Frances H. Flaherty

Frances Hubbard Flaherty (December 5, 1883 June 22, 1972) was a film writer and director known for Louisiana Story (1948) — for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story — The Land (1942), and Moana (1926).[1] In 1955, Flaherty founded The Flaherty Seminar, a film study center for filmmakers, curators, and students.[2] She was married to collaborator and documentary filmmaker Robert J. Flaherty from 1914 until his death in 1951.[3]

Frances Hubbard Flaherty
Born
Frances Johnson Hubbard

(1883-12-05)December 5, 1883
Cambridge, Massachusetts
DiedJune 22, 1972(1972-06-22) (aged 88)
Alma materBryn Mawr
OccupationFilmmaker
Spouse(s)Robert Joseph Flaherty
ChildrenBarbara van Ingen
Monica Flaherty Frassetto
Frances Rohr

Career

Flaherty graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1905,[3] studied music and poetry in Paris and was also secretary of the local Suffragette Society.[4]

Flaherty worked alongside her husband Robert Flaherty on several of films, including Louisiana Story (1948), for which she earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story.[1] Flaherty appeared in a feature-length documentary on her and her husband's film work, Hidden and Seeking (1971) directed by Peter Werner.[1] Frances Flaherty was a crucial part of Robert Flaherty's success in film. She took on the role of director at times, helped to edit and distribute his films, even landing governmental film contracts for England.[4]

In 1955, she invited filmmakers, critics, curators, musicians and others to the Flaherty farm in Vermont, a film study center that still exists as the Flaherty Seminar.[5]

Publications

  • Flaherty, Frances Hubbard; Leacock, Ursula (1937). Sabu, the elephant boy. London: Dent. ISBN 9780939660148. OCLC 475662289.
  • Flaherty, Frances Hubbard (1984). The odyssey of a film-maker: Robert Flaherty's story. Putney, VT: Threshold Books. ISBN 9780939660148. OCLC 754885242.

Personal life

Frances Johnson Hubbard was born in Bonn, Germany into "a household of erudition, gentility, and privilege," the daughter of Lucius L. Hubbard (1849-1933), who was studying mineralogy at the University of Bonn, and his wife Frances (1852-1927).[4] She met Robert Flaherty in 1903 in Painesdale, Michigan, where he was employed by her father; the two fell in love, but Flaherty, then "a lumberjack-handyman... of no means and few expectations," was dismissed by her father, after which Frances had a nervous breakdown and was treated at a sanatorium in Dansville, New York, while Flaherty went to British Columbia. Frances visited him there during the summer of 1908, but the two quarreled, and Frances broke their engagement and went back East.[6]

Over the next few years, she "traveled to New York and Paris to continue her conservatory training in music and piano, and in 1911 she visited the West Indies and South America."[7] On November 12, 1914, she married Flaherty in a civil ceremony in New York City; it is not clear how their relationship was renewed: "Legend has it that she sent him a congratulatory telegram on hearing reports of his return with the rediscovery of the Belcher Islands confirmed; and he shot back a reply that included a proposal of marriage."[8] She herself wrote in a self-profile for the tenth reunion of her Bryn Mawr class in 1915:

Coming back for a visit to my own country last July, I found myself caught by the war, and doubly caught in the toils of an old romance. I married my husband for several very plain and simple reasons: 1. Because an innate sense for the preservation of his own genius has saved him from all educational institutions or instruction of any kind. 2. Because that genius is for (a) exploration, (Profession: Exploration and Mining), and (b) music and the arts, (Avocations: playing the violin and portrait photography).[9]

The couple had three children — Barbara van Ingen, Monica Flaherty Frassetto, and Frances Rohr – and remained married until Robert's death in 1951.[3]

Frances Flaherty died on June 22, 1972 in Dummerston, Vermont.[10]

gollark: There's a *Lua* x86 emulator...
gollark: And probably horribly insecure, considering.
gollark: <@184468521042968577> I fail to see why you'd want that horrible type unsafety.
gollark: <@237328509234708481> I shall write a paper on potatOS.
gollark: Also, half the packages use native libraries which sometimes fail to build, and most stuff produces cryptic errors if it breaks.

References

  1. "Frances H. Flaherty". IMDb. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  2. "Programs of The Flaherty". The Flaherty. 13 May 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  3. "Mrs. Robert Flaherty, Widow Of Documentary Filmmaker". The New York Times. 24 June 1972. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  4. Robert J. Christopher (ed.), Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922 (McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2005: ISBN 0-7735-2876-8), pp. 40-42.
  5. "About Us". The Flaherty. 10 March 2011. Archived from the original on 14 January 2019. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  6. Christopher (ed.), Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922, pp. 43-48.
  7. Christopher (ed.), Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922, p. 49.
  8. Christopher (ed.), Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922, p. 201.
  9. Christopher (ed.), Robert and Frances Flaherty: A Documentary Life, 1883-1922, p. 203.
  10. Turner Browne and Elaine Partnow, Macmillan Biographical Encyclopaedia of Photographic Artists (Macmillan, 1983: ISBN 0-02-517500-9), p. 198.

Further reading

  • Flaherty, Frances Hubbard (1984). The odyssey of a fim-maker: Robert Flaherty's story. Putney, VT: Threshold Books. OCLC 463088746.
  • Flaherty, Frances Hubbard (1925). Samoan immortals. Concord, NH. OCLC 16343953.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.