Dryden Theatre

From Ephemeral Film Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Dryden Theatre is located at the George Eastman Museum, near Rochester, New York in the United States.

The theater is the primary exhibition space for showcasing the museum's collection of motion pictures, recent restorations, as well as traveling exhibitions and premieres of new foreign and independent films. To date, more than 16,000 film titles have been screened at the theater.[1]

The Dryden Theatre was constructed in 1951 after a donation from George and Ellen Dryden, George Eastman's niece. The first film to be shown at the Dryden was Jean Renoir’s silent film Nana (1924). The museum's founding film curator James Card (1915–2000) was a pioneer in the archival world and a close friend and confidant of Henri Langlois of the Cinémathèque Française in Paris. Together, they helped contribute to the appreciation of film as an art form.

As of 2021,[2] the Dryden Theatre is one of only a handful in the world certified to project nitrate film and annually hosts the Nitrate Picture Show, a film festival devoted to screening original nitrate film prints.[3][4]

The George Eastman Museum's renovation projects will temporarily shut the Dryden Theatre by mid-October 2019.[5]

References

  1. "About the Dryden Theatre | George Eastman Museum". www.eastman.org.
  2. "The Nitrate Picture Show | George Eastman Museum". www.eastman.org. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  3. "The Nitrate Picture Show returns to the George Eastman Museum in 2016 | George Eastman Museum". www.eastman.org.
  4. Lingan, John (2015-06-17). "A weekend at the world's most dangerous film festival". The Verge.
  5. "Work at George Eastman Museum will temporarily close Dryden Theatre. Here's what to know". Democrat & Chronicle. 8 August 2019. Archived from the original on 2021-01-17. Retrieved 19 August 2020.

External links

Lua error in Module:Coordinates at line 492: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).