Annabelle Serpentine Dance

Annabelle Serpentine Dance is a short silent American film produced and distributed by Edison Manufacturing Company in 1895. It is one of several released by the studio in the late 19th century. Each short film depicts the popular serpentine dance performed by Annabelle Moore. Many of the prints were distributed in color, which was hand-tinted.[1]

Annabelle Serpentine Dance
Directed byWilliam K.L. Dickson
William Heise
Produced byWilliam Heise
StarringAnnabelle Moore
Production
company
Distributed byEdison Manufacturing Company
Release date
  • 1895 (1895)
Running time
45 seconds
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent

Action in the film

edit
Hand tinted version (1895).

The dance is performed in succession in a lockoff shot. The first is in a flowing skirt, held out by her hands with arms extended. She smiles, wearing butterfly wings on her back and the wings of Mercury in her hair. Her dance emphasizes the movement of her visible, bare legs. She kicks high, bows, and moves to her right and left. The second dancer has a voluminous, long skirt, and holds sticks in each hand attached to the skirt's outer edges. The flowing patterns of the skirt from her arm movements give the second scene a different feeling from the first.

Production and distribution

edit

Different versions of the film were released on four different dates: August 10, 1894; February 1895; April–August 1895; and May 8, 1897.[2] The film was directed by William K.L. Dickson and William Heise. Heise was also producer and camera operator.

Film historians have commented on the possibilities for viewers to slow down the hand cranking of the footage; it was not technically possible in other art forms.[3]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Yumibe, Joshua (2012). Moving Color: Early Film, Mass Culture, Modernism. Rutgers University Press, ISBN 9780813552989
  2. ^ Perry, Ted (2006). Masterpieces of Modernist Cinema. Indiana University Press, ISBN 9780253347718
  3. ^ Barker, Jennifer M. (2009). The Tactile Eye: Touch and the Cinematic Experience. University of California Press, ISBN 9780520258426
edit