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Chief Spokane Garry: Indian of the Northwest. 1966. 

Washington State University Libraries' Films
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25 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 13   
@MaLaCoiD
@MaLaCoiD 2 года назад
Amazing tone! How do we make it right?
@Sara88890
@Sara88890 8 дней назад
Thank you for sharing this! He and his family would camp on my g--g grandparents (Joseph and Sarah Woodard) land in what is now Millwood in the 1880s where he would pick berries and hunt. Garry and the Woodard family would buy and sell food and animals to each other, and he'd often sit, and smoke, and chat at their home. It's nice to learn more about him, even if this is an older documentary, it seems like as many other Native Americans of the time period he experienced a lot of hardships, and mistreatment in his life; I hope their friendship offered him a little bit of respite. His teaching role, and his pacifism are very admirable.
@leeoconnor5142
@leeoconnor5142 9 лет назад
Lost for decades, the films of pioneering Spokane-area documentary filmmaker Robert Lee Pryor have been rediscovered. Beginning in the 1960s, Pryor created films about Chief Spokane Garry, the city of Spokane, and the development of the Spokane and Columbia rivers. "I decided to make films on Spokane," he said, "because of the lack in that area and feeling the pupils in SD81 need material on their city and its history." Students of Spokane Public Schools (District No. 81) and the public had the ability to enjoy Pryor's films for decades. However, when 16mm film projectors gave way to VHS and DVD players, Pryor's documentaries were effectively lost from view. Without a projector, no one could see Pryor's work until the Washington State University MASC (Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections) department digitized Pryor's Chief Spokane Garry film and posted it to RU-vid in 2014. Since then, the documentary has attracted a couple hundred views, including a view by Eastern Washington University history professor Larry Cebula who commented: "Wow, I had no idea that this video existed!" I saw Pryor's Chief Spokane Garry film on RU-vid, and through a correspondence with the filmmaker I was able to learn about his career. Pryor was born in Spokane in 1928 and raised in Cheney where he received his master's degree from Eastern Washington State College (now Eastern Washington University) in 1959. After a year of teaching in Oregon, he moved to Spokane and worked for Spokane Public Schools for thirty-two years. For twenty-three of those years he served as the district's Instructional Media Coordinator, a position that allowed him to screen thousands of educational films and teach himself the art of filmmaking. Also, he said, "my long time interest in 35mm slides helped me in my composition of film scenes." Pryor shot on Kodak Ektachrome film. "My camera," he said, "was a 16mm Bell and Howell and had a good fluid drive tripod." To assemble his films, Pryor said, "I used a very simple editing with a raised back that had clips for placing film clips, a viewer and two hand-cranked reels." Pryor said, "I don't recall anyone else making documentaries on Spokane in the 1960s." As a pioneer in the Spokane documentary film scene, Pryor produced Chief Spokane Garry: Indian of the Northwest in 1966, Spokane: The First 100 Years in 1969, The Spokane River in 1970, and Utilizing Fresh Water Resources: The Columbia River in 1971. In 1983, Pryor retired from the school district and moved to Idaho to live alongside one of his beloved film subjects: the Spokane River. During his career, Pryor worked as writer, producer, director, camera operator, and editor. He produced films independently with his company Northwest Film Productions, and in collaboration with the Instructional Materials Service of Spokane Public Schools. He worked with film editor R. C. Horn of Crown Film Co., artist Patricia Christensen who worked in Pryor's Instructional Media department, narrator Stanley G. Witter Jr. of KREM TV and radio, photographer William J. Benish, and Alpha Cine Lab of Spokane. In the titles of his films, he gave credit to those who lent him assistance, and acknowledged a veritable who's who of Spokane institutions: Eastern Washington State Historical Society, Spokane Public Library, Washington Water Power Company, KREM television, Lincoln First Federal Savings and Loan, Washington State Historical Society, E.T. Becher, John R. Rogers High School, and Northern Pacific Railroad. With Pryor's permission, I had his four documentary films transferred to a digital format by Jeff Tillotson at Lightpress www.lightpress.tv in Seattle in 2015. Pryor also agreed to allow me to post his films on RU-vid. Chief Spokane Garry: Indian of the Northwest, 1966, 23 Minutes ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-BW2rs3IVaqI.html Spokane: The First 100 Years, 1969, 26 Minutes ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Faw7XG1DC3o.html The Spokane River, 1970, 17 Minutes ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-du6pHo3EHYA.html Utilizing Fresh Water Resources: The Columbia River, 1971, 14 Minutes ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_gJ6TMBIJpQ.html Pryor's films should interest scholars because they tell the history of Spokane and are a time capsule that show what Spokane looked like when he created his films. The documentaries should also interest film students because they are a sampler of 16mm filmmaking techniques: time lapse, slow motion, night photography, macro photography, sliding shots, and traditional title art. I am grateful to Pryor for giving me the opportunity to see his films and excited to have his permission to share them with people interested in Spokane's history and the legacy of filmmaking in the northwest. Lee O'Connor Lee O'Connor is author of Take Cover, Spokane: A History of Backyard Bunkers, Basement Hideaways, and Public Fallout Shelters of the Cold War, available at Auntie's Bookstore in Spokane, and on Amazon.com in paperback and Kindle. amzn.com/1496094581
@LarryCebula
@LarryCebula 9 лет назад
Wow, I had no idea that this video existed! Though a bit condescending in tone it is pretty fair and holds up well. I would love to know more about who made it.
@wazzulibrary
@wazzulibrary 9 лет назад
+Larry Cebula We did some researching into R.L. Pryor a few years back, doing our due diligence to consult with the creator prior to digitizing this, but with very little luck. R.L. Pryor is Robert L. Pryor. He was with the Spokane Public Schools, listed as a consultant for instructional materials in the 1960s. He also did a film titled The Spokane River, which apparently exists only here at WSU, on 16mm film (undigitized). We believe he may have died in 1993 (editing later - this has been proved incorrect; see Lee O'Connor's comment on here starting "Shawn Vestal of...", which includes a link to an article about Mr. Pryor), though we may be conflating different Robert Pryors.
@LarryCebula
@LarryCebula 9 лет назад
wazzulibrary Thannks so much for getting this online. Any plans to digitize the Spokane River film?
@meghanwittman8153
@meghanwittman8153 2 года назад
Rest In Peace Chief forever!
@leeoconnor5142
@leeoconnor5142 7 лет назад
Here is a video interview with the filmmaker Pryor where he talks about his reasons for making the Spokane Garry movie and his other films: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-x6RMibLUenc.html
@leeoconnor5142
@leeoconnor5142 8 лет назад
Shawn Vestal of the Spokesman-Review wrote a great story about filmmaker Robert L. Pryor: www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/nov/24/shawn-vestal-four-old-documentaries-on-spokane-wor/
@wazzulibrary
@wazzulibrary 8 лет назад
Nice! Great job tracking him down and digitizing and sharing these. We're quite happy that this one initial sharing led to his full set of films being resurrected, and Mr. Pryor being given his due!
@leeoconnor5142
@leeoconnor5142 9 лет назад
If you have footage of Spokane from WWII or the 1950s-60s Cold War-era, and you are interested in allowing me to use clips of your footage in my documentary, then I would love to hear from you. I am making a documentary film based on my book "Take Cover, Spokane: A History of Backyard Bunkers, Basement Hideaways, and Public Fallout Shelters of the Cold War," which is available in Spokane at Auntie's Bookstore, and online in paperback and Kindle from Amazon.com. Also, if you have an old bunker or shelter from WWII and the Cold War that you would allow me to photograph or take video of, then I would also love to hear from you. And, if you have a story about civil defense or shelters in Spokane that you would be willing to share with me, please do get in touch. My email address is takecover@outlook.com Take Cover, Spokane (the book) for sale: Auntie's Bookstore: www.auntiesbooks.com/ Amazon: amzn.com/1496094581
@LarryCebula
@LarryCebula 9 лет назад
Take Cover, Spokane The Documentary Hey, I have been enjoying your book. If you want to make the plea in a more prominent place, you could do a guest post on my blog, Northwest History.
@leeoconnor5142
@leeoconnor5142 9 лет назад
Larry Cebula Hi Larry, Thank you so much. I would be honored to do a guest post on your blog. Please email me at takecover@outlook.com
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