Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Titanic on Film
popular culture. With a script largely comprised of non-historical figures,
Cameron’s Titanic was more fiction
than fact. Through his lead characters’ love story, Cameron did manage to spark
a passionate popular interest in the Ship and her demise.
As ubiquitous as Cameron’s Titanic
is, other cinematic versions of Titanic
are less known, but compelling nonetheless.
The first Titanic film was a
German silent feature called In Nacht und Eis ("In
Night and Ice"). Filming started on In
Nacht und Eis the summer after the springtime shipwreck. The movie premiered
in the winter of 1912.
Historically, this first Titanic
film is incredible to watch, as the clothing and style are not based on
reproductions, but are completely authentic of the period.
Thirty-one years later, Herbert Selpin and Werner Von Klingler
directed the first movie named after the Ship. Selphin and von Klingler’s 1943 Titanic was a Nazi propaganda film made
during World War II in Berlin. The
film painted the British and Americans on board as seedy capitalists, and
lionized German men as brave, valiant, and trustworthy.
While directing the Nazi version, co-director Selphin ran into massive
political trouble. He was overheard insulting some of the German Kriegsmarine
officers hired as on-set maritime consultants. The Kriegsmarine officers were frequently
harassing actresses working on the film, and Selphin found this behavior
inappropriate. Selphin was reported to the Gestapo for his remarks about the
officers, arrested, questioned by Joseph Goebbels (who controlled German media
at the time), and put in jail. Selphin was found hanging in his jail cell. His
death was ruled a suicide.
Von Klinger finished as a stand-in director, but the film never made
it with the German public: Goebbels banned Titanic
during the Allied raids for inciting panic during war time.
Next in Titanic’s cinematic history is 1958’s A Night To Remember, a docu-drama lauded for its historical
accuracy. Filmed in the United Kingdom A
Night To Remember won the 1959 Samuel Goldwyn International Award at the
Golden Globes. The set was based on blueprints from the RMS Titanic, and, although some of the
details weren’t correct, it is still often regarded as the most historically
accurate telling of Titanic’s
sinking.
Read more on our Stories from the Titanic blog...
The Last Titanic Survivor
September 1, 1985: The Navy, Robert Ballard, and Titanic
The Aftermath, Part II
When the British Inquiry was questioning the parties involved the night of the sinking of Titanic, management and regulators did everything they could to rationalize their way out of any blame the press was throwing at them. At the investigation, Charles Lightroller had been the senior surviving officer aboard the Ship. Lightroller was taken to task for not filling the Number 6 Lifeboat to capacity. He stated that he believed the mechanisms designed to lower the lifeboats into the ocean were not strong enough to hold the boats had they been filled completely. Lifeboat Number 6 was designed to carry 65 people, but left with just 40.
Titanic's Lifeboats
ELLEN BIRD AND THE STRAUS FAMILY
Titanic and the SS Californian
When Titanic received Cyril Evans’ warning, her wireless operator was overwhelmed with other work. While Californian was transmitting, Titanic wireless operator Jack Phillips was furiously trying to hear another signal for routine work on the Ship. Frustrated by the bleeding, unintelligible signals, Phillips demanded that Evans “shut up.”
Titanic Crew
The Aftermath, Part I
The British government wanted to be certain that this kind of maritime disaster wouldn’t happen again: it was a national tragedy that personally traumatized citizens from 44 different countries, horrified the public, and embarrassed the White Star Line as well as everyone involved in maritime legislation.
As it turns out, the regulations for lifeboats required on passenger ships hadn’t been updated since 1896. Chalmers attempted to justify this policy massive failure by giving the following reasons:
Since the original policy’s implementation in 1896, advancements in shipbuilding made adding lifeboat requirements unnecessary.
The latest boats, like the RMS Titanic, were considered virtually impenetrable and watertight, making them unlikely to require lifeboats at all.
The sea routes used were well travelled, meaning that the likelihood of a collision was minimal.
The latest boats were fitted with wireless technology, which meant they could communicate with surrounding ships in an emergency.
Even if there were more lifeboats available, crew members might not have been able to load more than sixteen boats during a disaster.
The provision of lifeboats should be determined by the ship builders, not the Board of Trade.
Quick to defend himself and divorce himself from any blame, Chalmers came up with an even more preposterous explanation — he claimed that even fewer lifeboats would have saved lives. He reasoned that people would have panicked and rushed to the deck to try to find escape instead of waiting in their warm rooms for instructions.
Titanic's Third-Class
Little Luxuries
It's interesting to see how the designs of our most utilitarian items have evolved since 1912. Over a dozen ceramic toothpaste jars have been recovered from the wreck site of the RMS Titanic. Relatively speaking, these jars are coming up in large numbers, and historians assume that the White Star Line provided toothpaste as a complimentary item to the first-and second-class passengers. At the time, toothpaste was a luxury, and most people didn't have the means to indulge on a regular basis.
Titanic Egg Cup
This egg cup, recovered from the wreck site in 2000, is made of ceramic and stands slightly less than three inches high. Most likely, this particular version belonged to a passenger on board the Ship. It is decorated with a mother hen and three chicks, and does not match any of Titanic’s other dish patterns.
An egg cup, sometimes called egg server, is a container used for serving boiled eggs within their shells. The upwardly concave portion holds the egg, and often egg cups include a base (informally known as a "footie”) to raise the egg-retaining portion and give stability. Although egg cups were in vogue at the turn of the century, egg cup collecting remains a popular hobby.
The White Star Line provided egg cups in their china service for Titanic passengers. The cups were delicate and small.
This ceramic egg cup is based on an egg cup recovered from the RMS Titanic. The pattern, nicknamed “Wisteria,” was replicated from an original Titanic design.
The act of collecting egg cups is referred to as “pocillovy;” it comes from the Latin “pocillum” for small cup and “ovi” for eggs.
Read more about Titanic on our Stories From The Titanic blog...
Titanic Interior Design
The luxury liner was absolutely stunning in her day. Even the Third-Class cabins were lovely and well appointed. The Third-Class General Room, which was accessible to all third-class passengers, was paneled in pine and finished with white enamel. Although the design elements were minimal and a bit more utilitarian then the second- and first-classes, they were incredibly sleek and beautiful. From a modern perspective, the third-class china looks the most contemporary.
A reproduction of the Third-Class China
The Second-Class Library featured furniture made of mahogany and covered with tapestry. Furnishings specially designed for the library in a Colonial Adams style, these fixtures evoked a design trend popular about 100 years before Titanic was built.
A reproduction of the Second-Class China, which was designed to compliment the second-class furnishings.
The First-Class China is the most ornate.
The First-Class Reading and Writing Room was located directly next to the First-Class Lounge. >The Lounge had a bow window along one side of the Ship that allowed passengers an uninterrupted view of the horizon.
It took ten months to fully outfit Titanic.
Titanic's Violet Jessop
Titanic Survivor Helen Newsom Behr Mathey
Helen’s mother, Sallie Newsom, had booked a “Grand Tour” of Europe for 19-year-old Helen to distract her daughter from Helen's relationship with the 26-year-old suitor. When Karl heard the news that Helen was going to be traveling on the Ship, he quickly invented a business trip to Europe to pursue her. Karl boarded Titanic at Cherbourg and ended up spending time with Helen on board.
During the exodus from Titanic, Karl, Helen, Sallie, and several others were told by Bruce Ismay that they could all leave together in Lifeboat No. 5.
There were newspaper reports that Karl proposed to Helen on the Lifeboat. They were married a year later.
Read more about Titanic on our Stories From The Titanic blog...
Titanic Survivor Leila Saks
Leila married Edgar Joseph Meyer in her mid-twenties. Edgar was a gentleman and a scholar – he graduated from Cornell University with a degree in mechanical engineering.