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IMDbPro

J. Stuart Blackton(1875-1941)

  • Director
  • Producer
  • Additional Crew
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
J. Stuart Blackton
In the US from the age of 10, he first worked as a journalist-illustrator for the New York World. Interviewing Thomas A. Edison, he so impressed the inventor with his drawings that Edison suggested he allow some of them to be photographed by the Kinetograph camera. The result was a short film, Edison Drawn by 'World' Artist (1896). Fascinated by the new medium, Blackton bought a Kinetoscope from Edison, went into partnership with a friend, Albert E. Smith, and exhibited films with it. In 1897 they added a third partner, William T. Rock, and the young partners converted the projector into a motion-picture camera and established the Vitagraph Company. They started film production in an open-air studio on the roof of the Morse Building at 140 Nassau Street, New York City. Their first film, The Burglar on the Roof (1898), was about 50 feet long, with Blackton playing the leading role. In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, they produced Tearing Down the Spanish Flag (1898), probably the world's first propaganda film. Smith operated the camera and Blackton was again the actor, tearing down the Spanish flag and raising the Stars and Stripes to the top of a flagpole. Blackton and his partners continued filming fake and real news events, ranging from Spanish-American War footage to coverage of local fires and crimes in New York City. They constantly expanded their activities and soon moved into the world's first glass-enclosed studios, in Flatbush, Brooklyn. Blackton directed most of the production of this early period, including such story films as A Gentleman of France (1905) and Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (1905), two milestones in the development of the American feature film. Blackton pioneered the single-frame (one turn, one picture) technique in cinema animation, turning out a number of animated cartoons between 1906 and 1910, including the immensely successful Humorous Phases of Funny Faces (1906), L'hôtel hanté (1907), and The Magic Fountain Pen (1909). He also introduced (in 1908, before Griffith) the close shot, a camera position between the close-up and the medium shot. Like Griffith, he emphasized film editing, setting his films apart from most of the products of this very early period. His film editing was especially noteworthy in his 'Scenes Of True Life' series, a realistic group of films he directed beginning in 1908. Next to Griffith, Blackton was probably the most innovative and creative force in the development of the motion picture art, not only as the director of hundreds of films but also as organizer, producer, actor, and animator. He pioneered the production of two- and three-reel comedies and starred in one such series as a character called Happy Hooligan. Beginning in 1908, he also pioneered the American production of distinguished stage adaptations, including many Shakespeare plays and historical re-creations. When the output at Vitagraph became too heavy for one man to handle, he initiated the system (later to be adopted by Ince) of overseeing the work of several underling directors as production supervisor. In 1917 he left active work with Vitagraph and began independent productions. During WWI, he directed and produced a series of patriotic propaganda films, the most famous of which, and which he also wrote, was L'Invasion des États-Unis (1915), based on a hypothetical attack on New York City by a foreign invader. Blackton later went to England, where he directed a number of costume pageants, two of them experiments in color. When Vitagraph was absorbed by Warner Bros. in 1926, Blackton retired. He lost his entire fortune in the 1929 crash and was forced to seek work on a government project in California. Later he was hired as director of production at the Anglo-American Film Company, where he worked until his death. Between 1900 and 1915, Blackton was president of the Vitaphone Company, a manufacturer of record players. In 1915 he organized and became president of the Motion Picture Board of Trade, later known as the Association of Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. He was also publisher and editor of Motion Picture Magazine, one of America's first film-fan publications.
BornJanuary 5, 1875
DiedAugust 13, 1941(66)
BornJanuary 5, 1875
DiedAugust 13, 1941(66)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

La Glorieuse Aventure (1922)
La Glorieuse Aventure
6.5
  • Director
  • 1922
The Moonshine Trail (1919)
The Moonshine Trail
  • Director
  • 1919
Violet Heming in The Judgment House (1917)
The Judgment House
  • Director
  • 1917
Sylvia Breamer in Dawn (1919)
Dawn
  • Director
  • 1919

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Director



  • Cohen and Coon
    • Director
    • Short



  • The Film Parade (1933)
    The Film Parade
    7.5
    • Director
    • 1933
  • Bessie Love and Charles Ray in The American (1927)
    The American
    • Director
    • 1927
  • The Passionate Quest (1926)
    The Passionate Quest
    • Director
    • 1926
  • John Harron, Gardner James, and Patsy Ruth Miller in Hell-Bent fer Heaven (1926)
    Hell-Bent fer Heaven
    • Director
    • 1926
  • Dorothy Devore in The Gilded Highway (1926)
    The Gilded Highway
    5.6
    • Director
    • 1926
  • Dolores Costello and John Harron in Bride of the Storm (1926)
    Bride of the Storm
    • Director
    • 1926
  • Malcolm McGregor in Le champion du cirque (1925)
    Le champion du cirque
    • Director
    • 1925
  • Laska Winter, Ben Hendricks Jr., and Mae Marsh in Tides of Passion (1925)
    Tides of Passion
    6.6
    • Director
    • 1925
  • Rosita Marstini, Carl Miller, Alla Nazimova, and Lou Tellegen in The Redeeming Sin (1925)
    The Redeeming Sin
    • Director
    • 1925
  • Marguerite De La Motte and Victor McLaglen in The Beloved Brute (1924)
    The Beloved Brute
    • Director
    • 1924
  • Marguerite De La Motte and Percy Marmont in The Clean Heart (1924)
    The Clean Heart
    • Director
    • 1924
  • Marguerite De La Motte, Charles A. Post, and Irene Rich in Le rustre et la coquette (1924)
    Le rustre et la coquette
    • Director
    • 1924
  • Échéance tragique (1924)
    Échéance tragique
    • Director
    • 1924
  • Pauline Frederick and Lou Tellegen in Le coeur a beau mentir (1924)
    Le coeur a beau mentir
    • Director
    • 1924
  • Mary Carr, Madge Evans, Mary MacLaren, Burr McIntosh, and James Morrison in Le flot qui monte (1923)
    Le flot qui monte
    • Director
    • 1923

Producer



  • Cohen and Coon
    • producer
    • Short



  • The Passionate Quest (1926)
    The Passionate Quest
    • producer
    • 1926
  • John Harron, Gardner James, and Patsy Ruth Miller in Hell-Bent fer Heaven (1926)
    Hell-Bent fer Heaven
    • producer
    • 1926
  • Dolores Costello and John Harron in Bride of the Storm (1926)
    Bride of the Storm
    • producer
    • 1926
  • Marguerite De La Motte and Victor McLaglen in The Beloved Brute (1924)
    The Beloved Brute
    • producer
    • 1924
  • Pauline Frederick and Lou Tellegen in Le coeur a beau mentir (1924)
    Le coeur a beau mentir
    • producer
    • 1924
  • Le Bohémien gentilhomme
    • producer
    • 1922
  • La Glorieuse Aventure (1922)
    La Glorieuse Aventure
    6.5
    • producer
    • 1922
  • De la haine à l'amour (1920)
    De la haine à l'amour
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Le testament d'Anthony Cole (1920)
    Le testament d'Anthony Cole
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Passers-By (1920)
    Passers-By
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Sylvia Breamer and Robert Gordon in Invincible obstacle (1920)
    Invincible obstacle
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Sylvia Breamer in Respectable by Proxy (1920)
    Respectable by Proxy
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Terrible Dilemme (1920)
    Terrible Dilemme
    5.3
    • producer
    • 1920
  • Sylvia Breamer in Dawn (1919)
    Dawn
    • producer
    • 1919
  • The Moonshine Trail (1919)
    The Moonshine Trail
    • producer
    • 1919

Additional Crew



  • Marguerite De La Motte, Charles A. Post, and Irene Rich in Le rustre et la coquette (1924)
    Le rustre et la coquette
    • presenter
    • 1924
  • The Littlest Scout (1919)
    The Littlest Scout
    • supervisor
    • 1919
  • Mitchell Lewis in Life's Greatest Problem (1918)
    Life's Greatest Problem
    • presenter
    • 1918
  • Missing (1918)
    Missing
    • presenter
    • supervisor
    • 1918
  • Coeurs esclaves (1918)
    Coeurs esclaves
    • supervisor
    • 1918
  • Violet Heming in The Judgment House (1917)
    The Judgment House
    • presenter
    • 1917
  • Alice Joyce and Harry T. Morey in The Question (1917)
    The Question
    • presenter
    • 1917
  • Alice Joyce, Harry T. Morey, Bernard Randall, and Anders Randolf in À l'abri des lois (1917)
    À l'abri des lois
    • supervisor
    • 1917
  • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation (1917)
    Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation
    8.3
    • supervisor
    • 1917
  • William Courtenay and Lucille Lee Stewart in The Ninety and Nine (1916)
    The Ninety and Nine
    • supervisor
    • 1916
  • The Devil's Prize (1916)
    The Devil's Prize
    • presenter
    • 1916
  • Fathers of Men (1916)
    Fathers of Men
    • presenter
    • 1916
  • Lillian Walker in Green Stockings (1916)
    Green Stockings
    • presenter
    • 1916
  • The Heights of Hazard (1915)
    The Heights of Hazard
    • presenter
    • 1915
  • The Man Who Couldn't Beat God (1915)
    The Man Who Couldn't Beat God
    • presenter
    • 1915

Personal details

Edit
  • Born
    • January 5, 1875
    • Sheffield, Yorkshire [now South Yorkshire], England, UK
  • Died
    • August 13, 1941
    • Los Angeles, California, USA(hit by a bus)
  • Spouses
      Evangeline RussellOctober 17, 1936 - August 13, 1941 (his death)
  • Other works
    Book: "The Battle Cry to Peace: A Call to Arms Against War"
  • Publicity listings
    • 2 Print Biographies
    • 36 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Father with Isabelle Mabel MacArthur of Marian Constance Blackton and J. Stuart Blackton Jr.; father with Paula Blackton of Violet Virginia Blackton and Charles Stuart Blackton.
  • Quotes
    [about the early days of the motion picture industry] Picture making can hardly be said to have developed. The art itself is an evolution--its branches developed. Everything was so absolutely new that the first producers had to evolve their own standards.

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