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Screening Sarah Bernhardt: reinterpreting acting in silent film

conference contribution
posted on 2016-01-19, 00:00 authored by Victoria DuckettVictoria Duckett
Sarah Bernhardt, the great nineteenth-century theatrical actress, was also the first major international film star. Appearing cross-dressed in a short Hamlet film before international audiences at the Paris Exposition of 1900, this 56-year-old French actress most famously went on to make Camille (La Dame aux Camélias, 1911) and Queen Elizabeth (Les Amours de la Reine Elisabeth, 1912). Later appearing in one of the first celebrity home movies (Sarah Bernhardt at Home, 1915), she also made a WWI propaganda film, Mothers of France (Mères Françaises, 1917). This presentation explores these films as evidence of a productive exchange between the stage and the nascent film industry. Rather than see Bernhardt’s acting as evidence of the theatre’s incommensurability with film, it will demonstrate the legacy of her stage acting as she adapted it to early film. The talk will include screenings of the films accompanied by live music.

History

Location

London, Eng.

Start date

2016-01-19

End date

2016-01-19

Language

eng

Publication classification

EN Other conference paper

Copyright notice

2016, STR

Title of proceedings

Society for Theatre Research Public Lecture

Event

Society for Theatre Research Lecture Series (2016: London, Eng.)

Publisher

Society for Theatre Resaeach

Place of publication

London, Eng.

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