Esmé Collings

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Esmé Collings
Born1859
Died28 March 1936 (aged 76)
Eastbourne, England
OccupationFilmmaker

Arthur Albert 'Esme' Collings (1859 – 28 March 1936) was an English photographer, miniaturist and the first of the loose association of early film pioneers dubbed the Brighton School by French film historian Georges Sadoul.[1][2][3][4] Collings, whose interest in cinematography may have stemmed from his business association with fellow film pioneer William Friese-Greene,[5] was only active in film production for about a year, has left little trace and is, according to film historian Rachael Low, of local importance only.[6]

Biography[edit]

Lady Emily Jackson by Esme Collings
Woman wearing a corset by A. Esme Collings circa 1900

Collings was born in Weston-Super-Mare, England sometime late in 1859, with his birth registered in the last quarter of that year. The son of local bootmaker James Collings, he followed his father into the trade, before his artistic ambitions were nurtured by Keturah Anne Beedle, whom he married in 1887.[2][4][7]

Around 1887, Collings and his brother James went into partnership with film pioneer William Friese-Greene running two London photographic studios at 69 New Bond Street and 92 Piccadilly. The partnership of Friese Greene & Collings opened a third London studio at 100 Westbourne Grove and a branch at 69 Western Road, Hove, the following year.[2][7][8] Friese-Greene's lack of professionalism and perceived financial mismanagement of the business had however resulted in Collings' dissolution of the partnership by the end of that year.[7][8] Collings retained control of the Bond Street and Hove studios initially with his brother as James Whyte Collings & A. Esme Collings Ltd. but from 1890 onward as Arthur Esme Collings Limited.[7]

By the time of the 1891 census, Arthur Collings, who is listed as an Artist Photographer, was residing with his wife at 59 Dyke Road, Brighton, where their son Arthur Cyril Esme Collings was born the following year. Around 1893, Collings transferred his studio to 120 Western Road, Hove which he retained his name until World War I.[7]

By the summer of 1896, Collings had taken up residence at 13 Alexandra Villas, Hove and begun to build a catalogue of films including Railway Scene, featuring a train arriving at The Dyke railway station mimicking the Lumière Brothers' Train Pulling into a Station, A Victorian Lady in Her Boudoir, an early erotic film, and The Broken Melody, featuring Dutch cellist Auguste van Biene.[8] On 18 September Collings sent his camera to local engineer Alfred Darling for repairs; Darling, who also may have supplied the camera to Collings,[4] would go on to manufacture his own film equipment and assist fellow pioneers George Albert Smith and James Williamson in perfecting their apparatus.[8] Collings films were shown on Chard's Vitagraph as part of an eight-week run at Bristol's Empire Palace of Varieties commencing 19 October.[8]

In 1897, Collings filmed three scenes based on the popular song Simon the Cellarer for Lewis Sealy to screen accompanied by live singers. A second run of Collings films on Chard's Vitagraph at Bristol's Empire Palace of Varieties commenced the following year.[8] The following year Collings ceased film production to concentrate on miniature portraiture.

By 1906, he had withdrawn from the photography business; closing a second studio he had opened at 89 King's Road, Hove in 1902 and leaving former army officer Richard Berwick Hope in charge of the Western Road studio, Collings returned to London to focus on his painting.[2][7] Esme Collings (Hove) Ltd, registered to stock broker Albert Winder Grant and photographers Henry Lawrence and William Leonard Staines in July 1910, closed the Bond Street branch in June 1913 and the Western Road branch sometime after 1915.[2][4][7]

On 28 March 1936, Collings died at his home in Eastbourne, Sussex.[2]

Family[edit]

Collings' wife Keturah Collings (née Beedle), who initially encouraged him to pursue his artistic ambitions, worked as a photographer and portrait artist in a series of London studios from 1905 until her death in 1948.[7]

Legacy[edit]

The pioneering film work of Esme Collings, as well as James Williamson and George Albert Smith, was commemorated in the 1966 BBC Television programme It Began in Brighton, produced by Melvyn Bragg and directed by Tristram Powell.

Filmography[edit]

Date Title Credited as Notes
Cinematographer Producer Writer Director
1896 Crowd at Law Court aka Crowds in London Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
9 November 1896 Lord Mayor aka The Lord Mayor's Show aka Arrival of the Lord Mayor in London Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 West Street, Brighton aka Street Scene in Brighton Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
October 1896 Rough Sea aka The Hove Sea Wall in a Gale aka Ocean Waves in a Storm Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
August 1896 King's Road, Brighton aka Brighton Front on a Bank Holiday aka Crowds in Brighton Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
August 1896 Boys under Pier aka Boys Scrambling for Pennies under the West Pier, Brighton aka Children Playing in the Sea Yes Yes Yes Extent actuality.
August 1896 Children Paddling aka Children Paddling and Playing on the Sands aka Children on the Beach Yes Yes Yes Extent actuality.
August 1896 Dyke Station aka Train arriving at Dyke Station aka Railroad Scene Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Soldiers Landing aka Soldiers in Portsmouth Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
6 November 1896 Czar in Paris Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
8 November 1896 Czar in Versailles Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Musical Party, Van Biene Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality featuring Auguste van Biene.
1896 The Broken Melody aka Theatre Scene Yes Yes Yes Lost romantic drama featuring Auguste van Biene.
1896 Hose Scene aka Comic Scene Yes Yes Yes Lost film.
1896 Donkey Rider Yes Yes Yes Partially extent actuality.
1896 Sailors Gun Drill aka Military Scene Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Do. Cavalry aka English Cavalry in Aldershot Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Policeman and Cook aka Love Scene Yes Yes Yes Lost film.
1896 Bathers on the Beach at Brighton Yes Yes Yes Extent actuality.
1896 Woman Undressing aka A Victorian Lady in Her Boudoir Yes Yes Yes Yes Extent erotic film.
1896 Portsmouth: The Ferry Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Sailors off an English Warship Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Bicycle Rider Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Workers Leaving a Dock Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Street Traffic in London Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Road Race in Gatwick Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 London Westminster Bridge Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.
1896 Street Scene in Portsmouth Yes Yes Yes Lost actuality.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sadoul, Georges (1949), Histoire du cinéma mondial, des origines à nos jours (History of world cinema, from early films to nowadays), Flammarion, pp. 40–47, ISBN 978-2-08-060216-9
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Collings, Esmé (1859-1936)". BFI Screenonline. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  3. ^ "Esme Collings (1859–1936)". IMDb. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d "Arthur Albert 'Esme' Collings (1859–1936)". Who's Who of Victorian Cinema. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  5. ^ Barnes, John (1998), The Beginnings of the Cinema in England 1894–1901, vol. I, University of Exeter Press, ISBN 9780047910050
  6. ^ Low, Rachael; Manvell, Roger (1948), The History of the British Film 1896–1906, Allen & Unwin, ISBN 9780859895644
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "Arthur Albert Esme Collings and Keturah Collings". Sussex PhotoHistory. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Brighton & Hove from the dawn of the cinema". Archived from the original on 11 August 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.