This authoritative book offers comprehensive accounts of the
professional journeys of three women working in silent film in the
Netherlands, France, and North America. Film historian Annette Förster
presents a careful assessment and exploration of the long careers of
Dutch stage and film actress Adriënne Solser, French stage and screen
actress and filmmaker Musidora, and Canadian-born actress and filmmaker
Nell Shipman. In studying these three early pioneers, Förster renders
builds a larger analysis of the interaction between the popular stage
and the silent cinema, and how that interaction appeared from the
perspective of women at work across both realms. A wealth of archival
research provides fresh insights into Dutch stage and screen comedy, the
French revue, and the American Northwest drama of the 1910s,
illuminating the lives of three important women in the early era of
film.