Texas Focus: The Blood of Jesus
Programs
February 11, 2016 7:00pm - 9:00pm
Rating: Not Rated
Suggested age: 18+
Runtime: 57 mins
Principal Actors: Cathryn Caviness, Spencer Williams, Juanita Riley
Director and Writer: Spencer Williams
Release year: 1941
Genre: Drama, Fantasy
Join the Bullock Museum for a screening and conversation about the groundbreaking film, The Blood of Jesus, as part of the Bullock's Texas Focus film series.
Event Details
- Film screening from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
- Q & A to follow the screening with special guest Winston Williams, Executive Director of the Capitol City Black Film Festival.
About the Film
Filmed in Texas in 1941, The Blood of Jesus marked Spencer Williams' second directorial effort with a budget of only $5,000. In 1991, it became the first race film to be added to the U.S. National Film Registry. Considered lost for years, The Blood of Jesus was discovered in a Tyler, Texas warehouse in the mid-1980s. Williams, who both wrote and directed The Blood of Jesus, also starred in the film as Ras Jackson, a rogue who accidentally shoots his wife, Sister Martha, played by Cathryn Caviness. A devout woman nearing death, Martha is pulled between forces that represent both heaven and hell. The film is scored to gospel music sung by members of Reverend R. L. Robinson's Heavenly Choir.
According to film critic David Sterritt, the black and white film has “… nothing remotely slick or sophisticated about [it], which (like all the Williams films I’ve seen) has rough-hewn performances, editing, and camera work. Such technical drawbacks seem unimportant, though, in light of the moral passion and visual creativity that mark the picture. While its cinematic qualities are unpolished, they allow for a directness of expression and a purity of atmosphere that have few equivalents in Hollywood or anywhere else. Just as important, the performances bypass Hollywood-style realism in favor of a ritual quality that recalls the traditions of Southern black churches–just as some of the most powerful and complex American jazz has deep roots in the heritage of gospel and church-choir music.”
About the Filmmaker
Spencer Williams, Jr. (1893-1969), African American pioneer of film and television, began his career in 1929 by writing and acting. Born in Louisiana, Williams moved at a young age to New York City, becoming a call boy for theatrical impresario Oscar Hammerstein. He later received comedic mentoring under vaudeville star, Bert Williams. After serving in WWI as an intelligence officer, Williams arrived in Hollywood, California in 1923, where he began to act in films. Within eight years, Williams and a partner self-financed a newsreel company called the Lincoln Talking Pictures Company. Throughout the 1930s, Williams worked as an actor as well as a writer and director for films specifically created to play in segregated theaters. He is credited for writing the black western, Harlem Rides Again, and the race horror comedy Son of Ingagi. In the 1940s, Al Sack of Dallas-based Sack Amusement Enterprises financed Williams to write, direct, and act in ten films.
Even after the success of The Blood of Jesus, Williams struggled to produce films that matched its commercial success. Williams eventually co-starred in the controversial yet popular 1950s sitcom Amos 'n Andy, the first U.S. television program with an all-black cast. Spencer Williams's legacy remains a testament to the movement for African American artists in the film and comedy industry.
Ticket prices are $3 for Bullock Museum members and students with a valid college or university ID and $5 for non-members. Visitors may purchase up to 10 tickets per transaction.
To view the Film Ticket Refund and Reschedule Policy, click here.
Support for the Bullock Museum's exhibitions and education programs provided by the Texas State History Museum Foundation.