The Gunsaulus Mystery Explained

The Gunsaulus Mystery
Director:Oscar Micheaux
Producer:Oscar Micheaux
Starring:Evelyn Preer
Lawrence Chenault
Edward R. Abrams
Cinematography:Leonard Galezio
Runtime:Eight reels
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)
Distributor:Micheaux Film Corporation

The Gunsaulus Mystery is a 1921 American silent race film directed, produced, and written by Oscar Micheaux. The film was inspired by events and figures in the 1913–1915 trial of Leo Frank for the murder of Mary Phagan. The film is now believed to be lost. Micheaux remade the film 1935 as Murder in Harlem.

Plot

The body of Myrtle Gunsaulus, a young African-American girl, is discovered in the basement of a New York City factory. Arthur Gilpin, the African-American janitor who discovered the body, is arrested and charged with her murder.

Arthur's sister Ida May (Evelyn Preer) contacts her former boyfriend, the attorney Sidney Wyeth (Lawrence Chenault), to defend Gilpin in court. During the trial, Wyeth redirects attention for the murder away from Gilpin to Anthony Brisbane, a white man with a history of sexual deviancy. Gilpin is exonerated while Brisbane is revealed as Myrtle Gunsaulus's killer.

Cast

Production

Oscar Micheaux, the most prolific African-American filmmaker of the race film genre, had previously addressed the issue of violence by whites against blacks in his 1920 feature Within Our Gates, which aroused controversy.[3] That film's storyline, which included a portrayal of racial lynching and the sexual attack by a white man against a black woman, resulted in censorship rulings in Atlanta and other major cities throughout the U.S.[4]

Micheaux tackled another controversial subject with his 1921 The Gunsaulus Mystery.[5] The plot was based on the 1913 murder of Mary Phagan and the trial of Leo Frank.[6] After an African American was first interrogated, police attention turned to Frank, the Jewish-American manager of the factory. He was prosecuted and convicted of the crime. After appeals had failed, he received commutation of his death sentence, but Frank was kidnapped and lynched on August 17, 1915.

Micheaux shot The Gunsaulus Mystery at the Estee Studios in New York City and distributed the film through his Micheaux Film Corporation. Evelyn Preer, the star of Within Our Gates, also starred in this production.

Micheaux revisited the subject again in 1935 with a sound remake, which was released under the titles Murder in Harlem and Lem Hawkins' Confession. Especially in this version, Micheaux used the conventions of the detective story to introduce differing narratives and rework the binary nature of the trial, in which an African-American man and Jewish-American man had testified against each other.

No print of The Gunsaulus Mystery is known to exist in any archive or private collection, and it is considered to be a lost film.[7] Events of the Mary Phagan murder would be covered in detail in the 1988 four-hour TV miniseries The Murder of Mary Phagan.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: African American Films Through 1959: A Comprehensive, Illustrated Filmography. 9781476610528. Richards. Larry. September 17, 2015.
  2. Web site: The Gunsaulus Mystery.
  3. http://www.blackpast.org/?q=aah/micheaux-oscar-1884-1951 John W. Ravage, "Micheaux, Oscar."
  4. "Within Our Gates," AfricanAmericans.com.
  5. "Overview: The Gunsaulus Mystery", New York Times
  6. " Oscar Micheaux and Leo Frank: Cinematic Justice Across the Color Line. Matthew Bernstein. Film Quarterly. Summer 2004. https://web.archive.org/web/20100413193019/http://www.filmquarterly.org/issue_5704_right.html. April 13, 2010.
  7. http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/G/GunsaulusMystery1921.html Progressive Silent Film List: The Gunsaulus Mystery
  8. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095678/ The Murder of Mary Phagan