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to research, plan and film "the centennial historical picture of
Indiana." Estimated to be a seven-reel production that would require the use of seven thousand feet of film, two reels were to be devoted to a prologue that detailed the state's early history, with the remainder of the reels to address
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The potential of movies as long term sources of revenue was unknown to early movie industry executives. Films were made quickly, sent into distribution channels and mostly forgotten soon after their first runs. Surviving prints were typically stored haphazardly, if at all.
362:. Described as "the sensation of the moving picture world" and "the most expensive, the most elaborate and most wonderful graphic moving picture film ever made," the three-reel movie portrayed "the vital events in the life and discoveries of
375:. Edendale soon became Selig Polyscope's headquarters, but in 1911 Boggs was murdered by a Japanese gardener who also wounded Selig. The company produced hundreds of short features at Edendale, including many early westerns featuring
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the period of 1816 to 1916. Company location scouts reportedly searched for three hundred sites for actors and actresses to "re-enact the scenes on the identical grounds where they occurred." Gillson
Willetts wrote the screenplay.
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from over 500 films that are otherwise lost (only about 225 of the over 3,500 films released by Selig between 1896 and 1938 have survived into the present day). This collection still requires further study.
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Selig created a zoo in east Los
Angeles to serve as a home for the company's performing animals. The Selig Zoo was founded in about 1913 and persisted for several decades under a variety of names.
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Attracted by
Southern California's mild, dry climate, varied geography for location shooting and isolation from Edison's legal representatives on the east coast, Selig set up his studio in
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Library. The
William Selig papers, together with the donation, include Selig's correspondence, scripts, scrapbooks, production files and six feet of photographs that include
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content or simply thrown away to save space. Out of Selig
Polyscope's hundreds of films, only a few copies and scattered photographic elements are known to survive.
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303:. Although Selig Polyscope produced a wide variety of moving pictures, the company was most widely known for its wild animal shorts, historical subjects and early
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Davis, Robert Murray (2005). "Shooting
Cowboys and Indians: Silent Western Films, American Culture, and the Birth of Hollywood by Andrew Brodie Smith (review)".
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438:’s circulation reportedly increased by ten percent and a dance and a cocktail were named after Williams, whose likeness was reportedly sold on more than 50,000
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Ending film production in 1918, the business, which had become known for its film production animals, became an animal and prop supplier to other studios and a
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on
December 30, 1915. After this release, the partnership between Hearst and Selig broke up. Selig continued to produce newsreels in collaboration with the
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Selig
Polyscope also made dozens of highly successful short movies involving wild animals in exotic settings, including a popular re-creation of an African
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268:'s interests. In 1909, Selig and several other studio heads settled with Edison by creating an alliance with the inventor. Effectively a
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430:. Each chapter's story was simultaneously published in the newspaper. A combination of wild animals, clever dramatic action and
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Editorial
Association in the Limelight: Newspapermen of Sioux Falls Feature Film Taken at Famous Selig Works, Chicago
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Frontier Sports Full of Thrills Clever Exhibitions by Horsemen in Varied Feats Keep Crowd of Five Thousand Excited
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366:" that were "with historic exactness." The film took three years to develop at a cost of more than $ 50,000.
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The company's early existence was fraught with legal turmoil over disputes with lawyers representing
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to a wider public (which played to full houses but was nonetheless a financial disaster for Baum).
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Between 1910 and 1913, when it released the film to audiences nationwide, Selig Polyscope filmed
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In 1947, William Selig and several other early movie producers and directors shared a special
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Hearst-Selig News Pictorial was established in 1914 by the Selig Polyscope Company and the
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213:. In 1896, with help from Union Metal Works and Andrew Schustek, he shot his first film,
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454:. Hearst-Selig News Pictorial, No. 104 was released in U.S. theaters by the
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In the late 1940s, Selig made a large donation of business records to the
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1299:." Jacksonville, Florida: Norman Studios, retrieved online July 3, 2023.
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By 1909, Selig had studios making short features in Chicago and the
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and quickly expanded, designing the studio's front entrance after
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In 1910, Selig Polyscope produced a wholly new filmed version of
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restrictions that were imposed through companies controlled by
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236:). In 1908, Selig Polyscope was involved in the production of
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Selig studio facilities and extensive backlot in Chicago, 1911
293:. The company produced the first commercial two-reel film,
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He then went on to successfully produce local actualities,
150:. The amusement park and zoo went into decline during the
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to acknowledge their role in building the film industry.
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Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
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Lincoln Heights page with pictures of recovered statues
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Tracked by Bloodhounds; or, A Lynching at Cripple Creek
434:' screen presence resulted in significant success. The
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In 1913, through a collaborative partnership with the
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Col. William N. Selig: The Man Who Invented Hollywood
1345:, December 26, 1915, p. 50 (subscription required).
394:. In 1914, Selig made fourteen short experimental "
1525:Film production companies established in the 1890s
1396:, November 7, 1915, p. 33 (subscription required).
1244:, December 15, 1910, p. 6 (subscription required).
462:while Hearst made use of Vitagraph to produce the
352:Street view of Selig's studio in Edendale, c. 1910
1261:, February 3, 1913, p. 8 (subscription required).
486:to form a film distribution partnership known as
280:(in 1913 and 1915) ruled the firm was an illegal
276:dominated the industry for a few years until the
135:'s first permanent movie studio, in the historic
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1272:"Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List"
1073:, August 17, 1912, p. 6 (subscription required).
1227:, March 31, 1916, p. 7 (subscription required).
1210:, March 10, 1910, p. 4 (subscription required).
1520:Film production companies of the United States
1515:Defunct companies based in Greater Los Angeles
1193:, June 14, 1910, p. 5 (subscription required).
474:In 1915, Selig entered into an agreement with
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1310:"Hearst-Selig News Pictorial, No. 104 (1915)"
1090:, July 9, 1913, p. 2 (subscription required).
1221:Historical Films Approved and Work Has Begun
1505:Entertainment companies based in California
1480:Mass media companies disestablished in 1918
1470:Entertainment companies established in 1896
1354:
1126:"The 20th Academy Awards Memorable Moments"
581:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
519:Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
426:plot device which came to be known as the
310:In 1916, Selig Polyscope was hired by the
242:, a touring "multimedia" attempt to bring
25:
1358:The Movies in the Age of Innocence, 3d ed
601:Learn how and when to remove this message
261:'s first movie was a Selig comedy short.
177:(1908), based on L. Frank Baum's Oz books
1475:Mass media companies established in 1896
1412:. University of Texas Press. p. 2.
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1355:Wagenknecht, Edward (13 October 2014).
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1255:Coming of Columbus in Motion Pictures
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337:, who began the facility in a rented
1297:A...is for The Adventures of Kathlyn
579:adding citations to reliable sources
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189:William Selig initially worked as a
107:company that was founded in 1896 by
1500:Film studios in Southern California
131:. Selig Polyscope also established
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1187:Gary Scene of Realism Galore Today
808:The Hold-Up of the Leadville Stage
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899:(1911) (partial section survives)
538:1914 Selig-Polyscope trade ad in
173:Surviving hand-tinted still from
146:and amusement park attraction in
720:Fun at the Glenwood Springs Pool
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255:Edendale district of Los Angeles
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1206:." Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania:
464:Hearst-Vitagraph News Pictorial
16:American motion picture company
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1238:How the Picture Films Are Made
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1069:." Sioux Falls, South Dakota:
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840:The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays
369:An early production there was
274:Motion Picture Patents Company
239:The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays
197:operator on the west coast in
175:The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays
1:
1490:Defunct American film studios
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960:The Sheriff of Yavapai County
728:A Hot Time on a Bathing Beach
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312:Indiana Historical Commission
944:Arabia, the Equine Detective
493:
201:. Later on, while living in
7:
1153:Western American Literature
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992:House of a Thousand Candles
968:Wamba A Child of the Jungle
688:Something Good – Negro Kiss
480:Lubin Manufacturing Company
446:Hearst-Selig News Pictorial
318:
10:
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1450:The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
1259:Montpelier Morning Journal
864:The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
856:Hunting Big Game in Africa
768:Trip Around The Union Loop
752:Chicago Firecats on Parade
497:
322:
290:The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
164:
1406:Erish, Andrew A. (2012).
1378:– via Google Books.
1024:The City of Purple Dreams
936:The Adventures of Kathlyn
824:The Count of Monte Cristo
662:Wamba Child of The Jungle
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422:, introducing a dramatic
419:The Adventures of Kathlyn
379:(which were also shot at
372:The Count of Monte Cristo
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1394:Fort Worth Star-Telegram
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952:The Devil and Tom Walker
650:The Devil and Tom Walker
1295:Lupack, Barbara Tepa. "
1240:." Red Lodge, Montana:
129:Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle
101:Selig Polyscope Company
20:Selig Polyscope Company
1392:." Fort Worth, Texas:
1390:In the Photoplay World
1341:). Chicago, Illinois:
1101:"Lincolnheightsla.com"
1071:The Daily Argus-Leader
904:The Coming of Columbus
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398:" with Scottish actor
359:The Coming of Columbus
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333:in 1909 with director
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159:Academy Honorary Award
1242:The Republican Picket
1189:." Munster, Indiana:
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880:The Way of the Eskimo
696:Chicago Police Parade
672:The Tramp and the Dog
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488:V-L-S-E, Incorporated
470:V-L-S-E, Incorporated
381:Las Vegas, New Mexico
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325:Edendale, Los Angeles
323:Further information:
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1204:Latest Selig Western
1105:lincolnheightsla.com
1088:Weekly Journal-Miner
1032:Little Orphant Annie
776:View of State Street
575:improve this section
456:General Film Company
364:Christopher Columbus
232:(a major client was
1485:Silent film studios
1343:The Chicago Tribune
1339:The Chicago Tribune
1223:." Brook, Indiana:
1016:The Garden of Allah
920:Kings of the Forest
712:Gans-McGovern Fight
626:Partial filmography
343:Mission San Gabriel
133:Southern California
21:
1225:The Brook Reporter
1047:Universal City Zoo
1000:The Man from Texas
912:Brotherhood of Man
896:Life on the Border
888:Lost in the Arctic
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637:Lost in the Arctic
616:Nitrate film stock
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452:Hearst Corporation
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1276:www.silentera.com
1208:Mount Carmel Item
979:(1914) (survives)
875:(1910) (survives)
867:(1910) (survives)
832:Damon and Pythias
787:(1904) (survives)
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476:Vitagraph Studios
416:, Selig produced
406:The "cliffhanger"
296:Damon and Pythias
215:Tramp and the Dog
137:Edendale district
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301:World War I
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67:Los Angeles
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541:Motography
530:Lost films
199:California
1335:Somewhere
1191:The Times
1173:165425332
562:does not
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1041:See also
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191:magician
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