemp Niver’s catalog speculates, errs, and editorializes: “A girl, approximately fourteen years of age, dressed in a costume resembling the American flag, performs a dance . . . and her actions show she has had very little training.” The eighteen-year-old Moore had been dancing professionally for three years. Flag Dance also survives on celluloid. A nitrate 35mm copy became part of a 1944 compilation reel in the Fox Movietone News library. When LOC began to preserve the Paper Print Collection in 1943, Howard Walls and Carl Gregory used a modified optical printer to rephotograph the paper frames on 35mm motion picture film. The process was experimental and slow, producing a small but unknown number of films. In 1944 LOC made samples available to the major newsreel producers. A nearly complete copy of the 1903 paper print of Flag Dance survives in 50th Anniversary of Motion Pictures—outtakes, Fox Movietone News story, 51-551 552, Moving Image Research Collections, University of South Carolina.

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