Seeing Sarah Bernhardt

£19.95

Seeing Sarah Bernhardt

Performance and Silent Film

Performing arts Film history, theory or criticism Gender studies: women and girls

Author: Victoria Duckett

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Collection: Women’s Media History Now!

Language: English

Published by: University of Illinois Press

Published on: 15th October 2015

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 7 Mb

ISBN: 9780252097751


Sarah Bernhardt and the Rise of Cinema

The most famous stage actress of the nineteenth century, Sarah Bernhardt enjoyed a surprising renaissance when the 1912 multi-reel film Queen Elizabeth vaulted her to international acclaim. The triumph capped her already lengthy involvement with cinema while enabling the indefatigable actress to reinvent herself in an era of technological and generational change.

Challenging Perceptions

Placing Bernhardt at the center of the industry''s first two decades, Victoria Duckett challenges the perception of her as an anachronism unable to appreciate film''s qualities. Instead, cinema''s substitution of translated title cards for her melodic French deciphered Bernhardt for Anglo-American audiences. It also allowed the aging actress to appear in the kinds of longer dramas she could no longer physically sustain onstage.

Her Influence on Film and Art

As Duckett shows, Bernhardt contributed far more than star quality. Her theatrical practice on film influenced how the young medium changed the visual and performing arts. Her promoting of experimentation, meanwhile, shaped the ways audiences looked at and understood early cinema.

A Reappraisal of an Icon

A leading-edge reappraisal of a watershed era, Seeing Sarah Bernhardt tells the story of an icon who bridged two centuries--and changed the very act of watching film.

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