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You
need
to watch to this! |
Anyone
in Bradford who was looking for a good film to go and watch on May
8th 1945 (VE Day) may well have been tempted by a special Victory
programme at the Odeon. The cinema was offering not one, but three
films - all of them made in the USA. Even more surprisingly one
of the films on offer, Since You Went Away, was about the effect
of war on an American home. But just as the war in West Yorkshire,
and beyond, called on everyone to play their part so those efforts
came to be reflected on the silver screen.
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| This
Bradford family celebrate the Allied Victory in Europe. |
While
the best-remembered wartime movies, such as In Which We Serve, focus
on fighting men, one of the most popular films for home audiences
was Millions Like Us. The film which kicks off with the words "Millions
like us, millions like you" is based on the experience of young
women in an armaments factory and stars Eric Portman from Halifax.
During
the war the cinema had an important propaganda role to play. Amongst
the many documentary films made at the time, Humphrey Jennings'
film Listen To Britain featured the Huddersfield Choral Society
as well as the very popular double-act Flanagan and Allen (responsible
for the theme tune for Dad's Army).
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| Dancing
in the centre of Bradford on VE Day |
But
West Yorkshire people could also be found behind the camera during
the war years and some of the resulting footage, now in the Yorkshire
Film Archive, will be shown at the National Museum of Photography,
Film and Television in Bradford on the 60th anniversary of VE Day
(May 8th 2005). Alex Southern, Education Development Officer for
the Archive, will be presenting the show on the day. She says the
show will consist of "wartime footage made by local people
in the region, showing life on the Home Front and the valuable contribution
to the war effort made in Yorkshire. The show will include film
of the Home Guard, Civil Defence units, the Air Training Corps and
the Women's Land Army as well as the processions and celebrations
in Bradford on VE Day 1945.
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| People
crowd into the centre of Bradford for VE Day |
"Many
of the films in the show have been conserved with the support of
the project. This has enabled the Archive to safeguard
the original films and provide greater access to the collections
so that these fascinating films will always be accessible to the
public in the future."
'Yorkshire
in Wartime' is just the first in a series of film shows called 'Framing
the Past,' presented by the Yorkshire Film Archive which will be
coming to the Museum. The final show will consist of films made
in and about Bradford over the past century.
Even
before the war came to an end in 1945 British films were asking
what the country might be like after the war. The Way To The Stars,
made in 1945 and starring the late John Mills, is ostensibly about
life on a British bomber base but suggests that the ensuing peace
should be worth the sacrifice of so many lives. This message is
reinforced in the film by the use of a poem, For Johnny by John
Pudney, about a dead airman which includes the lines: Better
by far
For Johnny-the-bright-star,
To keep your head,
And see his children fed.
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| Some
of the people who spent VE Day in Bradford were in uniform. |
The
National Museum of Photography, Film and Television will be taking
this story forward a few years when, as part of its VE Day event,
it will be screening the 1949 film Passport To Pimlico. This light-hearted
look at post-war redevelopment is
about what happens when the inhabitants of Pimlico find they are
part of Burgundy and declare an end to rationing! However, the film
also looks back nostalgically to the war years when people seem
to be united behind a common purpose.
Bill
Lawrence, Head of Film at the Museum, talks about the effect of
the war on the British cinema: "With the declaration of war
cinemas closed overnight - they thought there were going to be major
bombardments - but after a week they decided this was unnecessary
because it was a major morale booster that people could still go
to the cinema and life could have a semblance of normality. After
an initial dip, there were about 990,000 admissions just before
the war, it started to rise again and by 1946 it had crept up to
1.6 billion admissions in the UK which compares to 176 million admissions
now so it was a fantastic period of people going to the cinema.
The Ministry of Information realised film was a major way you could
get ideas across to the public and get them to understand things.
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| People
like you and me found themselves on the big screen and behind
the camera. |
"The
cinema was a way that people could plug into the bigger picture
- films like The Foreman Went to France as well as semi-propaganda
films like Went The Day Well. There were concerns in the early part
of the war about invasion and plots about Nazis invading Britain
or hidden as landed gentry were written into story-lines."
However,
not all propaganda films were so entertaining - Bill has unearthed
a short information film about compost heaps.
Although
Passport To Pimlico is a farce Bill says it look back the way people
had to pull together during the war: "There is a real sense
that things were quite good during the war in terms of communities
bonding but there's this major reconstruction taking place at the
same time."
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| Can
you imagine George Formby as a double-agent? |
Bill
has been looking back at the films that were popular during the
war. He says: "There were films that were successful like Gone
With The Wind but then there are films that have been forgotten
like The Wicked Lady which came out towards the end of the war just
seemed to strike a chord...One of the things during the war is everybody
is really open for a good laugh and people like George Formby really
came into their own during the war. He made his last film in 1946
but in the five years of the war he made nine different feature
films, some of which we're very relevant to the war. In one he plays
a double-agent in Germany. Can you imagine George Formby as a double
agents. Arthur Lucan (Old Mother Riley) also made nine films during
the war. In some ways I can't imagine them being successful in any
other period."
And
if you are still wondering what other films you may have missed
because you could not get along to The Odeon in Bradford on May
8th 1945 then we can reveal they were Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo,
featuring Spencer Tracey and Robert Mitchum, and the now completely
forgotten Man In Half Moon Street. Perhaps going to a street party
might have been a better bet.
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| Ìý |
You
need
to watch to this!
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Thanks
to the Yorkshire Film Archive fo Thanks to the Yorkshire Film Archive
for permission to use the film and all images of Bradford on VE Day,
1945. No images may be reproduced without permission from the Archive.
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