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Adolphe Le Prince
Adolphe Le Prince
from Wikipedia

Adolphe Le Prince (c. June 1872 – 20 August 1901) was an English actor. He appeared in Roundhay Garden Scene, the earliest surviving film.[1]

Key Information

In 1898, Le Prince appeared as a witness for the defence in a lawsuit brought by Thomas Edison against the American Mutoscope Company.[2] Le Prince testified about the inventions of his late father, Louis Le Prince, rebutting Edison's claim to be the inventor of cinematography, and therefore entitled to royalties for the use of the process.[citation needed]

Death

[edit]

Adolphe and his family had tried desperately to find his father following the latter's mysterious disappearance on 16 September 1890, to no avail. Adolphe later retreated to the house he and his brothers built as a refuge for his mother in Point O' Woods, New York, vicinity of Fire Island, for the summer, and in August the rest of the family joined him. On the afternoon of 20 August 1901, Le Prince picked up his hunting gun and went shooting for ducks in the area. He walked out into the sand dunes and fatally shot himself through the forehead.[3] The official verdict was suicide.

Filmography

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
1888 Roundhay Garden Scene Self Short
Accordion Player Accordion Player

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Adolphe Le Prince'' is an English actor known for appearing in ''Roundhay Garden Scene'', the earliest surviving motion picture, and for his role in defending his father's claim as a pioneer of cinematography in a major patent dispute. Born in 1872 in Leeds, Yorkshire, England, Adolphe was the son of French-born inventor Louis Le Prince and Elizabeth Whitley. At the age of sixteen, he appeared as himself in ''Roundhay Garden Scene'' (1888), filmed by his father in Roundhay, Leeds, alongside family members and friends in what is recognized as the oldest extant film. He also featured in another early experiment by his father, ''Accordion Player'' (1888), playing the instrument. After Louis Le Prince's disappearance in 1890, Adolphe and his mother sought to promote recognition of his father's contributions to motion picture technology. In 1898, Adolphe served as a witness for the defense in the U.S. patent infringement lawsuit brought by Thomas Edison against the American Mutoscope Company, where he aimed to prove prior invention by his father, though he was not permitted to present key evidence such as Le Prince's cameras. Adolphe Le Prince died on 20 August 1901 at Fire Island, New York, from a gunshot wound to the head while on a hunting trip; the circumstances of his death remain undetermined.

Early life

Birth and family background

Adolphe Le Prince was born in 1872 in Hunslet, Yorkshire, England, in the Leeds area. He was the son of Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince and Sarah Elizabeth Whitley, also known as Elizabeth Le Prince. As the eldest son in the Le Prince family, Adolphe grew up in a household rooted in Yorkshire during the 1870s and 1880s. The family resided in various locations across Yorkshire in this period, including Roundhay in the early 1870s—where they lived with his maternal grandfather Joseph Whitley—and later in Leeds itself by the time of the 1881 census. This Yorkshire background provided the immediate family context for Adolphe's early years, closely tied to his father's activities before the family's later experiences in the United States.

Youth and collaboration with Louis Le Prince

Adolphe Le Prince spent his teenage years in Leeds, where he assisted his father Louis Le Prince in numerous motion picture experiments throughout the 1880s. These efforts were deeply embedded in family life, with much of the work taking place at home or nearby sites including Oakwood Grange, the residence of Adolphe's grandparents Joseph and Sarah Whitley in Roundhay. Adolphe was present and contributed help during the preparation and shooting of the early test films in 1888, including activities at Oakwood Grange that resulted in the creation of Roundhay Garden Scene on October 14, 1888. His involvement reflected the collaborative nature of the family's inventive pursuits during this formative period for motion picture development.

Pioneering film work

On-screen roles in 1888 shorts

Adolphe Le Prince appeared on-screen in two of his father Louis Le Prince's surviving 1888 short films, marking him as one of the earliest individuals captured in motion pictures. In Roundhay Garden Scene, filmed on October 14, 1888, at Oakwood Grange, the home of his grandparents Joseph and Sarah Whitley in Roundhay, Leeds, Adolphe is one of four family members seen walking and laughing in the garden. The silent short features Adolphe alongside Joseph Whitley, Sarah Whitley, and Harriet Hartley, with the group casually moving about the outdoor setting. As a participant in this recognized earliest surviving motion picture, Adolphe holds a notable position in early film history as one of the first four people ever recorded on film. Adolphe also featured in the 1888 silent short Accordion Player, directed by Louis Le Prince. In this brief film, he is the central subject, shown in a single static shot playing a diatonic button accordion. The work, shot in Roundhay, highlights his performance as the sole on-screen figure.

Recollections of production details

Adolphe Le Prince later shared recollections of the technical aspects of his father's pioneering 1888 films, providing details on their production speeds based on his direct involvement and family knowledge. He stated that Roundhay Garden Scene was shot at approximately 12 frames per second. This figure appears in several historical descriptions of the work and aligns with accounts from the Le Prince family. He also recalled that Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge was filmed at 20 frames per second, a rate he associated with the more fluid motion captured in that sequence. These technical recollections were conveyed through family accounts preserved over time. Later examination of Roundhay Garden Scene by film archivists and historians, including assessments from institutions like the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television (now the National Science and Media Museum), has suggested that the effective rate may have been around 7 frames per second to produce more natural movement in the surviving footage. This discrepancy highlights the challenges in determining exact original speeds from early paper-film experiments without standardized equipment.

Defense of Le Prince's contributions

Family advocacy after 1890

Following the disappearance of his father, Louis Le Prince, on 16 September 1890 while traveling by train from Dijon to Paris, Adolphe Le Prince and his mother Elizabeth faced immediate challenges in locating him. The family reported the disappearance to authorities, distributed notices, and pursued leads without success, as no trace of Louis was ever found. In the years after 1890, Elizabeth and Adolphe shifted their efforts toward advancing recognition of Louis Le Prince's pioneering contributions to cinematography, particularly his development of a single-lens camera and the motion picture sequences he filmed in 1888. Adolphe, who had assisted his father in production and was familiar with the inventions, worked alongside his mother to promote Louis's priority as inventor amid emerging competing claims in the field. The family encountered obstacles such as lack of definitive proof in some areas and the growing prominence of other figures like Thomas Edison, yet persisted in their efforts to honor Louis's work.

Testimony in patent infringement suit

In December 1898, Adolphe Le Prince testified as a witness for the defense in the patent infringement suit Equity 6928, brought by Thomas Edison against the American Mutoscope Company in the United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York. The American Mutoscope Company sought to invalidate Edison's claim to being the sole original inventor of the motion picture camera by demonstrating prior invention. Adolphe described his father Louis Le Prince's experiments and achievements, emphasizing that Louis had developed and used a single-lens motion picture camera as early as 1888, years before Edison's patent applications. He recounted details of the construction and operation of the devices Louis built in Leeds, England, and affirmed that they successfully captured moving images on paper film. Early motion picture sequences filmed by Louis Le Prince, including Roundhay Garden Scene filmed in October 1888, were presented in court. The physical cameras themselves were not permitted as evidence in the proceedings. Edison's counsel challenged Adolphe's credibility and the completeness of the surviving evidence. After extended litigation, the trial court ruled in favor of Edison in 1901, affirming him as the first and sole inventor of moving pictures. This decision was overturned on appeal in 1902, removing Edison's exclusive claim to the invention's priority.

Later years

Life in the United States

In his later years, Adolphe Le Prince spent time in the United States, including for his testimony in the 1898 patent interference case and at the time of his death. His body was found in July 1901 on Fire Island, New York, near a family summer cottage in Point O' Woods, after he had gone duck hunting.

Death

Circumstances and cause

On 20 August 1901, Adolphe Le Prince died at Fire Island, New York, at the age of 29, during a summer stay with his family at their house in Point O' Woods. He had taken a hunting gun for duck shooting and ventured into the nearby sand dunes that afternoon. His body was later found in the dunes near the family cottage, with the gun at his side and a gunshot wound to the head. The circumstances of his death remain undetermined.

Legacy

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