Alice Guy

Alice Guy

DirectorProducerWriter
Born
July 1, 1873
Died
March 24, 1968
Awards
2 wins, 2 nominations

The world's first female filmmaker, French-born Alice Guy entered the film business in 1896 as a secretary at Gaumont, a manufacturer of movie cameras and projectors who had purchased a "cinématographe" from its inventors, the Lumiere brothers. The next year Gaumont became the world's first motion…

Biography

The world's first female filmmaker, French-born Alice Guy entered the film business in 1896 as a secretary at Gaumont, a manufacturer of movie cameras and projectors who had purchased a "cinématographe" from its inventors, the Lumiere brothers. The next year Gaumont became the world's first motion picture production company when they switched to creating movies, and Guy became its first film director. She impressed the company so much with the output (she averaged two two-reelers a week) and quality of her productions that by 1905 she was made the company's production director, supervising its other directors. In 1907 she married Herbert Blaché, an Englishman who ran Gaumont's British and German offices. The pair went to the U.S. to set up the company's operations there. In 1910 Mme. Guy set up her own production company, Solax, in New York and with her husband built a studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey. After a period of critical and financial success, the couple's fortunes declined when Thomas Alva Edison's trust hindered film production in the East coast, and they eventually shut down the studio in 1919. Although her husband secured work directing films for several major Hollywood studios, Guy was never able to secure any directorial jobs there, never made a film again, most of her films were lost, some were credited to other film directors, and she did no receive recognition for her pioneering work in France and the United States. She returned to France in 1922 after her divorce from Blaché, and in 1964 returned to the U.S. and lived in Mahwah, New Jersey - not far from where her original studios were - with her daughter, where she died in 1968.

Second Unit or Assistant Director

Stronger Than DeathStronger Than Death(1920)

Additional Crew

Algie, the MinerAlgie, the Miner(1912)

Thanks

TearsTears(2014)

Known for

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Photos 10

Alice Guy in Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché (2018)Herbert Blaché and Alice GuyAlice GuyAudrey Berry, Vinnie Burns, and Alice Guy in Dick Whittington and his Cat (1913)Alice Guy in Fra Diavolo (1912)Alice Guy, Billy Quirk, and Magda Foy in A Solax Celebration (1912)