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Charles Urban

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anglo-American film producer and distributor
Charles Urban
Urban in 1914
Born
Carl Urban

April 15, 1867
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
DiedAugust 29, 1942 (aged 75)
Brighton, England
Spouse

Charles Urban (April 15, 1867 – August 29, 1942) was aGerman-American film producer and distributor, and one of the most significant figures inBritish cinema before theFirst World War. He was a pioneer of thedocumentary, educational,propaganda and scientific film, as well as being the producer of the world's first successful motion picturecolour system.

Silent nature documentaryThe Four Seasons (1921) by Charles Urban andRaymond Lee Ditmars, showing the cyclic changes in living nature through the four seasons with lyrical intertitles. Duration: 01:18:14. Intertitles in Dutch.

Early life

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Urban was born Carl Urban inCincinnati,Ohio, the second child (of ten) of Joseph Urban, originally fromRonsberg,Bavaria, and Anna Sophie (née Glatz), fromKönigsberg,East Prussia. He lost the sight in his left eye aged twelve after a baseball accident. He changed his names to Charles after leaving school in 1882, then worked as a book agent across Ohio, before managing a stationery store inDetroit, Michigan. His first marriage was to Julia Lamereux Avery in 1888 (the marriage ended in divorce in 1908).[1]

Career

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Urban first entered the film industry in 1895 when he exhibited theKinetoscope inDetroit, Michigan early in 1895. He moved to Britain in August 1897, and became managing director of theWarwick Trading Company, where he specialised in actuality film, including newsfilm of theAnglo-Boer War. In July 1903 he formed his own company, theCharles Urban Trading Company, moving toLondon'sWardour Street in 1908, the first film business to be located in what became the home of theBritish film industry. The building, at 89–91 Wardour Street, still bears the name Urbanora House.[2][3]

In August 1903, he launched his 'Unseen World' film show at theAlhambra Theatre in London, featuring microcinematographic films taken byF. Martin Duncan. Scientific films had never before been presented as entertainment to a variety theatre audience, but the show was a considerable success, in particular the filmCheese Mites[4] which featurescheese mites crawling around on a piece ofStilton.[5] 'The Unseen World' went on to run for an unbroken nine months at the Alhambra and confirmed Urban's belief in the entertainment value of scientific and educational films.

Urban made many kinds ofnon-fiction film at the Charles Urban Trading Company, including travel films, war reportage, exploration films, sports films, advertising films and natural history films. Filmmakers who worked for him include Jack Avery,Joseph Rosenthal, Charles Rider Noble, Harold Mease Lomas, the mountaineer Frank Ormiston-Smith, George Rogers, J. Gregory Mantle and the naturalistF. Percy Smith. Smith made one of Urban's most successful films,The Balancing Bluebottle (1908), which featured a fly balancing objects such as a wine cork with its legs.

In 1904, Urban made a 2,500-feetdocumentary film calledLiving London. The film shows Londoners going about their business on a typical day.[6] He also made fiction films, of which the most notable examples are the proto-science fiction films ofWalter R. Booth such asThe Airship Destroyer (1909) andThe Aerial Submarine (1910).

'Urban Science Series' trademark, from a 1911 Kineto Ltd flyer

Among his other business interests was a French production company in Paris called Éclipse, which Urban founded in 1906, mainly to supply fiction films. His connection with that company lasted until 1909. He also established Kineto Limited in 1907, primarily for the production of scientific and non-fiction films.

Kinemacolor

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In 1906, his associateGeorge Albert Smith (1864–1959) developed a two-colour (red-green) additivemotion picture system, which was demonstrated several times in 1908. It was first shown to the public in 1909 and known asKinemacolor. This enjoyed great success worldwide until 1914. It was commercially exploited by Urban'sNatural Color Kinematograph Company. Urban's future second wife,Ada Aline Jones (they married in 1910), purchased the patent rights from Smith and became a director of the company. The most celebrated Kinemacolor film was a2+12-hour epicWith Our King and Queen Through India (1912), also known asThe Durbar in Delhi, depicting the December 1911Delhi Durbar which celebrated thecoronation ofGeorge V. Kinemacolor companies were formed in France, the US, Germany, Switzerland, Brazil, Holland (with Belgium and Luxembourg), Italy, Canada and Japan.

Of these the most prominent was theKinemacolor Company of America, whose most notorious production was the unreleasedThe Clansman, a colour version of theThomas Dixon story later filmed byD.W. Griffith asThe Birth of a Nation. Urban had nothing to do with this film or with the Kinemacolor Company of America once he had sold the American rights to the process to the Kinemacolor Company of America. Urban's British company produced Kinemacolor fiction films, with studios in Hove and Nice, includingBy Order of Napoleon (1910), thewesternFate (1911),Santa Claus (1912) and the feature-lengthThe World, the Flesh and the Devil (1914).

Urban's Kinemacolor business came to an end in 1914 after a court case was brought byWilliam Friese-Greene, producer of a rival colour system, Biocolour, who challenged the validity of the Kinemacolor patent. Though Urban won the initial hearing, the verdict was overturned on appeal.Lord Justice Buckley wrote:

The patent is I think invalid because it does not achieve the result which the patentee says it will achieve. The matter may be summarised thus: The patentee says his process will reproduce the natural colours or approximately so. Blue is a colour. He says: Drop the tri-colour blue; do not employ the blue end of the spectrum – blue or approximately blue will still be reproduced. It will not. The patent is consequently invalid.

Although Kinemacolor could still be operated, it was no longer an exclusive and lost much of its commercial value. Urban made his last Kinemacolor film in 1915, and the last film to feature Kinemacolor was probablySaiyûki zokuhen, made in Japan in 1917. Along with his associate Henry W. Joy, Urban continued his research in colour cinematography and developed an improved version of Kinemacolor, called Kinekrom, shown to the public in November 1916 in New York. The process was created because Urban wanted to continue showing his huge library of old Kinemacolor films. However, public interest for Kinemacolor had faded and there were few screenings.[7]

World War I

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DuringWorld War I, Urban worked for the covert organisationWellington House and other British propaganda outfits. He produced the documentary featureBritain Prepared (1915) for Wellington House, which included Kinemacolor sequences of the British fleet atScapa Flow. Urban was recruited to promote this film and other British propaganda productions in America, although he faced considerable resistance from US exhibitors who were resistant to any form of war propaganda. He worked with the Patriotic Film Corporation, formed by William Robinson to support distribution of what had been retitledHow Britain Prepared, but he ran into trouble with the British propagandists when he tried to do a deal withWilliam Randolph Hearst'sInternational News Service, which the British viewed as pro-German and anti-British.[8]

Another company, Official Government Pictures, achieved better distribution by use of more sensationalist advertising, but Urban's task became much easier once America entered the war in April 1917. He edited the classic documentaryThe Battle of the Somme (1916), making the crucial decision to release the footage in feature-length form rather than as a series of short releases. Urban continued to edit and promote British documentary films in America to the end of the war, editing the governmentnewsreelOfficial War Review. He formed a new business, theKineto Company of America, in 1917.[8]

Later life

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Urban remained in the United States post-war to re-establish himself as a producer ofeducational films through his umbrella company,Urban Motion Picture Industries Inc. He produced the cinemagazine seriesCharles Urban Movie Chats (started 1919) andKineto Review (started 1921), and made the documentary featuresThe Four Seasons (1921) andEvolution (1923). He built a large studio atIrvington, New York, where he planned to introduce a new color film system called Kinekrom, based on the earlier Kinemacolor, and to distribute educational films on disc using the Spirograph. However, his business interests collapsed in 1924 and he returned to the UK in the late 1920s.[9] He died inBrighton in 1942, at age 75, in relative obscurity.

References

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  1. ^McKernan, Luke (ed.),A Yank in Britain: The Lost Memoirs of Charles Urban, Film Pioneer (Hastings: The Projection Box, 1999), pp. 86, 91)
  2. ^"Ops! | Flickr".www.flickr.com. Archived fromthe original on 6 April 2019. Retrieved22 May 2022.
  3. ^"Mr Charles Urban". 11 June 2016.
  4. ^"The Cheese Mites – Internet Movie Database".IMDb. Retrieved2008-08-22.
  5. ^Stephanie Pain (28 May 2008)."New Scientist – Microscopic stars of the silver screen".New Scientist Print Edition. Retrieved2008-08-22.
  6. ^"Sky News – Rare 104 year old film footage discovered in Australian National Archives". Archived fromthe original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved2008-08-23.
  7. ^McKernan, Luke (2018).Charles Urban: Pioneering the Non-Fiction Film in Britain and America, 1897-1925. University of Exeter Press.ISBN 978-0859892964.
  8. ^abLuke McKernan, 'Propaganda, Patriotism and Profit: Charles Urban and British official war films in America during the First World War’, Film History vol. 14 nos. 3–4, 2002
  9. ^McKernan, Luke (2013).Charles Urban: Pioneering the Non-Fiction Film in Britain and America, 1897–1925. Exeter: University of Exeter Press. pp. 125–165.ISBN 978-0-85989-882-9.

Further reading

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Luke McKernan,Charles Urban: Pioneering the Non-Fiction Film in Britain and America, 1897-1925 (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2013),ISBN 978-0-85989-882-9

Luke McKernan (ed.),A Yank in Britain: The Lost Memoirs of Charles Urban, Film Pioneer (Hastings: The Projection Box, 1999)

External links

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