James Stuart Blackton (January 5, 1875 – August 13, 1941) was a British-American film producer and director of the silent era. One of the pioneers of motion pictures, he founded Vitagraph Studios in 1897. He was one of the first filmmakers to use the techniques of stop-motion and drawn animation, is considered a father of American animation, and was the first to bring many classic plays and books to the screen. Blackton was also the commodore of the Motorboat Club of America In 1896, Thomas Edison publicly demonstrated the Vitascope, one of the first film projectors, and Blackton was sent to interview Edison and provide drawings of how his films were made. Eager for good publicity, Edison took Blackton to his Black Maria, the special cabin he used to do his filming, and created a film on the spot of Blackton doing a lightning portrait of Edison. The inventor did such a good job selling the art of moviemaking that he talked Blackton and partner Smith into buying a print of the new film, as well as prints of nine other films, plus a Vitascope to show them to paying audiences.

thumb|left|Vitagraph Studios founders William T. Rock, [[Albert E. Smith (producer)|Albert E. Smith and J. Stuart Blackton (1916)]]

The new act was a great success, despite the various things Blackton and Smith were doing between the Edison films. The next step was to start making films of their own. In this way the American Vitagraph Company was born.]]

Stuart Blackton believed that the US should join the Allies involved in World War I overseas and in 1915 produced The Battle Cry of Peace. Former President Theodore Roosevelt was one of the film's staunchest supporters and convinced Gen. Leonard Wood to loan Blackton an entire regiment of marines to use as extras. Upon its release, the film generated a controversy rivaling that of The Birth of a Nation because it was considered as militaristic propaganda.

Blackton left Vitagraph to go independent in 1917, but returned in 1923 as junior partner to Albert Smith. In 1925, Smith sold the company to Warner Brothers for more than $1 million. He spent his last years on the road, showing his old films and lecturing about the days of silent movies. His daughter Violet Virginia Blackton (1910–1965) married writer Cornell Woolrich in 1930 but their marriage was annulled in 1933.

He married actress Evangeline Russell in 1936.

Blackton died August 13, 1941, a few days after he suffered a fractured skull At the time of his death he was working for Hal Roach on experiments to improve color process backgrounds. Blackton was cremated and interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.

Select filmography

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! class="unsortable" | Notes

|-

| 1898

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1898

| Tearing Down the Spanish Flag

| Short film

|-

| 1898

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1900

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1902

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1905

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1906

| Humorous Phases of Funny Faces

| Short film

|-

| 1906

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1907

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1907

| '

| Short film

|-

|1907

| Lightning Sketches

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| Macbeth

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| Romeo and Juliet

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| Antony and Cleopatra

| Short film

|-

| 1908

| Julius Caesar

| Short film

|-

| 1909

| The Bride of Lammermoor

| Short film

|-

| 1909

| Oliver Twist

| Short film

|-

| 1909

| Princess Nicotine; or, The Smoke Fairy

| Short film

|-

| 1909

| Les Misérables

|

|-

| 1909

| Napoleon, the Man of Destiny

|

|-

| 1909

| '

| Short film

|-

| 1909

| '

|

|-

|1910

|Francesca da Rimini (remake from 1908)

|

|-

|1910

|Uncle Tom's Cabin

|

|-

|1910

|The Last of the Saxons

|

|-

| 1911

| Ivanhoe

|

|-

| 1911

|Lady Godiva

|Short film

|-

| 1911

| '

|

|-

| 1912

| Richard III

|

|-

| 1915

| Crooky

|

|-

| 1916

|Whom the Gods Destroy

|

|-

| 1917

| '

|

|-

|1917

| Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation

|

|-

| 1917

| '

|

|-

| 1918

| Life's Greatest Problem

|

|-

| 1922

| '

|

|}

Archives

Blackton's film The Film Parade was restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive in 2009.

References

Further reading

  • J. Stuart Blackton at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films, American Film Institute