- published: 30 Nov 2014
- views: 11088
Vitaphone was a sound film system used for feature films and nearly 1,000 short subjects made by Warner Bros. and its sister studio First National from 1926 to 1931. Vitaphone was the last major analog sound-on-disc system and the only one which was widely used and commercially successful. The soundtrack was not printed on the film itself, but issued separately on phonograph records. The discs, recorded at 33 1/3 rpm (a speed first used for this system) and typically 16 inches in diameter, would be played on a turntable physically coupled to the projector motor while the film was being projected. Many early talkies, such as The Jazz Singer (1927), used the Vitaphone system. The name "Vitaphone" derived from the Latin and Greek words, respectively, for "living" and "sound".
The "Vitaphone" trademark was later associated with cartoons and other short subjects that had optical soundtracks and did not use discs.
In the early 1920s, Western Electric was developing both sound-on-film and sound-on-disc systems, aided by the purchase of Lee De Forest's Audion amplifier tube in 1913, consequent advances in public address systems, and the first practical condenser microphone, which Western Electric engineer E.C. Wente had created in 1916 and greatly improved in 1922. De Forest debuted his own Phonofilm sound-on-film system in New York City on April 15, 1923, but due to the relatively poor sound quality of Phonofilm and the impressive state-of-the-art sound heard in Western Electric's private demonstrations, the Warner Brothers decided to go forward with the industrial giant and the more familiar disc technology.
Don Juan (Spanish), Don Giovanni (Italian) is a legendary, fictional libertine. The first written version of the Don Juan legend was written by the Spanish dramatist Tirso de Molina (nom de plume of Gabriel Téllez). His play, El burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra (The Trickster of Seville and the Stone Guest), was set in the fourteenth century and published in Spain around 1630. The name "Don Juan" is a common metaphor for a "womanizer".
The original play was written in the Spanish Golden Age according to its beliefs and ideals, but as the story was translated and time passed the story was adapted to accommodate cultural changes.
Tirso de Molina wrote “El burlador de Sevilla” in 1630 in order to demonstrate a life-changing lesson. He saw that everyone was throwing his or her life away, living and sinning as they pleased, because they believed that in the end, as long as they repented before they died, they would receive the grace to enter heaven. Through his play, however, he shows that even Don Juan, who is identified as the very devil, a “man without a name” and shape-shifter, has to eventually pay for his sins. Tirso reminds us that we must pay for our actions, and that in the end death makes us all equal.
Shemp Howard (March 11, 1895 – November 22, 1955) was an American actor and comedian. Born Samuel Horwitz, he was called "Shemp" because "Sam" came out that way in his mother's thick Litvak accent. He is best known today for his role as the third stooge in the Three Stooges, a role he first portrayed at the beginning of the act in the early 1920s (1923-1932) while the act was still associated with Ted Healy and known as "Ted Healy and his Stooges", and again from 1947 until his death in 1955. Between his times with the Stooges, Shemp had a successful film career as a solo comedian.
Shemp was born in Manhattan, New York, and raised in Brooklyn. He was the third-born of the five Horwitz brothers, the sons of their Lithuanian Jewish parents: Solomon Horwitz (1872-1943) and Jennie Horwitz (1870-1939). Moe Howard and Curly Howard were his younger brothers.
Shemp's brother, Moe Howard,started in show business as a youngster, on stage and in films. Eventually, he and older brother Shemp tried their hands as minstrel-show-style "blackface" comedians with an act they called "Howard and Howard—A Study In Black". Meanwhile, they also worked for a rival vaudeville circuit at the same time, by appearing without makeup.
Vitaphone Demonstration: The Voice from the Screen 1926 Vitaphone
The Vitaphone Project
Dubbing a Vitaphone disc
Historian Miles Kreuger on Don Juan’s 50th anniversary, the 1st Vitaphone feature film with sound
Vitaphone Comedy Collection Vol 1 - Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle/Shemp Howard (Preview Clip)
Vitaphone 1929 "Clarinet Marmalade": The Original Indiana Five: 1929
EARL BURTNETT and his Orchestra, Vitaphone 2294
"Red Nichols and his Five Pennies" (Vitaphone 1929)
Vitaphone ATT Archives
RICHARD HIMBER and his CHAMPIONS with JOEY NASH. Vitaphone 1758
Shawty, what yo name is?
Uh uhhh
Them hustlas keep on talkin'
Uh uhhh
The like the way I'm walking
Uh uhhh
You saying that you want B?
So press record and let you film me
On your video phone
Make a cameo
Tape me on your video phone
I can handle you
Watch me on your video phone
On your video, video
If you want me you can watch me on your video phone
I love how you approach me
Fresh white, with your pants hangin' grown-man low
Everything you sayin' soundin' good to me
No need to convince me anymore
Swag up, its bright
One blade, its tight
And I smell your cologne in the air
Baby, you doin' something right
You just cancelled every other man here
You say you like my bag and the color of my nails
You can see that I got it goin' on
I wanna make sure you remember me
So I'ma leave my number on your video phone
Uh uhhh
I got no time for frontin'
Uh uhhh
I know just what I'm wantin
Uh uhhh
If its gonna be you and me?
When I call they better see me on your video screen
Uh uhhh
Them hustlas keep on talkin'
Uh uhhh
The like the way I'm walking
Uh uhhh
You saying that you want B?
So press record and let you film me
On your video phone
Make a cameo
Tape me on your video phone
I can handle you
Watch me on your video phone
On your video, video
If you want me you can watch me on your video phone
You a cutie
You should let me put you in my movies
Do shoot into a star of your own hit song
We can shoot the video right here on my cellphone
I never seen a smile so pretty
I need to know I'll always have you wit' me
So take your picture on my video phone
You can pick your own song
And you could be the only one....
I know you like that
Turn you into a star? I got it like that
Like that, baby don't fight it
Cause when I miss your call I hit you right back
On my video phone
Uh uhhh
Them hustlas keep on talkin'
Uh uhhh
The like the way I'm walking
Uh uhhh
You saying that you want B?
So press record and let you film me
On your video phone
Make a cameo
Tape me on your video phone
I can handle you
Watch me on your video phone
On your video, video
If you want me you can watch me on your video phone
You know them G's they be hollerin'
'Specially them hot ones
Brooklyn, Atlanta, Houston to New Orleans
When they see me they be like, "Yo, B, let me call you!"
You breakin' my focus, boy
You cute and you ballin'
You like it when I shake it?
Shawty on a mission, what yo name is?
What? You want me naked?
If you liking this position you can tape it
On your video phone
Uh uhhh
Hustla keep on talkin'
Uh uhhh
You like the way its popping?
Uh uhhh
You saying that you want B?
Press record, baby film me
On your video phone
Make a cameo
Tape me on your video phone
I can handle you
Watch me on your video phone
On your video, video
If you want me you can watch me on your video phone