Louis Le Prince
Louis Le Prince | |
---|---|
Louis Le Prince, inventor of motion picture film | |
Born |
Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince 28 August 1841 Metz, France |
Disappeared |
16 September 1890 (aged 49) Dijon, France |
Occupation | Chemist, engineer, inventor, filmmaker |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Le Prince-Whitley (m. 1869–90) |
Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince (28 August 1841 – vanished 16 September 1890) was an inventor who shot the first moving pictures on paper film using a single lens camera.[1][2] He has been heralded as the "Father of Cinematography" since 1930.[3]
A Frenchman who also worked in the United Kingdom and the United States, Le Prince conducted his ground-breaking work in 1888 in the city of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England.
In October 1888, Le Prince filmed moving picture sequences Roundhay Garden Scene and a Leeds Bridge street scene using his single-lens camera and Eastman's paper film.[4] These were several years before the work of competing inventors such as Auguste and Louis Lumière and Thomas Edison.
He was never able to perform a planned public demonstration in the United States because he mysteriously vanished from a train on 16 September 1890.[1] His body and luggage were never found, but, over a century later, a police archive was found to contain a photograph of a drowned man who could have been him.[4] Not long after this, Thomas Edison tried to take credit for the invention.But Le Prince’s widow and son, Adolphe, were keen to advance his cause as the inventor of cinematography. In 1898 Adolphe appeared as a witness for the defence in a court case brought by Edison against the American Mutoscope Company, claiming that Edison was the first and sole inventor of cinematography (and thus entitled to royalties for the use of the process). He was not allowed to present the two cameras as evidence (and so establish Le Prince’s prior claim as inventor) and eventually the court ruled in favour of Edison; a year later that ruling was overturned.[5]
Forgotten inventor of motion pictures
The early history of motion pictures in the United States and Europe is marked by battles over patents of cameras. In 1888 Le Prince was granted an American dual-patent on a 16-lens device that combined a motion picture camera with a projector. A patent for a single-lens type (MkI) was refused in America because of an interfering patent, yet a few years later the same patent was not opposed when the American Thomas Edison applied for one.
On October 14, 1888, Le Prince used an updated version (MkII) of his single-lens camera to film Roundhay Garden Scene. He exhibited his first films in the Whitley factory in Hunslet, Leeds and in Oakwood Grange, the Whitley home in Roundhay, Leeds, but they were not distributed to the general public.
The following year, he took French-American dual citizenship in order to establish himself with his family in New York City and to follow up his research. However, he was never able to perform his planned public exhibition at Jumel Mansion, New York, in September 1890, due to his mysterious disappearance. Consequently, Le Prince's contribution to the birth of the cinema has often been overlooked.
Life
“ | "In conclusion, I would say that Mr. Le Prince was in many ways a very extraordinary man, apart from his inventive genius, which was undoubtedly great. He stood 6ft. 3in. or 4in. (190cm) in his stockings, well built in proportion, and he was most gentle and considerate and, though an inventor, of an extremely placid disposition which nothing appeared to ruffle."Declaration of Frederic Mason (wood-worker and assistant of Le Prince, April 21, 1931, American consulate of Bradford, England) | ” |
Childhood and school
Le Prince was born on Saint-Georges street in Metz, France, on 28 August 1841.[1][6][7] His father was a major of artillery in the French Army[8] and an officer of the Légion d'honneur. He grew up spending time in the studio of his father's friend, the photography pioneer Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre,[8] from whom the young Le Prince received lessons relating to photography and chemistry[citation needed] and for whom he was the subject of a Daguerrotype,[citation needed] an early type of photograph. His education went on to include the study of painting in Paris and post-graduate chemistry at Leipzig University,[8] which provided him with the academic knowledge he was to utilise in the future.
Adulthood
He moved to Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK in 1866, after being invited to join John Whitley,[1] a friend from college, in Whitley Partners of Hunslet,[9] a firm of brass founders making valves and components. In 1869 he married Elizabeth Whitley, John's sister[1] and a talented artist. The couple started a school of applied art, the Leeds Technical School of Art, in 1871, and became well renowned for their work in fixing colour photography on to metal and pottery, leading to them being commissioned for portraits of Queen Victoria and the long-serving Prime Minister William Gladstone produced in this way, that were included alongside other mementos of the time in a time capsule – manufactured by Whitley Partners of Hunslet – which was placed in the foundations of Cleopatra's Needle on the embankment of the River Thames.[citation needed]
In 1881 Le Prince went to the United States[8] as an agent for Whitley Partners, staying in the country along with his family once his contract had ended.[citation needed] He became the manager for a small group of French artists who produced large panoramas, usually of famous battles, that were exhibited in New York City, Washington DC and Chicago.[8][9] During this time he continued the experiments he had begun, relating to the production of 'moving' photographs and to find the best material for film stock.
During his time in the USA, Le Prince built a camera that utilised sixteen lenses[9] and was his first invention to be patented. Although the camera was capable of 'capturing' motion, it wasn't a complete success because each lens photographed the subject from a slightly different viewpoint and thus the projected image jumped about.
After his return to Leeds in May 1887,[9] Le Prince built and then patented, a single-lens camera. It was first used[citation needed] on 14 October 1888 to shoot what would become known as Roundhay Garden Scene, presumably the world's first motion picture. Le Prince later used it to shoot trams and the horse-drawn and pedestrian traffic on Leeds Bridge (the movie was shot from Hicks the Ironmongers, now the British Waterways building, a building on the south east side of the bridge,[1] a blue plaque marks the spot). These pictures were soon projected on a screen in Leeds, making it the first motion picture exhibition.
Suspicious disappearance
In September 1890, Le Prince was preparing to go back to the UK to patent his new camera, to be followed by a trip to the US to promote it. Before his journey, he decided to return home and visit friends and family. Having done so, he left Bourges on 13 September to visit his brother in Dijon. He would then take the 16 September train to Paris, but when the train arrived, his friends discovered that Le Prince was not on board.[10] He was never seen again by his family or friends.[1] No luggage or corpse was found in the Dijon-Paris express, nor along the railway. No one saw Le Prince at the Dijon station, except his brother. No one saw Le Prince in the Dijon–Paris express after he was seen boarding it. No one noticed any strange behaviour or aggression in the Dijon-Paris express.[10]
The French police, Scotland Yard and the family undertook exhaustive searches but never found his body or luggage. This mysterious disappearance case was never solved. Four main theories have been proposed:
- Perfect suicide:
- The grandson of Le Prince's brother's told film historian Georges Potonniée that Le Prince wanted to commit suicide because he was on the verge of bankruptcy. He had already arranged his suicide and he managed for his own body and belongings never to be found. However, Potonniée noted that Le Prince's business was profitable and that he was proud of his inventions, and thus had no reason to commit suicide.[11]
- Patent Wars assassination, "Equity 6928":
- Christopher Rawlence pursues the assassination theory, along with other theories, and discusses the Le Prince family's suspicions of Edison over patents (the Equity 6928) in his 1990 book and documentary The Missing Reel. At the time that he vanished, Le Prince was about to patent his 1889 projector in the UK and then leave Europe for his scheduled New York official exhibition. His widow assumed foul play though no concrete evidence has ever emerged and Rawlence prefers the suicide theory. In 1898, Le Prince's elder son Adolphe, who had assisted his father in many of his experiments, was called as a witness for the American Mutoscope Company in their litigation with Edison [Equity 6928]. By citing Le Prince's achievements, Mutuscope hoped to annul Edison's subsequent claims to have invented the moving-picture camera. Le Prince's widow Lizzie and Adolphe hoped that this would gain recognition for Le Prince's achievement, but when the case went against Mutoscope their hopes were dashed. Two years later Adolphe Le Prince was found dead while out duck shooting on Fire Island near New York.[12]
- Disappearance ordered by the family:
- In 1966, Jacques Deslandes proposed a theory in Histoire comparée du cinéma, claiming that Le Prince voluntarily disappeared due to financial reasons (already shown to be false) and "familial conveniences". Journalist Léo Sauvage backed up that assertion, quoting a note shown to him by Pierre Gras, director of the Dijon municipal library, in 1977, that claimed Le Prince died in Chicago in 1898, having moved there at the family's request because he was homosexual. There is no evidence to suggest that Le Prince was gay, however.[13]
- Fratricide, murder for money:
- In 1967, Jean Mitry proposed, in Histoire du cinéma, that Le Prince was killed. Mitry notes that if Le Prince truly wanted to disappear, he could have done so at any time prior to that. Thus, most likely he never even boarded the train in Dijon. He also questions that if the brother, who was confirmed to be the last person to see Le Prince alive, knew Le Prince was suicidal, why didn't he try to stop him, and why didn't he report this to the police before it was too late?[14]
Le Prince was officially declared dead in 1897.[15] A photograph of a drowning victim from 1890 resembling Le Prince was discovered in 2003 during research in the Paris police archives.[8]
Career
Decisive meetings
- Louis Daguerre
- Eadweard Muybridge
- Jean Le Roy
Late recognition
Le Prince is considered by many film historians[16] as the true father of motion pictures.[17]
“ | "Le Prince had indeed succeeded making pictures move at least seven years before the Lumière brothers and Thomas Edison, and so suggests a re-writing of the history of early cinema." Richard Howells (Screen vol.47 #2, p.179~200, Oxford University Press, 2006) | ” |
Even though Le Prince's solo achievement is unchallenged, except for advocates of William Friese-Greene, his work was long forgotten; he disappeared on the eve of the first public demonstration of the result of years of toil in his Leeds workshop and tests conducted at the New York Institute for the Deaf. Despite his pursuit of trademarks over in the United States, the dominance and influence of his rival Thomas Edison, founder of the oligopolistic Edison Trust, became unstoppable.
For the April 1894 commercial exploitation of his personal kinetoscope Parlor, Thomas Edison is credited in the USA as the inventor of cinema, while in France, the Lumière Brothers are hailed as inventors of the Cinématographe device and for the first commercial exploitation of motion picture films, in Paris in 1895. Like Le Prince, another untold proto-cinema figure is the French inventor, Léon Bouly, who created the first "Cinématographe" device and patented it in 1892 (Patent N°219,350). He was never credited, as two years later his patent, which he had left unpaid, was bought by the Lumière Brothers (Patent N°245,032).
However, in Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the UK, Le Prince is celebrated as a local hero. On 12 December 1930, the Lord Mayor of Leeds unveiled a bronze memorial tablet at 160 Woodhouse Lane (then Auto Express Engineering Company), Le Prince's workshop. In 2003, the University's Centre for Cinema, Photography and Television was named in his honour. Le Prince's workshop in Woodhouse Lane was until recently the site of the BBC in Leeds. The former Blenheim Baptist chapel, at the junction of Woodhouse Lane and Blackman Lane, is next to the site. (coordinates: 53°48′20.58″N 1°32′56.74″W / 53.8057167°N 1.5490944°W). His historic moving pictures are shown in the cinema of the Armley Mills Industrial Museum, Leeds.
In France, an appreciation society was created as L'Association des Amis de Le Prince (Association of Le Prince's Friends) which still exists in Lyon.
In 1990, Christopher Rawlence wrote The Missing Reel, The Untold Story of the Lost inventor of Moving Pictures and produced the TV programme The Missing Reel (1989) for Channel Four, a dramatised feature on the life of Le Prince.
In 1992, the Japanese filmmaker Mamoru Oshii (Ghost in the Shell) directed Talking Head, an avant-garde feature film paying tribute to the cinematography history's tragic ending figures such as George Eastman, Georges Méliès and Louis Le Prince who is credited as "the true inventor of eiga", Japanese for "motion picture film".
In 2013, a feature documentary, The First Film, on the life and inventions of Le Prince is being produced, with new research material and documentation on the life of Le Prince and his patents.[citation needed]
LePrince Cine Camera-Projector types
Model | Specs | Design | Manufacture | Patents |
---|---|---|---|---|
LPCC Type-16 | Patent: "Method of, and apparatus for, producing animated pictures." Designation: LePrince 16-lens camera, designated by him as "receiver" Framerate: 16 frame/s Film: Eastman Kodak paper film 1885 | 1886, New York | Made in Paris, 1887 | US Patent No.376,247/217,809 Issued Washington 2 November 1886 Accepted 10 January 1888 |
LPCCP Type-1 MkI | Patent: "Method and Apparatus for the projection of Animated Pictures in view of the adaptation to Operatic Scenes" Designation: LePrince single-lens camera MkI, designated by him as "receiver" Framerate: 10~12 frame/s | 1886, New York | Made in Leeds, 1887 | UK Patents No.423/425 Issued Washington 2 November 1886 Rejected 10 January 1888 Issued London 10 January 1888 Accepted 16 November 1888 Issued Paris 11 January 1888 Accepted June, 1890 |
LPCCP Type-1 MkII | Patent: "Method and Apparatus for the projection of Animated Pictures in view of the adaptation to Operatic Scenes" Designation: LePrince single-lens camera MkII, designated by him as "receiver" Framerate: 20 frame/s (adjustable) Lenses: Viewfinder (upper) & Photograph (lower) Film: sensitised paper film & gelatin stripping film (2 1⁄2 in (64 mm) Focus: lever (backward/forward) | 1888 | *Frederic Mason (chassis) *James W. Langley (metal parts) Made in Leeds, 1888 | FR Patent No.188,089 Issued London 10 January 1888 Accepted 16 November 1888 Issued Paris 11 January 1888 Accepted June, 1890 |
LPP Type-3 | 3-lens projector, designated by him as "deliverer" |
Le Prince's legacy
Remaining material & production
Le Prince developed his single-lens type camera in a workshop at 160 Woodhouse Lane, Leeds. An updated version of this model was used to direct his motion-picture films. Remaining surviving production consists of a scene in the garden at Oakwood Grange (his wife's family home, in Roundhay), another at Leeds Bridge and an Accordion Player.
These world's first motion picture films do not exist anymore, as Le Prince's body and effects disappeared two years later, but parts of the original paper film strips remaining in the camera (Mark II) were found[citation needed] and exploited later.
Half a century later, Le Prince's daughter, Marie, gave the remaining apparatus to the National Science Museum, London (it's now in the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television (NMPFT), Bradford, which opened in 1983 and in 2006 was renamed the National Media Museum). In May 1931, photographic plates were produced by workers of the Science Museum from paper print copies provided by Marie Le Prince.[2] In 1999, the copies were restored, remastered and re-animated to produce a digital version which was uploaded on to the NMPFT website as public resources ("Roundhay" & "Leeds"). These versions are running at the modern cinématographe 24 frames per second (frame/s) rate (Roundhay Garden at 24.64 frame/s and Leeds Bridge at 23.50frame/s), but Le Prince used the frame-rate adjust device built into his apparatus to test various speeds. According to Adolphe Le Prince, who assisted his father at Leeds, Roundhay Garden is believed to have been shot at 12 frame/s and Leeds Bridge at 20 frame/s.[18]
Since the NMPFT release, various names are used to designate the untitled films, such as "Leeds Bridge" or "Roundhay Garden Scene". Actually, all current online versions (e. g., GIF, FLV, SWF, OGG, WMV, etc.) are derived from the NMPFT files, and these tentative titles are not canon to Le Prince whose mother tongue was French. However, "Leeds Bridge" is believed to be the original title, as the traffic sequence was referred as such by Frederick Mason, one of Le Prince's mechanics.
Man Walking Around A Corner (LPCC Type-16)
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Unremastered film, original frames copy (14 frames) by National Science Museum, London circa 1931. (Courtesy NMPFT, Bradford) NMPFT.Filmed in Paris bef.18.08.1887.
The last remaining production of Le Prince's 16-lens camera is a frame sequence of a man walking around a corner. It is believed to have been shot with the 16-lens type but this is unsure as it appears as if it has been made with a single glass plate, not an Eastman American film. Pfend Jacques, a French cinema-historian and Leprince specialist, confirms that those images where shot in Paris,at the Corner of Rue Bochard de Saron (where Leprince was living) and corner with avenue Trudaine because Leprince who was in Leeds at that time, sent the images to his wife in New-York City in a letter dated from 18 August 1887. It's a part of a gelatine film shot in 32 im/sec.
An amateur remastering of all 16 frames is on YouTube here. The individual frames used are on Flickr here.
Roundhay Garden Scene (LPCCP Type-1 MkII)
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Roundhay, 1888 original frames copy (20 frames) by National Science Museum, London 1931 (Courtesy of NMPFT, Bradford).
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Roundhay, remastered version (52 frames) by NMPFT, Bradford 1999.
The 1931 National Science Museum copy of the remaining film sequence shot in Roundhay garden features 20 frames (run time 1.66 seconds at 12 frame/s). The digital version produced by the NMPFT has 52 frames (run time 2.11 seconds at 24.64 frame/s) and switches the left side and the right side, since the house is actually incorrectly shown on the right-hand side of the scene in the 1931 copy. It is believed to have been mirrored because of paper parts stuck on the left side of the film that would reduce the visibility. The reason is both physiologic and cultural, a Western viewer's eyes are used to automatically watch from top left to right, this reflex action comes from the childhood taught reading direction. The garden sequence film's damaged side results in distortion and deformation on the inverted, right side of the digital movie. The scene was shot in Le Prince's father-in-law's garden at Oakwood Grange, Roundhay on October 14, 1888.
Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge (LPCCP Type-1 MkII)
Louis Le Prince filmed traffic on Leeds Bridge from Hicks the Ironmongers[1] at these coordinates: 53°47′37.70″N 1°32′29.18″W / 53.7938056°N 1.5414389°W.[19]
-
6-frame sequence (118~124) of Leeds Bridge (National Science Museum, London 1923)
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20-frame sequence of Leeds Bridge (National Science Museum)(Courtesy NMPFT, Bradford)
The earliest frames copy belongs to the 1923 NMPFT inventory (frames 118-120 & 122-124), though a larger sequence comes from the 1931 inventory (frames 110-129). Digital footage produced by the NMPFT has 65 frames (run time 2.76 seconds at 23.50 frame/s) although the original Leeds Bridge film of 20 frames was shot by Le Prince's camera at 20 frame/s on a 60 mm film, according to Adolphe Le Prince who assisted his father when this film was shot in late October 1888.
Accordion Player (LPCCP Type-1 MkII)
-
Unremastered film, 1888 original frames copy (20 frames, 41~59) by National Science Museum, London 1931 (Courtesy of NMPFT, Bradford).
The last remaining film of Le Prince's single-lens camera is a sequence of frames of Adolphe Le Prince playing a diatonic button accordion. It was recorded on the steps of the house of Joseph Whitley, Adolphe's grandfather.[2] The recording date is probably 1888. The NMPFT has not remastered this film. An amateur remastering of the first 17 frames is on YouTube here.
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 BBC Education – Local Heroes Le Prince Biography, BBC, archived on 1999-11-28
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Howells, Richard (Summer 2006). "Louis Le Prince: the body of evidence". Screen (Oxford, UK: Oxford Journals) 47 (2): 179–200. doi:10.1093/screen/hjl015. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
- ↑ THE "FATHER" OF KINEMATOGRAPHY: LEEDS MEMORIAL PIONEER WORK IN ENGLAND Our Special Correspondent. The Manchester Guardian (1901-1959) [Manchester (UK)] 13 Dec 1930: 19.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Pioneers of Early Cinema: 1, AIMÉ AUGUSTIN LE PRINCE (1841-1890?)" (PDF). www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk. p. 2. Retrieved 2012-11-25. "he developed a single-lens camera which he used to make moving picture sequences at the Whitley family home in Roundhay and of Leeds Bridge in October 1888. ... it has been claimed that a photograph of a drowned man in the Paris police archives is that of Le Prince."
- ↑ http://www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk/~/media/Files/NMeM/PDF/Collections/Cinematography/PioneersOfEarlyCinemaLouisLePrince.ashx
- ↑ The birth certificate mentions "born August on the 28th, 1841 at 5am. The common mistake of making him born in 1842 comes from an article of Ernest Kilburn Scott, mistake made since then in numerous articles, including the one by Simon Popple
- ↑ 1842 is given by these sources:
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Herbert, Stephen. "Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince". Who's Who of Victorian Cinema. Retrieved 2006-08-26.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Adventures in CyberSound: Le Prince, Louis Aimé Augustin, Dr Russell Naughton (using source: Michael Harvey, NMPFT Pioneers of Early Cinema: 1. Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince)
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Irénée Dembowski (1995). "La naissance du cinéma : cent sept ans et un crime...". Alliage, numéro 22, 1995 (in French) (22). Retrieved 2008-10-14.
- ↑ Dembowski (1995): "1928, Georges Potonniée avance une autre hypothèse ... – Augustin Le Prince s'est suicidé. Il était au seuil de la faillite."
- ↑ Burns, Paul. "The History of the Discovery of Cinematography". – "After his disappearance, the Le Prince family led by his wife and son went to court against Edison in what became known as Equity 6928. The famous Patent Wars ensued and by 1908 Thomas Edison was regarded as sole inventor of motion pictures, in the USA at least. However, in 1902, two years after Le Prince’s son Adolphe had testified in the suit, he was found shot dead on Fire Island, New York."
- ↑ Demboswki (1995): "Pierre Gras, conservateur en chef de la Bibliothèque publique de Dijon, en 1977, montra à Léo Sauvage une note (il la cite dans son ouvrage), prise lors de la visite d'un historien connu (il a tu son nom) qui avait déclaré : – Le Prince est mort à Chicago en 1898, disparition volontaire exigée par la famille. Homosexualité. Disons clairement qu'il n'y a pas l'ombre d'une preuve à l'appui d'une telle assertion."
- ↑ Dembowski (1995): "S'il en était ainsi, pourquoi n'a-t-il rien fait pour l'empêcher de réaliser son funeste projet, pourquoi n'a-t-il pas averti la police à temps?"
- ↑ Hannavy, John, ed. (2008). Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography 1. CRC Press. p. 837. ISBN 978-0-415-97235-2.
- ↑ Historians such as Professor Wheeler Winston Dixon, Christopher Rawlence and others
- ↑ Rausch, Andrew (2004). Turning Points In Film History. Citadel Press. ISBN 978-0-8065-2592-1.
- ↑ "Cinematography". National Museum of Photography, Film and Television. Archived from the original on 2006-07-11. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
- ↑ Google Earth Community: First Moving Pictures
Sources
- Insight Collections & Research Centre
- Guinness Book of Movie Facts & Feats
- Who's Who of Victorian Cinema
- The Career of Louis Aimée Augustin Le Prince by E. Kilburn Scott (July 1931)
- La naissance du cinéma : cent sept ans et un crime... by Irénée Dembowski (in Kino 1989, translated from Polish to French in Cahiers de l'AFIS, numero 182, nov.-déc. by Michel Rouzé, quoted by Alliage numéro 22 1995)
- The Missing Reel, by Christopher Rawlence (Athenum Publishers, New York, 1990)
- Le Prince's Early Film Cameras, by Simon Popple (in Photographica World, September 1993)
- Le Prince and the Lumières, by Rod Varley (in Making of the Modern World, Science Museum, UK, 1992)
- Career of Louis Aimée Augustin Le Prince, by E. Kilburn Scott, (in Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, USA, July 1931)
- Burns, Paul The History of the Discovery of Cinematography An Illustrated Chronology
- The Pioneer Work of Le Prince in Kinematography, by E. Kilburn Scott (in The Photographic Journal #63, August 1923, p. 373~8)
- Louis Aimée Augustin Le Prince by Merritt Crawford (in Cinema, 1 Dec., 1930, p. 28~31)
- L'affaire Lumière. Du mythe à l'histoire, enquête sur les origines du cinéma by Léo Sauvage, 1985 ISBN 2-86244-045-0
- {A1AB0C69-968B-A377-BDE7-3FA8C2EDB7A1}&s=S1&SearchString=le%20prince&source=Search&viewby=images& Ingenious Le Prince 16-lens camera
- Louis Le Prince: the body of evidence by Richard Howells (in Screen vol.47 #2, Oxford University Press, 2006)
- Le Prince, inventeur et artiste, précurseur du cinéma by Jean-Jacques Aulas and Jacques Pfend (in Revue d'Histoire du Cinéma N°32, December 2000, p. 9) ISSN 0769-0959
- New research centre honours father of film
- Essential Films chapter 2, Culture Wars by Ion Martea
- Roundhay Garden Scene (1888), Culture Wars by Ion Martea
- Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge (1888), Culture Wars by Ion Martea
- The Indispensable Murder Book, edited by Joseph Henry Jackson (New York: The Book Sociey, 1951), p. 437-464, "The Red and White Girdle" by Christopher Morley. This deals with the murder of Gouffe, and shows the intense study of that trunk murder in 1889-90.
- Pfend Jacques: Louis Aimé Augustin Leprince,pioneer of the moving picture,and his family.(Sarreguemines,2009).
See also
- List of people who have mysteriously disappeared
- Roundhay Garden Scene
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Le Prince. |
- Louis Le Prince at the Internet Movie Database
- Adventures In Cybersound – extended biography by Dr Russell Naughton, RMIT University, Melbourne. Retrieved 2008-09-26
- Roundhay Garden Scene YouTube Video
- Leeds Bridge YouTube Video
- Accordion Player by Louis Le Prince a rough YouTube video from the first 17 frames
- Louis Le Prince Centre for Cinema, Photography, and Television. University of Leeds. Retrieved 2008-09-26
- The Legend of Louis Le Prince
- Leodis – a photographic archive of Leeds. Leeds Library & Information Service. Allows search for key terms such as Louis Le Prince or Leeds Bridge or Bridge End or Hick Brothers or Auto Express (workshop site), etc.
- National Science Museum, London
- National Media Museum, Bradford
- Armley Mills-Leeds Industrial Museum
- Le Prince single-lens camera 1888, Science & Society Picture Library
- Chronomedia year 1888 (Terramedia)
- Burns, Paul The History of the Discovery of Cinematography 1885~1889 An Illustrated Chronological History
- Local films for local people (BBC Bradford & West Yorkshire)