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Title Director Cast Genre Notes The Musketeers of Pig Alley: D. W. Griffith: Elmer Booth, Lillian Gish Drama: A New Cure for Divorce: William Garwood, Mignon Anderson
July 13 – Ed Sherman, American football player, coach (died 2009) July 14 Woody Guthrie, folk musician ("This Land Is Your Land") (died 1967) Buddy Moreno, American musician (died 2015) July 17 – Art Linkletter, television host (House Party) (died 2010) July 28 – George Cisar, screen character actor (died 1979) July 31
Cleopatra, directed by Charles L. Gaskill and starring Helen Gardner; one of the earliest American feature films Conductor 786 , produced by the Thanhouser Company Conscience (Vitagraph), aka The Chamber of Horrors , produced by Albert E. Smith, directed by Maurice Costello , starring Rose Tapely and Robert Gaillard.
In order for Edison Studios to produce in 1912 a large, believable recreation of the famous charge, director J. Searle Dawley made arrangements with the commander of Fort D. A. Russell near Cheyenne, Wyoming to have between 750 and 800 of his federal troopers to perform as British cavalry units and as Russian artillery crews and supporting infantry.
The movie features the work of U.S. Sen. William Alden Smith, portrayed by actor Cotter Smith, who led the Senate hearings into the disaster. The film will open the Three Rivers Arts Festival on ...
2020 — Nomadland, Minari, The Eight Hundred, Hamilton, Mank, The Invisible Man, Another Round, Promising Young Woman, Wolfwalkers, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, The Half of It; Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of films shut down production, or are either removed from their originally scheduled releases and moved to new release dates or ...
Making an American Citizen is a 1912 silent comedy short film by the pioneering French woman filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché, produced at Solax Studios. [1] Originally advertised as "educational drama" or "educational subject," it grapples with the theme of immigration, assimilation, and of becoming a "good American."
1912 was a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and a leap year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1912th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 912th year of the 2nd millennium, the 12th year of the 20th century, and the 3rd year of the 1910s decade. As of the start of 1912, the ...