The autobiography of Georges Melies, the father of cinema, has been discovered by a filmmaker inLondon, UK. It is being published after being unavailable for 73 years and this is the first time it has been translated into English.
81 years ago, at the age of 77, Georges Méliès – the father of narrative and fantastical film – hand-wrote his autobiography. It has been completely unavailable since 1945 and has never been translated into English. This is one of the great unseen texts of cinema history.
Georges Méliès (1861-1938) is arguably the most important figure in . He pioneered the Sci-fi, Fantasy and Horror genres and was the first to create and use special effects. Many of his concepts are still used today and although his work is over 100 years old, he gave cinema its first iconic image – the moon with a rocket in his eye. Martin Scorsese’s 2011 film ‘Hugo’ was an homage to Méliès.
“He invented everything, basically, he invented it all.” – Martin Scorsese
Jon Spira a documentary filmmaker who works with the British Film Institute and directed recent Star Wars documentary Elstree 1976, discovered a facsimile of Méliès’s handwritten manuscript in the collection of an antique bookseller in rural France and is now publishing the memoir in a brand new hardback edition.
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Says Spira: “This is a hugely significant, long-forgotten text. A firsthand account of the birth of cinema from a man who was not only there but was its greatest innovator and artist. It deserves to be read.”
Film fans and history buffs can pre-order their copies of the book or the deluxe wooden box set now on Spira’s Kickstarter campaign at: http://kck.st/2GkTttH