Now We're in the Air will be shown tonight at the Library of Congress Packard Campus (19053 Mt Pony Rd., Culpeper, Virginia). Here are at few more details on this late breaking event.
Now We're in the Air & Corporal Kate, tonight @ 7:30
NOW WE’RE IN THE AIR (Paramount, 1927)
Louise Brooks appeared in 14 American films during the silent era. Five
of these features are currently thought to be entirely lost, while two
others survive only as fragments or incomplete copies. Following a tip
from Academy Award winning film historian Kevin Brownlow, Robert Byrne
learned of a fragmentary nitrate print of the hitherto considered lost
“Now We’re in the Air” (1927) stored in the vaults of Národní filmový
archiv in Prague. In this presentation, Byrne will present a brief
description of the project to restore and preserve what remains,
followed by a screening of the entire 22-minute restoration.
CORPORAL KATE (DeMille Pictures Corp., 1926)
Frequently cited as one of the first war films to feature the female
angle, “Corporate Kate” is the story of a pair of Brooklyn manicurists
who go to France during WWI to entertain the troops with a
song-and-dance act. Both girls struggle not only with the brutalities of
war but also with their love for the same man. This is the premiere
screening of the newly preserved DeMille Pictures Corp. feature that
stars Vera Reynolds, Julia Faye and Kenneth Thompson. Andrew Simpson
will provide live musical accompaniment for the evening’s screenings.
Seating may be limited for this screening as it is part of “Mostly Lost
6: A Film Identification Workshop” and many of the registered
participants will be attending. Black & white, 85 min. No
reservations - seating is on a walk-in basis.
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