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Peter Domankiewicz

William Friese-Greene
Historian fights to establish William Friese-Greene as true father of cinema
William Friese-Greene
On the centenary of his death, admirers hope to win recognition for the Bristol photographer’s motion picture camera

It’s a strange fact, but British inventor William Friese-Greene is as well-known among serious film buffs for not having invented cinema as he is for inventing it. Now, on the centenary of his sudden death at 65, mid-flow at a meeting of film distributors, admirers of this controversial pioneer from Bristol are at the centre of a new drive to establish his international legacy once again.

Film director and historian Peter Domankiewicz believes Friese-Greene will soon be reinstated as one of the great figures in the development of the moving image: the one who got there before Thomas Edison, the Lumière brothers and George Méliès, the Frenchman whose story was told by Martin Scorsese in the hit 2011 film Hugo.
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 5/2/2021
  • by Vanessa Thorpe
  • The Guardian - Film News
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