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How to Be Eccentric: The Films of Richard Massingham (1933-1950)

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"If you asked me who is the great English cineaste, I would reply: Massingham."
--Henri Langlois, founder, Cinematheque Française Though unknown to contemporary audiences, Richard Massingham was recognizable to anyone who went to the cinema in Britain during the 1940s.

Massingham starred as a well-meaning but absent-minded everyman in a series of imaginative shorts that provided instruction on such quotidian experiences as blowing one's nose, crossing the street, and bathing in just five inches of water (a commonplace during war-time rationing).

Often serving as producer and director as well, Massingham was compared to Georges Melies, Luis Bunuel, and Mack Sennett by Cinematheque Francaise founder Henri Langlois. This 15-film program (82 mins.) includes such gems as Tell Me if It Hurts, Jet Propelled Germs, and Handkerchief Drill.

How to Be Eccentric: The Films of Richard Massingham was organized by the British Film Institute.

Season Support

Support for the 2003-04 film/video season provided by the Rohauer Collection Foundation and the Corporate Annual Fund of the Wexner Center Foundation.

Contemporary films, international films, and visiting filmmakers presentations presented with support from the Ohio Arts Council.

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Past

How to Be Eccentric: The Films of Richard Massingham (1933-1950)