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Archive: 2022 (93 Posts)

A view looking past a digital display screen towards the doors of an indoor theater, with

Film Loans from the Library of Congress — March 2022

Posted by: Cary O’Dell

Here are some of the titles from the Library’s motion picture collections–many preserved by the NAVCC film laboratory–that we’re loaning for exhibition this month. As always, we can’t guarantee that schedules won’t change or links get broken, but this is our best information at the time of publication. Campus Theatre: Lewisburg, Pennsylvania https://www.campustheatre.org/ I MARRIED …

Unidentified still, possibly from film. Two puppets, gnomes or fairy tale figures, hand-tinted in the faces otherwise photo is black and white.. "Male" figure holds large knife. Keys hang in background.

STILL THEY HAUNT US II: Another Mystery Photo!

Posted by: Cary O’Dell

Yep, we’re going to try again.  Back in November of last year, we posted on this blog a now almost-infamous mystery photo that we have here at the Library; it’s the photo we call “Photo #33” a.k.a. “Two Dudes” a.k.a. “Are You Sure They’re Dudes?”  And while we haven’t identified that picture yet, we are …

A view looking past a digital display screen towards the doors of an indoor theater, with

National Film Registry: “All My Babies” (1953)

Posted by: Stacie Seifrit-Griffin

  Each year, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) sets a theme for February’s Black History Month, and this year, they’ve chosen the impact and importance of Black Health and Wellness. According to their website, “this theme acknowledges the legacy of not only Black scholars and medical practitioners in …

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From the National Recording Registry: “Singin’ the Blues” (1927)

Posted by: Cary O’Dell

Ninety-five years ago today–February 4, 1927–Frankie Trumbauer and his Orchestra with Bix Beiderbecke headed into the studio to lay down their classic “Singin’ the Blues.”  “Blues” was added to the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry in 2005.  In the essay below, the Library’s own David Sager recounts the making of a legendary recording. “Singin’ …

A view looking past a digital display screen towards the doors of an indoor theater, with

Film Loans from the Library of Congress — February 2022

Posted by: Cary O’Dell

Here are some of the titles from the Library’s motion picture collection–many preserved by the NAVCC film laboratory–that we’re loaning for exhibition this month. As always, we can’t guarantee that schedules won’t change or links get broken, but this is our best information at the time of publication. Film Forum NYC BOARDING HOUSE BLUES (1948) …

A view looking past a digital display screen towards the doors of an indoor theater, with

Captain Hugh Mulzac and the SS Booker T. Washington

Posted by: Matthew Barton

This 15-minute broadcast from January 2, 1943 comes from the Office of War Information (OWI) Collection at the Library of Congress, and reflects a unique and vital chapter of World War II. It features Captain Hugh Mulzac and members of the integrated crew of the “Liberty Ship,” he captained, the SS Booker T. Washington. Though …

A view looking past a digital display screen towards the doors of an indoor theater, with

Arch Oboler’s Plays for Americans

Posted by: Matthew Barton

This blog post was written by Matt Barton, curator of the Recorded Sound Section. At the time of the United States’s entry into World War II, Arch Oboler was one of a handful of radio writers whose popularity rivaled that of the medium’s star performers. Although he was best known for horror programs like the …