Helena Smith Dayton Explained

Helena Smith Dayton
Birth Date: 1883
Nationality:American
Field:Animation
Works:Romeo and Juliet (1917)

Helena Smith Dayton (often hyphened as Helena Smith-Dayton) (1883–1960) was an American filmmaker, painter and sculptor working in New York City who used fledgling stop motion and clay animation techniques in the 1910s and 1920s, one of the earliest animators (and the first American woman) to experiment with clay animation. Her "clay cartoons" were humorous in nature, and Dayton was featured in the "Humorist Salons" in New York City.[1] She spent the end of World War I in Paris, managing an YMCA canteen for soldiers.[2] She was a published author, ranging in genre from journalism to plays to a guide to New York City.[3]

Career

Art and animation

Dayton began sculpting around 1914 while living in Greenwich Village in New York City.[4] She described how she began to sculpt while she worked as a writer: "I was sitting at my typewriter, when my fingers began to itch for something to mould." She bought art clay and began to sculpt it. "From then on, I tried to fashion people as I saw them, the humorous always being uppermost in my thoughts."[1] Her "grotesque" figurines graced magazine covers and accompanied her humorous short stories in magazines such as Puck and Cartoons Magazine.[4] [5] A humorist, she specialized in creating clay models of prominent citizens.[2] She described her work as "gigglesome bits of statuary."[1] She copyrighted some of her creations[6] and they were marketed as "Caricatypes". The figurines, averaging 7 1/2 inches in height, cost 75 cent each.[7] Girls dressed as Dayton's caricatypes would appear in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1916 with lines written by Dayton.[8]

She began experimenting with "clay cartoons" in 1916. The February 1917 issue ofPopular Science Monthly included an article about the motion-picture novelty of "animated sculpture". Illustrations included photographs of Dayton with her clay figures, a picture from the animated sculpture play Battle of the Suds, a part of a film strip showing circa ten frames of three dancing chorus girls and another of a man and a snake. The journalist found the effect "startingly (sic) realistic and highly amusing" and believed that "the rather jerky action serves only to enhance the amusing result".[9] Later in the year, Dayton admitted: “The difficult thing at first was to determine just how much to move an arm or a head, to avoid an appearance of jerkiness. I used to make the changes too great, but am learning to overcome that now.” Dayton created 16 poses for her sculpted figures for each foot of film, with up to 30 figurines moving in a scene. Dayton managed to animate about 100 feet of film per day and planned to release one film per month.[10]

The first documented public screening of some of her animated shorts took place on March 25, 1917 at the Strand Theater in New York City.[4] Later in 1917, she released her adaptation of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Before the animated portion of the film, the introduction featured a shot of Dayton sculpting the clay figures.[11] She contributed the short film Pride Goeth Before a Fall, featuring “dances and other stunts”, to the second issue of Pathe’s Argus Pictorial "screen magazine" released on 25 November 1917. The third edition of the program, released on 16 December, closed with a film featuring her clay figures around the banquet bord.[12] Her forays in sculpture and animation had contributed greatly to her income by this point: her bank account contained $12,000 in 1917, the equivalent of $256,000 in 2018 dollars.[1] Though newspapers and magazines in her day covered her work extensively and in detail, it is unclear whether Dayton produced any films after 1917.[13] This may be due to the onset of World War I, during which she worked abroad as part of the war effort, putting her artistic work on hold.[4] None of her films have yet been located, but impressions of her animation can be gathered from the stills and descriptions printed in magazines.

After working as a canteen director for the YMCA in Paris during World War I, she created sculpted figures depicting scenes in France. These were featured in an exhibition by the Society of Illustrators (of which she was a member) in 1922 in New York City.[14]

Later in life, she took up painting.[2] She exhibited her paintings in 1943 at the Montross Gallery.[15] One New York Times art critic praised her work, calling her portraits in this exhibition "unflattering and sound, with a mining for individual character."[16]

Writing

Before she was an animator, Dayton worked as a reporter in Hartford, Connecticut.[2]

Dayton co-authored two guidebooks with Louise Bascom Barratt: A Book of Entertainments and Theatricals (1923) and New York in Seven Days (1926).[4]

Later in her career, she took up playwriting.[3] She frequently collaborated with Louise Bascom Barratt. With Barratt in 1926, she co-wrote The Sweet Buy and Buy, which was performed on stage in 1927 (produced by James Gleason and Earle Boothe) and published as a book.[17] [18] With Barratt again, she co-wrote Hot Water; it opened in 1929 at Lucille La Verne's theater in New York City, with La Verne in the leading role.[19] In 1931, Casanova's Son, also co-written with Barratt, debuted in New York City.[20]

Personal life

Dayton was married to Fred Erving Dayton, a writer and publisher.

Sometime between 1920 and 1925, Helena Smith Dayton signed The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door at Frank Shay's Bookshop on Christopher Street. The door served as an autograph book for nearly 250 bohemians and is now held by the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. Dayton's signature can be found on front panel 1.

Filmography

1917? Battle of the Suds

1917-03-25 Animated Sculpture (program of shorts), Strand Theater, New York

1917-11? Romeo and Juliet (1.000 ft reel)

1917-11-25 Pride Goeth Before a Fall in Argus Pictorial No. 2

1917-12-16 Argus Pictorial No. 3 (featuring one short with figures around a banquet bord)

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Johnson, Mindy. Ink & paint: the women of Walt Disney's animation. 2017. 9781484727812. English. 23. Disney Editions . 968290213.
  2. News: Mrs. Helena Dayton (Obituary). February 23, 1960. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  3. Web site: Helena Smith Dayton: the Greenwich Village Bookshop Door. Harry Ransom Centre. University of Texas. September 27, 2017.
  4. Web site: Artist, author, and Pioneering Motion Picture Animator: The Career of Helena Smith Dayton. Douglass. Jason Cody. journal.animationstudies.org. December 29, 0201 . February 5, 2018.
  5. Web site: Cartoons magazine. v.9no.3 1916.. HathiTrust. en. 2020-01-25.
  6. Book: Catalog of Copyright Entries: Works of art.... 1914. Library of Congress, Copyright Office.. en.
  7. Web site: Cartoons magazine. v.9no.3 1916.. HathiTrust. en. 2020-01-25.
  8. Web site: Cartoons magazine. v.9no.3 1916.. HathiTrust. en. 2020-01-25.
  9. Web site: Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 90.djvu/274 - Wikisource, the free online library. en.wikisource.org. 2020-01-28.
  10. “Romeo and Juliet – In Clay!,” Film Fun, November 2, 1917, p. 434.
  11. November 24, 1917. Prominent Sculptor in Film. The Moving Picture World. 1164.
  12. Book: Chalmers Publishing Company. Moving Picture World (Dec 1917). 1917. New York, Chalmers Publishing Company. 1490, 1523, 1774. New York The Museum of Modern Art Library.
  13. Web site: Helena Smith Dayton: An Early Animation Pioneer Whose Films You Have Never Seen. Douglass. Jason Cody. September 24, 2018. Animation Studies 2.0. September 24, 2018.
  14. News: ILLUSTRATORS OPEN SHOW WITH A 'PARTY'; Exhibit Their 'Double Lives' in Work and an Amusing Movie, 'Through Hollywood.'. May 13, 1922. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  15. News: Art Notes. April 20, 1943. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  16. News: A Reviewer's Notebook. Devree. Howard. Howard Devree. April 25, 1943. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  17. News: Theatrical Notes.. July 22, 1926. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  18. News: ANNOUNCING THE SHOWS OF THE NEW THEATRICAL SEASON; A List of the Sundry Entertainments That May Be Expected to Open in New York Between Now and Next Summer. August 7, 1927. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  19. News: "Hot Water" to Open on Jan. 21. – The New York Times. 1929. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.
  20. News: Theatrical Notes.. August 25, 1931. The New York Times. 4 June 2018. 0362-4331.