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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 32

Niver, Early Motion Pictures, 8. See Walter Terry, “World of Dance,” Saturday Review, March 8, 1969, 113–16. A Duncan biographer, Terry describes a 1968 screening in which he watched a set of dance films from the Paper Print Collection. Kemp Niver’s private company Historical Films released a twenty-minute compilation documentary. The BBC documentary The Last Machine (1994) shows footage from Animated Picture Studio, saying the performer is “thought to be Isadora Duncan.” Catherine Hindson dismisses the Duncan story as well as the Fuller films in “The Female Illusionist—Loie Fuller: Fairy or Wizardess?” Early Popular Visual Culture 4, no. 2 (2006): 161–74. Kristina Kohler calls it a “false reference” in “Between the Old and the New Art of Movement: Dance and Cinematic Reflexivity at the Intersections of Cinema’s Past, Present and Future,” in In the Very Beginning, at the Very End: On the History of Film Theories, Leonardo Quaresima and Valentina Re, eds. (Udine: Forum Editrice, 2010), 195–203.

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