The Daughter of Dawn 1920 Ages 12+
When
1.00pm, Sun 27 Sep 2015 (94 mins)Where
Gallery of Modern Art & Cinema A
About
With live accompaniment by David Bailey on the Gallery's 1929 Wurlitzer organ.
Thought to have been lost for over 85 years The Daughter of Dawn 1920, which was restored in 2013, features an entirely Native American cast with members of the Comanche and Kiowa Tribes as well as the son and daughter of legendary Comanche chief Quanah Parker. The film centres on a love triangle. Interspersed with the scenes of courting and unrequited love are battles, dances, and buffalo hunting. The Texas Film Company shot the film in the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma in 1920 with a cast of over 300.
Screening with John Young Deer's short film White Fawn's Devotion 1910.
White Fawn's Devotion 1910 Ages 12+
'Most likely the earliest surviving film by a Native American director, this tragic love story of a Native American woman and her white husband was added to the National Film Registry of culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant films in 2008.' National Museum of the American Indian
Ages 12+
Production Credits
- Director: Norbert a Myles
- Year: 1920
- Runtime: 83 minutes
- Country: United States
- Language: English
- Sound: Silent (With Live Musical Accompaniment)
- Colour: Black & White
- Screening Format: 35mm