Silent film of black couple's kiss discovered, added to National Film Registry
It was remarkable to me how well the film was preserved, and also what the actors were doing, said UChicagos Allyson Nadia Field, an expert on African-American cinema who helped identify the film and its historical significance. Theres a performance there because theyre dancing with one another, but their kissing has an unmistakable sense of naturalness, pleasure, and amusement as well.
It is really striking to me, as a historian who works on race and cinema, to think that this kind of artifact could have existed in 1898. Its really a remarkable artifact and discovery.
An associate professor in UChicagos Department of Cinema and Media Studies, Field first saw scanned frames of the film in January 2017. The footage was discovered by USC archivist Dino Everett, who found the 19th-century nitrate print within a batch of silent films he had acquired from a Louisiana collector nearly three years earlier.
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Their performance is a reinterpretation of Thomas Edisons The Kiss, featuring May Irwin and John Rice. Added to the National Film Registry nearly two decades ago, the 1896 film contained the very first on-screen kiss, and was also one of the first films to be publicly shown.
But less discussed is the fact that Irwin herself was a well-known minstrel performera fact that, Field argues, would have shaped how viewers understood both the Irwin-Rice kiss and Something Good-Negro Kiss. Indeed, the discovery of Something Good-Negro Kiss could prompt scholars to reevaluate their perceptions of the time period.
This artifact helps us think more critically about the relationship between race and performance in early cinema, Field said. Its not a corrective to all the racialized misrepresentation, but it shows us that thats not the only thing that was going on.
https://news.uchicago.edu/story/silent-film-black-couples-kiss-discovered-added-national-film-registry