MovieMaker The Art and Business of Making Movies » Login | Register  

July 6, 2008

ABOUT | CONTACT | NEWSLETTER | Search

Blog

Email
Print

This Day in Indie History: Lincoln Motion Picture Company

lincoln-motion.gifNoble Johnson, an established actor of the silent era, and his brother, George, founded the Lincoln Motion Picture Company on this day in 1915. As the first studio owned and operated by African Americans, the company’s purpose, as Noble put it, was to present the African American “in his everyday life, a human being with human inclination and one of talent and intellect.” Having only a handful of employees and only finding booking opportunities in churches, schools and “Colored Only” theaters, Lincoln Motion Pictures failed to achieve any level of notoriety. Though the studio heroically struggled, it would close after five years, being credited with only six films. By Right of Birth was the studio’s last effort and the only one to accept white investors. The release proved unprofitable and ultimately the death blow to the venture. Still, these films served as a necessary response to disturbingly racist films like D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915) and an example for African American moviemakers throughout cinema.

Factoid: George Johnson hired 10 of the prettiest girls he could find to sell tickets to the two-day premiere of By Right of Birth and succeeded in selling out the event. Unfortunately, this marketing strategy did not have the legs to capture the public’s interest.

SHARE THIS STORY

Del.icio.us this itemDel.icio.us

Reddit this itemReddit

Yahoo this item Yahoo

TAGS

COMMENTS | POST A COMMENT

POST A COMMENT

OUR PRIVACY POLICY | We will not publish or sell or share your email address or other personal information. Read more.

Name:  
Email:  
URL:  

Type the word you see below:

Comment:

SITE DELIVERY OPTIONS