Submitted by gdenney on Tue, 09/29/2020 - 10:26

Alligator-Horses: Conference on Making Films About History

Friday, March 21, 2014

Speakers: Carroll Smith-Rosenberg from University of Michigan; David Shields, Milliman Distinguished Writer-in-Residence from University of Washington; Brian Huberman, Associate Professor, Department of Visual & Dramatic Arts, Rice University; Ed Hugetz from University of Houston.

Alligator-Horses is a documentary film about the raunchy youth of 1830s America viewed through the lens of the first decade of the twenty-first century. Materials used to evoke our perspective of the time include Penny Press newspapers, Davy Crockett Almanacs, Blackface minstrel songs and a cast of contemporary scholars including Rice faculty and students. The three-hour documentary is structured in five parts around famous and less known events, including King Philip’s War, Davy Crockett’s tour of the northeast, the murder of Helen Jewett a New York prostitute, Jim Crow at the Bowery Theater and the Anti-Abolition riots of 1834.