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Slapsticon 2013 piece at Greenbriar Picture Shows
Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2013 4:16 am
by Richard M Roberts
Hey Gang,
John McElwee wrote a nice piece on Slapsticon for his great blog Greenbriar Picture Shows today:
http://greenbriarpictureshows.blogspot. ... turns.html" target="_blank
RICHARD M ROBERTS
Slapsticon 2013:Podcast Interview & Blog Article
Posted: Sun Jun 09, 2013 7:33 pm
by JFK
Slapsticon 2013 piece at Bloomington Herald Times
Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2013 3:36 pm
by JFK
Bloomington Herald Times June 23, 2013
"Slapsticon Features Known, Unknown Early Film Comedians" By Liz Leslie
"Silent comedy is no oxymoron. For anyone familiar with the antics of legendary Charlie Chaplin or Fatty Arbuckle, expressive comedic actors paired with jaunty musical accompaniments can be engrossing. Familiar with Charlie Chaplin? What about Lupino Lane or Larry Semon? Soon Bloomington will have an opportunity to view works of those early comedians in addition to many others — well-known and not as well-known.
Slapsticon 2013 will showcase four days of silent and early comedy with live musical accompanists. The festival will take place at IU Cinema, June 27-30, as a part of Indiana University’s Summer Festival of the Arts. Many know of the “big” names of early comedy — Laurel and Hardy, Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin — but those names are only the tip of the iceberg, Slapsticon director Richard Roberts said.
Before Slapsticon, a lot of the films shown were previously unknown. For instance, in 2010, Slapsticon introduced a film featuring Charlie Chaplin that was not known previously to have Charlie Chaplin. The film, “A Thief Catcher,” sent biographers and historians scrambling to edit and update their documents. “We pride ourselves that we are respected for new research,” Slapsticon director Richard Roberts said. The festival provides an opportunity for collectors, academics and historians to meet, all in one place. However, the festival isn’t just for those who are already familiar with early and silent comedy. A historian himself, Roberts noted the family-friendly event is for anyone who likes to laugh.
Slapsticon brings together those who are already passionate about early and silent comedy with those who may be discovering it for the first time. The main goal is entertainment, Roberts said. “Remember that it’s fun. Even if you can’t attend for all four days, come for a day,” he said. There is something for everyone. “Not many other places have these many laughs available to you,” Roberts said. Comedy is often “unjustly neglected,” as Roberts put it, in the silent film cannon. Slapsticon not only provides a stage for lesser-known films, but highlights influential films as well.
House accompanist of the George Eastman House in Rochester, N.Y., Philip Carli and Washington, D.C.-based Andrew Simpson will be playing live along with the films. Simpson performs with the Library of Congress Packard Campus Theatre and National Gallery of Art. Both are Indiana University alumni. Carli initially pitched Bloomington as a new location for the festival, IU Cinema director Jon Vickers said. “IU Cinema is starting to build a reputation as a venue and as a program,” he said. Moving from the Washington, D.C., area to south-central Indiana was not an immediately obvious choice, but it became an attractive option with the strong reputation of IU Cinema and the amenities the city of Bloomington had to offer. Roberts visited Bloomington before making the offer to move the festival.
Excitement continues to grow as Bloomington prepares for its first Slaptsticon. People come from all over the world to experience Slapsticon, and with every new year, it grows and changes.
Now in its 10th year, Slapsticon began in 2003. “We started with a group of film collectors and historians that wanted to run early and silent comedy in a festival forum,” Roberts said. Slapsticon’s first year was a success. After the first year, the festival began receiving assistance from archives and collectors, including the Library of Congress. Also in its first year, the festival highlighted rare and recently discovered Buster Keaton films and packed the National Gallery of Art for a screening of rare 35mm short films. The festival then moved to Boston from Arlington for 2004, then returned to Arlington in 2005, when it re-premiered Mabel Normand’s “Head Over Heels” — previously unscreened for 80 years. As the event draws near, the organizers are getting ready. Roberts said the week leading up to the festival is the busiest he has all year, as he coordinates collecting and shipping films from all over to one location.
This year also marks the first time the IU Cinema has hosted Andrew Simpson. “This is my first Slapsticon,” Vickers said. “Much of it will be a new experience for me as well.” In addition to giving the films a showcase with live musicians, Slapsticon does something for early comedy YouTube and streaming cannot — it allows early and silent comedy to be seen as it was intended — in front of a live audience. Roberts said it’s rewarding, “hearing the laughs these films were designed to make come from the audience.” Slapsticon will take place at IU Cinema, 1213 E. Seventh Street, June 27-30. Ticket information is available at http://www.cinema.indiana.edu and children 16 and younger get in for free. For more information, see http://www.slapsticon.org ."
WFIU Public Radio Artworks Slapsticon Interview
Posted: Tue Jun 25, 2013 5:05 pm
by JFK
6/26/13:Halli Casser-Jayne Show:Ben Model+Slapsticon Preview
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 2:02 am
by JFK
Re: Slapsticon 2013 piece at Greenbriar Picture Shows
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:56 am
by BenModel
This is the closest I'll get to being at Slapsticon this year, I guess.
Ben
Re: Slapsticon 2013 piece at Greenbriar Picture Shows
Posted: Thu Jun 27, 2013 10:49 am
by Gloria Rampage
What about Lupino Lane or Larry Semon?
Spot on.