Carey. Baltimore Afro-American,10. Jan 22, 1927. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
Announces the Colored Players Film Corporation’s Ten Nights in a Barroom on the program of the Carey Theater in Pittsburgh and includes a plot summary. By Elissa Stern
"Ten Nights in a Bar Room" Gets Showing. Philadelphia Tribune, 3. Nov 20, 1926. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
This article reviews a preview screening of Ten Nights in a Barroom given by the Colored Players Film Corporation at Philadelphia’s Gladstone Theater “before a representative audience.” The author also mentions a post-screening visit to the CPFC studios where “race artists, electricians, and cameramen” were busily working on a film. In addition, he notes Starkman’s dissatisfaction with the “indifference and lack of cooperation of certain local theater owners in doing their part to encourage worthwhile Negro pictures”. By Elissa Stern
Stellar Colored Picture At…Royal Theater Next W…. Philadelphia Tribune, 3. July 17, 1926. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
The article includes a summary of A Prince of His Race by the Colored Players Film Corporation and an announcement for its exhibition at the local Royal Theater. Moreover, the article states that “an excellent supporting cast of local talent” was used in the film. By Elissa Stern
Gilpin Enters Movie’s Realm. Philadelphia Tribune, 3. June 19, 1926. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
This article discusses the involvement of Charles Gilpin, the famed stage actor, in the Colored Players Film Corporation’s Ten Nights in a Barroom and announces a preview screening. Includes brief quotes from Gilpin. By Elissa Stern
At the Elmore. Pittsburgh Courier, 10A. Aug 13, 1927. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
An announcement for the presentation of the Colored Players Film Corporation’s Children of Fate at Pittsburgh’s Elmore Theater touts the film as “a super movie play with an all-star colored cast” and includes a plot summary. By Elissa Stern
Royal. Baltimore Afro-American, 13. April 13, 1929. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
This elaborate full page advertisement for the Colored Players Film Corporation’s The Scar of Shame in Baltimore includes a plot summary and a screen shot reproduction and bills the film as the “First All-Colored Talking Picture!”. By Elissa Stern
Dudley, S. H. (1927, June 26). Dud’s Dope. Chicago Defender, 8A. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
S. H. Dudley, who later becomes closely involved with the Colored Players Film Corporation advocates the production of race pictures. By Elissa Stern
Dudley, S. H. (1927, June 25). Dud’s Dope. Chicago Defender, 8A. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
S. H. Dudley discusses returning from a conference in Philadelphia in which he was invited to become involved with the Colored Players Film Corporation and appeals to readers to contribute financially to make “a one million dollar corporation”. By Elissa Stern
Dudley, S. H. (1927, March 12). Dud’s Dope. Chicago Defender, 8A. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
In his column, S. H. Dudley, who became closely involved with the Colored Players Film Corporation of Philadelphia, advocates the production of race films and cites the Colored Players as a praiseworthy example. By Elissa Stern
Elmore Theater. Pittsburgh Courier, 10A. Aug 6, 1927. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
Advertises a film by the Colored Players Film Corporation of Philadelphia entitled Children of Fate, with the interesting misprint “Children of Hate” as mentioned in Musser (2001). Cites the film as the “most talked-of movie of the year” and “The Greatest Colored Picture Ever.” By Elissa Stern
Scores of Race Theaters Install Talkies. Pittsburgh Courier, p. 9A. March 30, 1929. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.]
This article provides a reference relating to the film historical context in which the Colored Players Film Corporation was working in the second half of the 1920s, when the silent film industry was on its last legs as sound film took over. By Elissa Stern
Goldwyn, R. (1974, November 17). The Scar of Shame: Why the Fuss over this Old, Made-in-Philadelphia, Silent Black Film. Sunday Bulletin, Philadelphia Bulletin, p. 16. [Cited in Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001.278-85.]
By Elissa Stern
Bowser, P. Lost, Then Found: The Wedding Scene from The Scar of Shame (1929). Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001. 188-9.
This brief article includes a description of a “rediscovered” scene from the Colored Players Film Corporation’s 1929 silent film The Scar of Shame. Bowser also provides bits of information about the history of the actual prints of the film. The American Film Institute acquired 35mm prints of the film around 1970 and this became the commercially available video version. The wedding scene, however, discovered a few years later by Bowser in a 16mm version, is missing from the AFI version. By Elissa Stern
Musser, C. Appendix C: A Colored Players Film Corporation Filmography. Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001. 278-85.
This filmography of the four films produced by the Colored Players Film Corporation of Philadelphia is by far the most detailed source of information regarding Philadelphia film production in the second half of the 1920s. Musser’s filmography includes cast listings, production credits, the length of the features (all are 8 reels), plot descriptions transcribed from newspaper advertisements, production and screening dates and locations, as well as copious lists of relevant contemporary newspaper citations. By Elissa Stern
Musser, C. Colored Players Film Corporation: An Alternative to Micheaux. Oscar Micheaux and his circle : African-American filmmaking and race cinema of the silent era / Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser editors and curators. [0253339944] Bloomington : Indiana University Press, c2001. 178-87.
This article relays detailed information about the organization of the Colored Players Film Corporation, the inter-racial and inter-ethnic context in which its films were produced, and also provides interesting discussion about the rivalry between Colored Players and the company of Oscar Micheaux, including the “st[ealing of] each other’s actors” (Musser, 2001, p. 182). By Elissa Stern


