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Book cover of Before, In And After Hollywood
Filmmakers - General & Miscellaneous - Biography

Before, In And After Hollywood

by Anthony Slide, Joseph Henabery
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Overview

In 1914, a young midwesterner quit his railroad job to crack the Hollywood motion picture boom. Impressed by his energy and honesty in his role as Lincoln, D.W. Griffith made him his assistant for Intolerance. Griffith then made Joe a director. He swiftly progressed to a preeminent position in the industry, directing some of the biggest Hollywood stars of the 1920's including Douglas Fairbanks, Fatty Arbuckle, and Rudolph Valentino. Versatility played an important role in Joe's rich creative life inside the studios. His understanding of the mechanics of motion-picture film led him to develop and be granted a patent for teaching speech to the deaf by visualizing sound. He pioneered sound short-subjects for the Vitaphone Studios in Brooklyn and later directed WWII training films for the Army Signal Corps in Astoria. Henabery contributed, not only as a director, but also as a researcher, writer, make-up artist/actor, architect, scenic designer, and special-effects innovator. His autobiography, Before, In and After Hollywood was completed in 1975 shortly before his death. Contains 24 black and white photographs.

Synopsis

The autobiography of Joseph Henabery, the director of some of the biggest Hollywood stars of the 1920s including Douglas Fairbanks, Fatty Arbuckle, and Rudolph Valentino.

Rapport

It's an extraordinary feat, one that should be appreciated by students of the movies. Henabery's unpretentious manner is ingratiating and the history he imparts is unequaled..

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Editorials

Curio

...offers important insights on Griffith, as well as stories about Fairbanks, Valentino, and Fatty Arbuckle.

Rapport

It's an extraordinary feat, one that should be appreciated by students of the movies. Henabery's unpretentious manner is ingratiating and the history he imparts is unequaled.

The Silent Film Monthly

Too few first-hand accounts of the silent era exist, making this book valuable for insight into early filmmaking.

The Silents Majority

...captivating...illustrates a cutthroat motion picture industry...one of many excellent Hollywood memoirs.

Kevin Brownlow

For a book as important as this to surface so many years after its author's death is nothing short of a miracle. Joseph Henabery is a fascinating chronicler of a colourful eraβ€”and his analysis of the other books on the subject is worth the cost of this one..

Rapport

It's an extraordinary feat, one that should be appreciated by students of the movies. Henabery's unpretentious manner is ingratiating and the history he imparts is unequaled..

Booknews

Finishing shortly before his death, Henabery (1887-1976) recounts how he went from the midwest to Hollywood in 1914, worked as a crowd extra, got his break as Lincoln in D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation", moved from acting to directing, worked with some of the biggest names in the movie industry, pioneered sound short-subjects, and directed training films for the Army during World War II. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1997
Publisher
The Scarecrow Press, Inc.
Pages
392
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780810832008

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