Crissie Sheridan

Crissie Sheridan

1897 ""
Crissie Sheridan
Crissie Sheridan

Crissie Sheridan

5.4 | en | Documentary

A woman in a white gown performs a skirt dance, using her arms to produce circles and other patterns within the folds of her costume. Her legs and feet appear to be bare. (Library of Congress)

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5.4 | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: October. 24,1897 | Released Producted By: Edison Studios , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A woman in a white gown performs a skirt dance, using her arms to produce circles and other patterns within the folds of her costume. Her legs and feet appear to be bare. (Library of Congress)

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Director

William Heise

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Edison Studios ,

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Michael_Elliott Crissie Sheridan (1897)You could show this 30 second movie to a million different people and I'm sure all but perhaps one would walk away not knowing what the big deal was. After all, there's no plot, no acting and no drama so why watch someones serpentine dance? Well, as a lover of these early movies, what's so fascinating about these early pictures is that without them, we probably wouldn't know who Crissie Sheridan was. I mean, I had never heard of her but by being able to watch this movie I can learn about her, see her work and just know that she was someone popular back in the day that has been forgotten through time. Even though she's forgotten, I can't help but wonder what she'd think about someone watching this film 118 years after it was made.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) I assume the name Crissie Sheridan was not a total unknown 115 years ago with early French-born and English-speaking film pioneer William K.L. Dickson using the dancer's name as the title for the film, while we, usually, in these early short films that involve some kind of sports activity or dancing or music usually get a description of the activity or the name of the profession.In any case, we see the obviously talented dancer Crissie Sheridan perform her routine with grace and elegance. The flowing of the serpentine in the air is surely a beautiful sight, which would have been even better with stunning colors or beautiful music to it, i.e. the way Dickson most likely actually saw it, but even silent and in black and white this short film is far from being a total miss.
ackstasis Cinema is a window to immortality. The greatest theatrical actors and performers of the nineteenth century, however special they may have been, are now entirely lost to us. Of their greatness, we must take the word of their contemporaries. In the 1890s, all that began to change. 'Crissie Sheridan (1897),' an Edison film directed by William K.L. Dickson, is a brief snippet of a serpentine dance performance by the titular dancer, and, great or not, her performance still exists a century later for her great-great-great-great grandchildren to enjoy. The dance routine was an imitation of the Gaiety Girls, a chorus line of "respectable, elegant young ladies" from England, who attained considerable success in musical theatre. Flourishing a magnificent costume in all directions, Sheridan is almost completely hidden behind the twisting, pulsating fabrics of her dress. Other dance-orientated curios you might like to track down include 'A Nymph of the Waves (1900)' and 'Neptune's Daughters (1900),' both directed by Frederick S. Armitage.
dantfinn The film consists totally of dancer Crissie Sheridan holding on to sticks with her long, flowing white costume draped over them. She performs a dance, flicking and twirling the costume around and around. By doing this, it is very difficult to actually see Ms. Sheridan's face. The film was created in 1897 by the Edison Company in the Black Maria Studio and lasts for about 15 seconds, but it is an enjoyable 15 seconds. Even though the movie is over 100 years old, it still has the power to engage you and fill you with awe. I loved every second of it. I discovered this film not to long ago, but after looking at some photographs of it, I knew i had to watch it. Edison made several films like this, showing dancers (Carmencita) (1894) or boxers Men Boxing (1891) and most of his films up until about 1900 did not tell a story. They were simply images of people going about their day-to-day work, dancing, kissing or racing each other.