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HUNTLEY FILM
ARCHIVES announces new collection
of Home Movies 1927-1940s
16mm film was only
four years old when this collection
was begun. Dating from 1927 through
to the late 1940's, these home movies
cover such diverse and important subjects
as Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin
at Chequers with family and friends;
a state visit to Canada; point-to-point
racing and hunting with foxhounds;
and foreign holidays to Rhodesia,
Canada and the West Indies. Personalities
in the collection include the Canadian
Premier, Mackenzie King; Governor
of New York, Al Smith; and members
of Sir John Dashwood's family. Highlights
of the collection are the sections
relating to Baldwin. The amateur cameraman
wasn't a distant observer. He was
probably a member of Baldwin's private
staff, and accompanied the Prime Minister
to Canada in 1927. This would explain
his unsympathetic use of intertitles:
'Wales, as usual, is late' and 'the
Prince is rather ill at ease and nervous
over his task' when the prince is
about to speak. (We have just seen
the Prince biting his fingernails).
Baldwin was known to dislike the Prince
of Wales, and it is possible his distrust
of the prince dates from this time.
Baldwin would later preside over the
abdication crisis of 1936. No doubt
those close to the Prime Minister
sympathised with his views. Later,
the party travelled across Canada
on a Canadian Pacific Railroad Royal
Train, where the Prince would have
to press the flesh at the various
rail stops. Some of the material of
the cameraman's family is in colour
- children at play, nannies tending
to them, and trips to Southern Africa.
For more information:
Robert Dewar, Huntley
Film Archives
191 Wardour Street
London W1F 8ZE
t 020 7287 8000
f 020 7287 8001
e robert@huntleyarchives.com
www.huntleyarchives.com
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