Arthur Melbourne-Cooper
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Arthur Melbourne Cooper (15 April 1874 – 28 November 1961) was a British photographer and early filmmaker best known for his pioneering work in stop-motion animation. He produced over three hundred films between 1896 and 1915, of which an estimated 36 were all or in part animated. These include ''Dreams of Toyland'' (1908) and according to some sources ''Dolly’s Toys'' (1901), as well as ''Matches: An Appeal'' (date disputed), which Dutch independent researcher Tjitte de Vries has claimed may have been the first animated film to be shown in public. Since his death, Cooper has become a controversial figure among film historians with disputes arising over his professional relationship with film pioneer
Birt Acres Birt Acres (23 July 1854 – 27 December 1918) was an American and British photographer and film pioneer. Among his contributions to the early film industry are the first working 35 mm camera in Britain (Wales), and ''Birtac'', the firs ...
; seven films known as the GRG-Series, which archives such as the BFI's currently credit to Brighton-based filmmaker George Albert Smith; and the re-dating of the aforementioned ''Matches: An Appeal'', which archives such as the BFI's currently date to 1914. The claims were debated in a series of articles in ''Film History'' journal from 1999 to 2002, and in response to the book on Cooper published in 2009 by de Vries.


Biography


Early life and career

Born in
St Albans St Albans () is a cathedral city in Hertfordshire, England, east of Hemel Hempstead and west of Hatfield, north-west of London, south-west of Welwyn Garden City and south-east of Luton. St Albans was the first major town on the old Roman ...
, Cooper was the son of a local photographer Thomas M. Cooper, who educated him from very early on in his profession. By the age of 16, he was working as an assistant at his father's shop on New London Road, St. Albans. He claimed to have gone to work for film pioneer
Birt Acres Birt Acres (23 July 1854 – 27 December 1918) was an American and British photographer and film pioneer. Among his contributions to the early film industry are the first working 35 mm camera in Britain (Wales), and ''Birtac'', the firs ...
in 1892, at the age of 18; this claim has however been disputed as Acres himself was working for Elliot and Sons up until 1895 and is felt unlikely to have hired an assistant before this time. During the late 1890s and early 1900s, Cooper performed "rush work" filming and developing topical subjects, such as the 1898 launch of the ''
Albion Albion is an alternative name for Great Britain. The oldest attestation of the toponym comes from the Greek language. It is sometimes used poetically and generally to refer to the island, but is less common than 'Britain' today. The name for Scot ...
'' (for Acre), the 1902
Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra The coronation of Edward VII and his wife, Alexandra, as King and Queen of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions, and as Emperor and Empress of India took place at Westminster Abbey, London, on 9 August 1902. Originally scheduled for 26 ...
(for the
Biograph Company The Biograph Company, also known as the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company, was a motion picture company founded in 1895 and active until 1916. It was the first company in the United States devoted entirely to film production and exhibition, ...
) and the 1903 Grand National among others. Dutch researcher Tjitte de Vries, based on later reports by Cooper and his daughter Audrey Wadowska, controversially claims that during this time the filmmaker also produced the ''Animated Matches'' series of films more commonly dated to 1914 and the GRG-Series of films more commonly attributed to George Albert Smith. Continuing to live at London Road with his mother and siblings and work as a cameraman, he began to think about establishing his own company following his father's death in 1901.


Alpha Trading Company

By 1906 Cooper had established the Alpha Trading Company, and started film production in his own right. His productions at this time include ''MacNab's Visit to London'' (1905), in which he plays the title role in a slapstick comedy about golf, and ''The Motor Pirate'' (1906), in which bandits in an armoured car make the roads unsafe. That year he also became one of the founder-members of the British Kinematograph Manufacturers Association. In 1907 Cooper set out on a special observation car, attached to the front of a train to film the long phantom ride film ''London to Killarney'' (1907) which was one of the longest to have been made at that time and was distributed in four parts. At the end of the ride he also filmed the comedy ''Irish Wives and English Husbands'' (1907), starring local girl Kate O'Connor, which was the first fiction film to be made in Ireland. By 1908 Cooper had established the Alpha Production Works in St Albans. His productions during this time include his earliest uncontested animation ''Dreams of Toyland'' (1908), which includes storylines, themes, characters and techniques he would return to in later films. Earlier, contested, animated productions include ''Dolly’s Toys'' (1901), which has also been credited to
Walter R. Booth Walter Robert Booth (12 July 1869 – 1938) was a British magician and early pioneer of British film. Collaborating with Robert W. Paul and then Charles Urban mostly on "trick" films, he pioneered techniques that led to what has been descri ...
and George Albert Smith, and the ''Animated Matches'' trilogy which has been variously dated to 1914 and 1899 by different researchers.


Alpha Picture House

On 27 July 1908, Cooper opened Hertfordshire's first permanent cinema, the Alpha Picture House, on London road. The building designed by Percival Blow contained a restaurant, swimming pool and hairdressing salon as well as the 800 seat cinema, which has been described as the first cinema as we know them today. The cinema failed inspection following the passing of the 1910 Cinematograph Act and was sold through liquidation to George Arthur Dawson the following year. The cinema continued to run as the Poly until 1926 and was destroyed by fire the following year. A new cinema was built on the London Road site, which continued in operation until the 1990s. In February 1909, he visited Paris where he had been once or twice before on business, but this time to represent his Alpha Trading Company at the first international film congress, the ''Congrès International des Éditeurs du Film'', in order to secure the rights of film producers. In the same year, encouraged by the success of his new cinema in St Albans, he opened in Letchworth a second Picture Palace. This was not a success in a town populated by church-going people who disliked the moving pictures. Two fires in the cinema got Cooper into serious financial difficulties.


Kinema Industries Ltd

After twelve years, Cooper folded up his businesses in St Albans and, with his wife and young children, he moved to Manor Park, Lee. During the day he made here a series of surprising puppet animation pictures for Butcher's Empire Films, which had its studios at the back of his garden. One of his most beautiful animation films was ''Cinderella'' (1912), which was distributed in hand-coloured versions. In the evenings Cooper, for a while, became manager of a new cinema in Harrow, paying his debts in St Albans. With his assets of the Alpha Trading Company and capital of a semi-retired officer, Andrew Heron, Cooper established Heron Films Ltd., a company which set out to produce longer films, comedies and dramas, with the theatrical company of Mark Melford, a well-known actor in those days. Cooper also established Kinema Industries Ltd, for which he made several documentaries and newsreels, among which the notorious ''The Suffragette Derby'' of 1913 at
Epsom Epsom is the principal town of the Borough of Epsom and Ewell in Surrey, England, about south of central London. The town is first recorded as ''Ebesham'' in the 10th century and its name probably derives from that of a Saxon landowner. The ...
, in which suffragette
Emily Davison Emily Wilding Davison (11 October 1872 – 8 June 1913) was an English suffragette who fought for votes for women in Britain in the early twentieth century. A member of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and a militant figh ...
can be seen being trampled to death by the King's racing horse. It was filmed by Cooper with his camera at the finish and his brother Hubert at Tattenham Corner. Both companies were wound up at the outbreak of the First World War when Andrew Heron reported himself for active service. Cooper became munition inspector in Luton, while the family lived nearby in
Dunstable Dunstable ( ) is a market town and civil parish in Bedfordshire, England, east of the Chiltern Hills, north of London. There are several steep chalk escarpments, most noticeable when approaching Dunstable from the north. Dunstable is t ...
. After the First World War, Cooper and his family moved to Blackpool where he became manager of Animads, a subdivision of Langford's Advertising Agency Ltd. He made a number of animated advertisements films. Among them: ''
Cadbury Cadbury, formerly Cadbury's and Cadbury Schweppes, is a British multinational confectionery company fully owned by Mondelez International (originally Kraft Foods) since 2010. It is the second largest confectionery brand in the world after Mar ...
's chocolates'', ''
Paddy Whiskey Paddy is a brand of blended Irish whiskey produced by Irish Distillers, at the Midleton distillery in County Cork, on behalf of Sazerac, a privately held American company. Irish Distillers owned the brand until its sale to Sazerac in 2016. As of ...
'', ''
Swiss Roll A Swiss roll, jelly roll (United States), roll cake, cream roll, roulade or Swiss log is a type of rolled sponge cake filled with whipped cream, jam, or icing. The origins of the term are unclear; in spite of the name "Swiss roll", the cake i ...
s'', and ''Clean Milk Campaign''.


Later life and death

Melbourne-Cooper retired in 1940 and moved to
Coton, Cambridgeshire Coton is a small village and Civil parishes in England, civil parish about three miles (about 5 km) west of Cambridge in Cambridgeshire, England and about the same distance east of the Prime Meridian. It is in the district of South Cambridge ...
, where he died in 1961; he is buried in the cemetery of St Peter's Church, Coton alongside his wife, who died in 1962.


Legacy

In 1955, Audrey Wadowska, the daughter of Cooper, attended an exhibition on film history in London, where she saw stills from a series of films credited to Brighton-based film pioneer George Albert Smith, which she claimed contained members of her family and must therefore have been filmed by her father. The series is known as the GRG-Series, after ''
Grandma's Reading Glass ''Grandma's Reading Glass'' is a 1900 British short silent drama film, directed by George Albert Smith, featuring a young Willy who borrows a huge magnifying glass to focus on various objects, which was shot to demonstrate the new technique ...
'' (1900); the significance of this particular film is its pioneering use of interpolated close-up. Wadowska's campaigning, championed by Dutch researcher Tjitte de Vries, has resulted in the films being re-attributed to Cooper by New York's Museum of Modern Art Film Archive, but other archives, including the BFI National Film and Television Archive, have not done the same. Dutch researcher Tjitte de Vries has also championed the claim by Cooper and his daughter that the series of three stop-motion animation films that includes ''Matches: An Appeal'' (date disputed), was not produced in 1914 as previously suggested by study of the now lost original negative by curator of Harrow's Kodak Museum Dr. R.S. Schultze, and instead dates production to 1899; the significance of this is that it would predate any other known use of stop-motion animation techniques. In 1996, the city of St Albans with the British Film Institute, to celebrate 100 years of British films, erected a plaque on a flat building at the corner of Alma Road and London Road, commemorating that Cooper once had on this spot his Alpha Cinematograph Works. Although the picture house that Cooper founded on London Road was destroyed by fire, the site continued to be used as a cinema when a new building was erected in 1931. Known variously as the Regent, the Capitol and the Odeon, the cinema remained in operation until it closed in 1995. The building was restored and re-opened in 2014 as The Odyssey Cinema.


Filmography


References


Footnotes


Sources

*''The Alpha Trading Co Open New Works At St Albans'', The Bioscope, September 18, 1908. *''How Bioscope Records Are Made'', The Herts Advertiser & St Albans Times, March 13, 1909. *''First Film Cartoon'', by E.G. Turner, Evening News, November 17, 1955. *''Advertising Was in At the Beginning'', by W.J. Collins, World's Press News, May 11, 1956. *''The Observer Film Exhibition. The Animated Cartoon'', by Richard Buckle, London, 1956. *''He Started the Newsreel'', by Barnet Saidman, News Chronicle, July 15, 1956. *''Mr A. Melbourne-Cooper, Pioneer of the Film Industry'', by Joe Curtiss, Hertfordshire Countryside, Summer 1960. *''A Portrait in Celluloid'', by John Grisdale, ms. St Albans Museums, 1960. *''Coton is the Home of One of the Pioneers of Film-making'', Cambridge Daily News, August 8, 1961. *''Mr A. Melbourne-Cooper, A Pioneer in the Cinema'', The Times obituary, December 7, 1961. *''The Unsung Pioneers of the World of Celluloid'', by Bill Field, Barnet Press, September 24, 1965. *''A British Film Pioneer in Ireland'', by Anthony Slide, Vision, Winter 1967. *''The Oldest Purpose-built Cinema'', by Audrey Wadowska, Hertfordshire Countryside, July 1970. *''The Visionary'', St Albans Gazette, September 20, 1973. *''Forgotten Film-maker Ahead of His Time'', Herts Advertiser, October 19, 1973. *''The Forgotten Movie Pioneer'', by Ronald Riggs, Herts Advertiser, June 18, 1974. *''Pioneers of the British Film. The Work of Birt Acres and Arthur Melbourne-Cooper'', by Luke Dixon, ms. Eastern Arts Association/St Albans Museums, 1976. *''Film Pioneer is 'Recognised At Last, by Steve Payne, Herts Advertiser, August 12, 1977. *''Birth Place of the Movies'', by Nicky Whinerah, Post-Echo, August 24, 1977. *''Arthur Melbourne-Cooper: Motion Picture Pioneer'', Film Collecting, Fall 1977. *''Father Was Rather Flamboyant'', Review, September 17, 1981. *''Chasing Dreams and Shadows'', by Ronald Riggs, Herts Advertiser, April 10, 1991. *''Ludwig Stollwerck - Wie der Film nach Deutschland kam'', Martin Loiperdinger, KINtop-1, Stroemfeld/Roter Stern, Frankfurt a/Main, 1992 *''Arthur Melbourne-Cooper, Film Pioneer Wronged by Film History'', by Tjitte de Vries, KINtop-4, Frankfurt a/Main, 1994. *''Arthur Melbourne-Cooper, A Documentation of Sources'', by Tjitte de Vries, KINtop-13, Frankfurt a/Main, 2004.


Further reading

*Robertson, Patrick; ''The Shell Book of Firsts'', London, 1974. *Whitmore, Richard; ''Of Uncommon Interest'', Spurbooks 1975. *Gifford, Denis; ''The British Film Catalogue 1895-1970'', Newton Abbott, 1973. *Gifford, Denis; ''The British Film Catalogue 1895-1985'', Newton Abbott/London, 1986. *Lange-Fuchs, Hauke, ''Birt Acres. Der Erste Schleswig-Holsteinische Film Pionier'', Walter G. Mühlau, Kiel, 1987. *Whitmore, Richard; ''Hertfordshire Headlines'', Countryside Books 1987. *Gifford, Denis; ''British Animated Films 1895-1985'', Jefferson, N.-Carolina and London, 1987. *Lange-Fuchs, Hauke, ''Der Kaiser, der Kanal und die Kinematographie'', Schleswig, 1995. *''The American Film Institute Catalogue. Film Beginnings 1893-1910'', Metuchen NJ and London, 1995. *Lopiperdinger, Martin, ''Film & Schokolade. Stollwercks Geschäfte mit lebende Bilder'', Stroemfeld/Roter Stern, Frankfurt a/Main, 1999. *Ayles, Alan; ''Cinemas of Hertfordshire'', Hatfield 1985/2002. *Christopher Winn, ''I Never Knew That About England'', Ebury Press, 2005. *De Vries, Tjitte and Ati Mul, ''They Thought it was a Marvel - Arthur Melbourne-Cooper: Pioneer of Animation'', Filmmuseum Amsterdam, 2007. {{DEFAULTSORT:Cooper, Arthur Melbourne 1874 births 1961 deaths Cinema pioneers People from St Albans