Romance of Celluloid explained

The Romance of Celluloid
Narrator:Frank Whitbeck
Starring:Adrian
Jack Dawn
Cliff Edwards
Clark Gable
Gladys George
Virginia Grey
Don Loomis
Robert Montgomery
Maureen O'Sullivan
Jessie Ralph
Rosalind Russell
Herbert Stothart
Distributor:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Runtime:10 minutes
Country:United States

The Romance of Celluloid is a 1937 short black and white documentary film, narrated by Frank Whitbeck, which goes behind the scenes to look at the manufacture of film and the making of motion pictures. The film was the first of the studio's Romance of Celluloid series which also included:[1]

Synopsis

The film starts with a brief look at cotton being picked on a plantation in the southern United States, before cutting to the Kodak plant in Rochester, New York where the raw cotton is processed into cellulose which is treated with silver and other materials to make film stock. Behind the scenes at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in Culver City, California, where sets are being constructed, we see make-up artist Jack Dawn demonstrating his Abraham Lincoln make-up, costume designer Adrian sketching a dress for Jeanette MacDonald in The Firefly (1937), composer Herbert Stothart conducting the music for Conquest (1937), Virginia Grey doing her first screen test with Clark Gable, and candid footage of Robert Montgomery, Cliff Edwards, Rosalind Russell, Gladys George, Jessie Ralph, Maureen O'Sullivan and studio trainer Don Loomis. The film concludes with a montage from trailers for coming MGM pictures featuring the studio's parade of stars.

Production

The film was shot on location at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in Culver City, California and the Kodak plant in Rochester, New York.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: THE ROMANCE OF CELLULOID, 1937 . The National Archives . 2010-02-18 .