Posts Tagged ‘Broad Street’

December 30th, 2009

New Year’s Day in Philadelphia: “As Long as My Feet Take Me Up the Street”

By Melissa Mandell

63973_ca_object_representations_media_3773_largeAs the new year approaches, we at PhilaPlace turn to what Joe Figurski of 2nd & Carpenter calls “Memories of Mummery.”  Joe is a parade veteran, having first marched with a comic club in 1944 when he was 10 years old — “they gave you a hot dog, a dollar, and a soda.”  Joe joined the Fralinger String Band as an accordion player when he was 13 years old and marched with them for almost 40 years.  After a few years off, Joe resumed strutting for the Hegeman String Band in 1998 and says “I’m going to do this as long as my feet take me up the street.”  Here’s Joe back in the day, when he marched for Fralinger:

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December 18th, 2009

Home Movies and Philadelphia History

By Dwight Swanson

Departure for ItalyIn 1923, the Eastman Kodak Company began marketing its Cine-Kodak movie camera and 16mm film, and just as the Kodak Brownie camera had opened the world to a flood of snapshots, 16mm movie film and later the cheaper 8mm and Super 8 formats, brought the world of moviemaking out of the theaters and into people’s homes.

Home movies are often thought of in terms of their technical limitations—the unsteady cameras and the overexposed films—and limited in their subject matter. These are often overstated, since over the years there have been incredibly talented home movie makers who have filmed almost every imaginable event, but what home movies do best (or at least most often) is capture peoples’ travels, celebrations, and daily lives. Because of this, scenes that never would have been shot by newsreel cameramen or professional cinematographers were captured on film, and we now can view scenes of Philadelphia life that we wouldn’t be able to see in any other way.

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