Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Sidney Olcott | The Girl Spy: An Incident of the Civil War / 1909 || The Further Adventures of the Girl Spy / 1910 || The Bravest Girl in the South / 1910 || The Romance of the Girl Spy / 1910 || The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg / 1910 || To the Aid of Stonewall Jackson: An Exploit of the Spy Girl / 1911

rebel without a good cause

by Douglas Messerli

 

From 1909 to 1911, Kalem pictures featured a series of six short films, all directed by Sidney Olcott, written and starring Gene Gauntier about a girl spy, Nan, working for the Confederate cause during the Civil War.

     The films include The Girl Spy: An Incident of the Civil War (1909), The Further Adventures of the Girl Spy (1910), The Bravest Girl in the South (1910), The Love Romance of the Girl Spy (1910), The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg (1910), and To the Aid of Stonewall Jackson: An Exploit of the Girl Spy (1911).

      These shorts all feature Gauntier as a rough and tumble hero, willing to go through the most difficult of feats, and who at one point or another cross-dresses in order to achieve her goals. They were inspired by the real-life woman spy Belle Boyd. They were shot at Kalem studios near Jacksonville, Florida.

      The adventures are important, in part, because they were the precursors to the popular serial films in the 1910s starring Pearl White and Grace Cunard, which featured women able to take on their male counterparts; but also, in terms of LGBTQ+ history because they represented the first wave of US films featuring strong and daring women as cross-dressers, which included also The House of Closed Shutters (1910), The Red Girl and the Child (1910), Taming a Husband (1910), and Judith of Bethulia (1914), among others.

       Only three of these films remain available, the first held at the at the Library and Archives Canada, the second at The British Film Institute and The Library of Congress, and The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg at the EYE Filmmuseum in Amsterdam.

 

 

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coded messages

 

Gene Gauntier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) The Girl Spy: An Incident of the Civil War / 1909

 

In this film Nan is portrayed in the latter part of the Civil War when the Union Army had pushed their operations deep into the South. In an early scene we see the Union soldiers arrive at her house, ransacking the place for food and stealing her hen, with Nan, dressed as a Southern Belle, trying to fight them off and angered by the event.

 


   Secretly, however, the motherless girl, dedicated to the Southern cause, along with her boyfriend have been ordered to tap the telegraph wires and listen in to the code of the Union Army messages, reporting them back to headquarters. The first two minutes of this film, when Nan receives her orders has been lost, and the film picks up with the scene I describe above with the arrival of the Union Soldiers on a raiding mission.

      Immediately after, we observe her boyfriend shinnying up a local telephone pole, where he cuts both wires and hooks them up to his own listening device. He listens in as we seen the Union soldiers receive an important message which their specialist telegraphs, as he jots down the messages from the Morse Code.

 

    Suddenly observing a small group of Union soldiers in the near distances, he runs off, returns home and hands the message to Nan, to hide himself jumping into an empty water barrel situated next to the house.

     The Union soldiers have followed him home and, as they begin to search the house, Nan, now dressed as a man, sneaks around from the other side of the house and rides off on one of their horses. They ride after her, leaving only the one horseless soldier behind. As he shoots at the escaping Nan, the hidden boyfriend rises from the barrel, clonks the soldier over the head, and strips him, putting on his Union uniform.



      Nan, meanwhile, attempts to outrun the pursuing four soldiers, fording a small stream, and, in what the intertitles suggest is “a clever use,” jumps off her horse and behind a tree pulls off her male garb to transform herself back into a woman who points out the direction to the passing soldiers in which she claims to have seen the Confederate ride. 

       Eventually, they come across their stolen horse, realizing that they have been tricked.

      At Edward’s Road House, in the meantime, the now drunken group of drunken Union soldiers sit drinking. Nan arrives on the run, and seeing the soldiers has no choice but, in her womanly garb, to sit down to a table and order up something, served predictably perhaps but also somewhat ironically by a black man given the Union attempt to “free” the slaves. The Union men, presented in this Southern version of reality as monsters, all begin to manhandle her.

 

     At nearly the same moment, her boyfriend, dressed in Union regalia arrives and orders the men to leave her alone. As they move inside, he quickly hands Nan a gun, and at that very moment the man whose horse she has stolen suddenly arrives, recognizing her. She has no choice but to shoot him dead, telling the other soldiers who rush out of the road house that a stranger has just shot him and ridden off.

     Nan and her Confederate soldier run off again, the four Union soldiers behind them. Nan’s boyfriend turns, attempting to shoot them, but is himself shot instead. Terribly wounded, he hides Nan in a large bunch of rushes as, pulling off his fake beard and moustache, he pretends to be another Union soldier pointing out the way of the escapees to his pursuers.

     In front of her, he pulls open his shirt, revealing his wounds, falls down, and dies, Nan rushing to his side, briefly hugging him to her before continuing on her own escape.

      In the last frame, she finally reaches her Confederate base, handing over the secret messages where she is lauded for her brave feats.

 

Los Angeles, July 3, 2023

 

 

 

 

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through an open window

 

Gene Gauntier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) The Further Adventures of the Girl Spy / 1910

 

While Nan is visiting with several of her female friends, a peddler arrives pretending to sell his wares, but sneaking a secret message to her: she is wanted at Confederate headquarters.

     She quickly rides there and receives her orders. Infiltrating a known Union meeting place, Miller’s Tavern, she observes three men meeting in a back room and, from the outside, carefully lifts up the window a bit to listen in to their conversation.

 

     However, one of the soldiers observes that the room has become far windier and perceives that the window has been risen. He goes to check out the situation and there finds Nan scribbling down their discussions concerning their secret plans.

      Hearing his arrival, she pulls out a gun and shoots, the two remaining within quickly moving to the window and themselves shooting, only to finish off their fellow soldier as Nan runs off. Once more a foot pursuit follows, with the two armed men close behind her. She returns home, lifts up of the bucket and drops herself in the well, the two men arriving puzzled by her sudden disappearance.

       But the woman of the house, either mother (which the documentation has told she doesn’t have), an aunt, or servant, brought out by the soldiers immediately calls for the help of an older man once the soldiers have left; realizing where Nan might have disappeared to, they gradually wheel up the heavy bucket upon which she is still standing, finding her soaking wet.


      Nan, now dressed as a boy, is put into a gunny sack by the older man and placed on his wagon with several sacks of apples, evidently meant as provisions for the Union Army. He drives through enemy lines, one of his bags inspected, and when safely into enemy territory opens up the bag from which the boy Nan emerges.

       The boy climbs high into a tree beneath which two Union men come to rest or evidently picnic. But as soon as they have sat down and opened their sack of food, she jumps from the tree onto one of the horses and rides off.

       She speeds off the Confederate camp and proudly delivers up the Union secrets.

       This second work in the series is not nearly as interesting or unpredictable as the first, and the fact that her scenarios were pretty much made up as the filmmakers went along becomes fairly apparent.

        By the time of the fifth extant film the series had grown much more sophisticated.

 

Los Angeles, July 3, 2023

     

       

 

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riding the rails

 

Gene Gauntier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) The Bravest Girl in the South / 1910 || lost film or unavailable

 

There is no evidence that this film is still available and it is likely a lost movie. But a synopsis does appear on the IMDb site, attributed to Bruce R. Bardarik, without providing any information of who he is or how he came to see this movie. It reads:

 

“Worn out and wounded, a Confederate messenger crawls up to the house of Nan, and gives her a dispatch for delivery to another agent fifty miles distant. Ostensibly bound for market, she rides through the Federal camp, but is suspected and hotly pursued. By taking shelter in a log shanty, she temporarily evades the soldiers, but they get on her track again, and another thrilling chase ensues. Reaching the railway, Nan invokes the aid of a friendly engine driver, and has the satisfaction of outdistancing her pursuers and delivering the all-important document.”

 

Los Angeles, July 3, 2023

 

 

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in bed with the enemy

 

Gene Gauntier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) The Love Romance of the Girl Spy / 1910 || lost film or unavailable

 

Evidently this fourth of the girl spy series was to have been the last of the series. It would seem a good ending, since the Confederate spy, oddly enough, falls in love in this picture with a Union soldier, Captain Wilkins, who after the War claims his Rebel sweetheart.

      Accordingly, we also do not know if this film, about falling in heterosexual love, has any LGBTQ content. I can find no pictures of the movie. But we do still have “The Moving Picture World” synopsis, which reads as follow:

 

“This is the fourth and last of the Kalem Company's celebrated series of productions relating the fascinating adventures of Nan, the Girl Spy. In this is shown how Fate played a trick on Nan; how she found the man to whom she entrusted herself and her future happiness in the army of the enemy she hated so bitterly.”

Scene I. The End of the Battle - Nan Meets the Wounded Union Officer.

Scene II. One Mouth Later - Love's First Awakening.

Scene III. Captain Wilkins Bids Nan Farewell.

Scene IV. The Girl Spy Is Captured.

Scene V. The Escape.

Scene VI. Nan Tells General Lee of Her Failure.

Scene VII. After the War Captain Wilkins Claims His Rebel Sweetheart.

 

     It would have been wonderful, if nothing else, to know how Gauntier and Olcott brought the two warring sides together and justified the girl spy’s Confederate betrayal, her support of slavery, and her previous murder of so many Union soldiers.

 

Los Angeles, July 3, 2023

 

 

 

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deeper waters

 

Gene Gauntier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) The Girl Spy Before Vicksburg / 1910

 

In this 5th installation of the girl spy series, gay actor and director Robert Vignola plays the role of the Confederate General, with Australian actor and director J. D. McGowan as his handsome assistant. The only copy of the film that remains is held at the EYE Filmmuseum in Amsterdam which explains its Dutch intertitles, translated in the version I saw into English.

 


     This spy story is quite simple. A Union powder wagon is making its way across the country guarded by mounted Union soldiers. Without men he might detach to destroy the wagon, the Confederate General is forced to call upon his own daughter, Anna (Gauntier, her character called Nan in other sources and the credits) who, dressed in a Union military uniform, rides to the Union unit with a fake declaration, telling the group to move in another direction. They believe not only in the paperwork but that its messenger is one of their own and a male. Evidently, they are quite easily duped.

     As they prepare to turn about, Anna knocks out the young guard who is attending the wagon and takes his place. As they begin to move forward, she plants a dynamite cartridge under the wagon, lights the fuse, and hurries away from the danger.


 

    The wagon explodes into what the publicity sheet described as “a heap of charred embers.” As Anna rushes off, she is followed closely by Union soldiers, escaping as she leaves her horse and dives into a river, pretending to swim off. The soldiers follow her, swimming out of the frame. Meanwhile the camera holds still, focusing on the rather still lovely scene of the river without seemingly a soul in site—until suddenly Anna rises from the deep waters, having escaped her pursuers by remaining there for a rather long period of time.

 

 

      She returns home to find her mother, frantic at her absence, kneeling in prayer.

      The scenes with the Union military, the ammunition explosion, and particularly the river scene are all quite wonderfully filmed by cinematographer George K. Hollister.

      Too bad the film, like Griffith’s before it, celebrates heroism for a cause that was determined to keep blacks in slavery. It is notable that in this film, the original driver of the ammunition wagon is a black man, not a white in blackface.

 

Los Angeles, June 13, 2023

 


     

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marching to the rear

 

Gene Gautier (screenplay), Sidney Olcott (director) To the Aid of Stonewall Jackson: An Exploit of the Spy Girl / 1911 || lost film or unavailable

 

The final episode of the spy girl series may have been closer to a feature film, although again we cannot know whether or not it as any LGBTQ content. This time we do have a photograph from the production and a longer “Moving Picture World” synopsis.



“Monday, while the girl spy is visiting relatives, General Shields, of the Union army, and his staff, take possession of the house for the night. Nan, seeing an opportunity to employ her professional talents, makes an effort to learn the Union officer's plans. She finds the General's room guarded, but discovers another way to overhear the conversation. Retiring to her room on the second floor, she crawls out of the window on to the roof of the gallery, lowers herself down to the ground and takes up a position at the window of the General's room. Hearing the officer say he would attack Jackson at daybreak, Nan thinks of the doughty General and his Confederate army one hundred miles away. Starting on her journey, Nan rides at top speed with her important information. Tuesday night, Nan has twenty miles more to go and her horse is fagged out. This forces her to rest at a nearby town, where she unwittingly runs into danger and is suspected of being the girl spy. The loyal keeper of the tavern warns Nan of the suspicion aroused against her and an hour later Nan escapes from her room, goes to the barn for her horse, which she mounts and rides off. As she passes the tavern door the Union soldiers, hearing the sound of her horse, all rush out and readily recognize the spy is trying to escape. They quickly mount their horses and follow in pursuit. Nan, however, being thoroughly familiar with the country, fools them. Finally reaching the Confederate lines, she asks that she be taken to General Jackson, whom she informs that Shields will march at sunrise Wednesday morning and before noon will attack Jackson's flank. The doughty General of the Confederates replies, "We will march immediately and surprise General Shield's rear."

 

Los Angeles, July 3, 2023

Reprinted from World Cinema Review (July 2023).

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