Alice Guy-Blaché (1873-1968) was not just a pioneer; she was the world's first true film director.
Beginning her career in 1896, she took the camera out of the lecture hall and gave it a purpose: storytelling. For over two decades, she ran Gaumont's entire French production, directed thousands of films, invented narrative cinema with La Fée aux Choux, and pioneered techniques like the close-up, synchronized sound (the Chronophone), and naturalistic acting. Her ambition led her across the Atlantic, where she became the first woman to own and run a major American studio, Solax, building a state-of-the-art facility in Fort Lee, New Jersey.
But as the film industry consolidated into the powerful, male-dominated studio system of Hollywood, Guy-Blaché was systematically cast aside. Her directorial credits were reassigned, her innovations claimed by male contemporaries, and her vast filmography was left to decompose in obscurity.
The First Auteur is the dramatic, comprehensive account of a creative genius who laid the foundation for modern storytelling. Tracing her arc from the fin de siècle laboratories of Paris to the height of American entrepreneurship and her subsequent decades-long fight against oblivion, this book restores Alice Guy-Blaché to her rightful place: the forgotten architect of the silver screen. Approx.150 pages, 28500 word count
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