The Guardian (USA)

‘Captivatin­g’ – BFI shares first footage of a solar eclipse from 1900

- Ian Sample Science editor

The first moving picture of a solar eclipse, captured by a British magician-turned-film-maker more than a century ago, has been rediscover­ed in the archive of the Royal Astronomic­al Society.

The shaky footage, recorded by John Nevil Maskelyne using a specially-adapted camera, shows the moon passing in front of the sun while he was on a British Astronomic­al Associatio­n expedition to North Carolina in the United States.

Conservati­on experts at the British Film Institute scanned, reassemble­d and retimed the footage, frame by frame, and have now released it in 4k as part of their Victorian film collection.

The pictures come from Maskelyne’s second attempt to record an eclipse and is the only footage of his that is known to have survived. His first go

at recording an eclipse in India in 1898 was successful, until the film was stolen on his journey home.

Maskelyne, who co-ran the Egyptian Hall magic theatre in London’s Piccadilly, wrote several books on the art. He became one of the world’s first hackers when he hijacked Guglielmo Marconi’s demonstrat­ion of the wireless in 1903 to broadcast his own message and reveal the setup’s security flaws.

“Early film historians have been looking for this film for many years. Like one of his elaborate illusions, it’s exciting to think that this only known surviving film by Maskelyne has reappeared now,” said Bryony Dixon, BFI silent film curator.

“These scenes of a total solar eclipse – one of the most spectacula­r sights in astronomy – are a captivatin­g glimpse of Victorian science in action,” said Prof Mike Cruise, president of the Royal Astronomic­al Society.

 ??  ?? An image of the solar eclipse filmed by John Nevil Maskelyne. Photograph: BFI/YouTube
An image of the solar eclipse filmed by John Nevil Maskelyne. Photograph: BFI/YouTube

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