The Guardian (USA)

Overlooked black actor may have been most prolific in early British cinema

- Nadia Khomami Arts and culture correspond­ent

Look up the actor Lucius Blake on IMDb and you’ll find just two official credits to his name. Google him, and his presence is practicall­y nonexisten­t. But over the course of a 25-year career as a self-described “film artist” Blake appeared in more than 30 British films – making him possibly the most prolific black actor in early British cinema.

Now, Blake’s life and career have come to light after extensive research by a film historian who says the story of his erasure is far from unique.

“Lucius Blake is just one of the hundreds of people of colour who have been lost to British film history,” said Marc David Jacobs, who will be delivering a presentati­on on the subject at BFI Southbank on Monday in celebratio­n of Black History Month.

Jacobs was watching the 1929 movie The American Prisoner when he first saw Blake in a substantia­l role and thought it might be the first credited part for a black actor in a British-made talkie.

When he began researchin­g film archives, he discovered Blake was a jobbing artist who had appeared in dozens of films from 1928 to 1952. These included the silent version of Sweeney Todd in the 1920s, one of the first Hammer films in the 1930s, one of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburge­r’s most obscure production­s in the 1940s, and Sidney Poitier’s second feature film in the 1950s.

One of the significan­t factors behind Blake’s invisibili­ty, Jacobs said, was the neglect of early British sound films. The period is often remembered through the lens of a handful of wellknown stars, rather than for its many rich ensemble casts.

“Where character actors of colour from later periods have benefited from the availabili­ty of their work, of the 25 films Blake is known to have appeared in between 1928 and 1938 – by far the most prolific part of his career – only four have ever been issued on DVD,” Jacobs said.

“An extraordin­ary film like King of the Damned (1936), in which Blake plays a key part alongside the then hugely popular Conrad Veidt, and

which could have contribute­d to his earlier recognitio­n, has largely languished in undeserved obscurity since last being shown on television in the early 1990s.”

Blake was born Elusha Ebenezer Blake in Jamaica in 1890. Working initially alongside his family as a coffee planter, he left for Pittsburgh, US at the age of 23, where he found work as a labourer, chauffeur, janitor, steelworke­r and mechanic.

He travelled on to the UK in the 1920s, where he made his film debut, seemingly with no previous acting experience. His personal life was equally fascinatin­g, taking him from a sensationa­l trial for his attempted murder to serving in his fifties as a stretcher-bearer during the London blitz.

“Blake also acted under at least two other names, J. Blake and Sam Blake, neither of which has yet to be connected to him in any contempora­ry film database,” Jacobs said.

“His obscurity has unsurprisi­ngly led to his being mistaken for other black actors … he also has the misfortune of being missed out in modern cast lists for several films in which he received offscreen credit, including Old Bones of the River (1938), probably the biggest box office success in which he had a major role.”

Jacobs said Blake’s career should be seen in the wider context of other people of colour working in Britain in the first decade of talking films.

“While the problem is one shared by numerous character actors of the period (including white actors), actors of colour appeared predominan­tly in these smaller or more obscure roles, so their absence from most histories of the period is more keenly felt,” he said.

The historian highlighte­d character actors such as Kiyoshi Takase, a Japanese magician who appeared in British science-fiction blockbuste­rs and musicals; and Eva Hudson, an African American singer who solved a murder mystery alongside James Mason in one of his first films.

Behind the camera, he said, there were also figures like Gordon Wong Wellesley, the Chinese-British author, director and producer who crafted four of Gracie Fields’s biggest successes, and who became “probably the first person of colour” nominated for a writing Oscar.

“The era of the earliest sound films made in Britain remains a substantia­lly undiscover­ed country, about which benign myths and plain untruths remain largely dominant,” Jacobs said.

“One of its many perceived wisdoms is that it was a time when those both in front of and behind the cameras were uniformly white men. But, as a mixedrace person myself, I’m keenly aware that actors and creatives of colour have been present throughout practicall­y the entire history of British filmmaking – as indeed were women, as well as members of other marginalis­ed communitie­s.”

• This article was amended on 2 October 2023 to refer to Blake appearing in one of the first Hammer films, not the first as stated in an earlier version.

 ?? ?? Lucius Blake as ‘African Prince’ in the 1944 British film fantasia Dreaming. Photograph: none
Lucius Blake as ‘African Prince’ in the 1944 British film fantasia Dreaming. Photograph: none
 ?? ?? Lucius Blake in the 1929 British talkie The American Prisoner. Photograph: none
Lucius Blake in the 1929 British talkie The American Prisoner. Photograph: none

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