Does this film exist? (Victor Victrola manufacturing, 1914)
Posted: Mon May 06, 2019 10:27 pm
The Talking Machine World
September 15, 1914
Movies For Victor Employees
Six Thousand Employees of Victor Talking Machine Company and Their Families See Films Showing Work in Every Department of Mammoth Plant at Private Exhibition
Camden, NJ August 30. Thousands of employees of the Victor Talking Machine Company filled the Plaza Theater here at two performances last week and immensely enjoyed a complete review of the process of making Victor talking machines and records. The company has 6000 employees, and in order to enable each of them and an additional member of their family to see the Victor pictures it rented for this entire week the Plaza Theater, and by giving two shows nightly, one at 8 and the other at 9, it was possible for each of the many Victor employees to have two tickets. This means that 12,000 in all saw the pictures in the twelve performances that followed.
The moving pictures, which were first shown at the convention of the National Association of Talking Machine Jobbers at Atlantic City last month, showed every department of the Victor Plant in action, even to the interesting detail of taking impressions of the music and the singers’ voices. The making of the records, the cabinets and every detail that enters into the completed Victrola were most interestingly illustrated in the moving pictures. There were seven reels of pictures, or about 6500 feet of film, and the show was interesting throughout the nearly two hours of continuous movement of the film. The last reel showed the 6000 Victor employees assembled outside the mammoth plant.
September 15, 1914
Movies For Victor Employees
Six Thousand Employees of Victor Talking Machine Company and Their Families See Films Showing Work in Every Department of Mammoth Plant at Private Exhibition
Camden, NJ August 30. Thousands of employees of the Victor Talking Machine Company filled the Plaza Theater here at two performances last week and immensely enjoyed a complete review of the process of making Victor talking machines and records. The company has 6000 employees, and in order to enable each of them and an additional member of their family to see the Victor pictures it rented for this entire week the Plaza Theater, and by giving two shows nightly, one at 8 and the other at 9, it was possible for each of the many Victor employees to have two tickets. This means that 12,000 in all saw the pictures in the twelve performances that followed.
The moving pictures, which were first shown at the convention of the National Association of Talking Machine Jobbers at Atlantic City last month, showed every department of the Victor Plant in action, even to the interesting detail of taking impressions of the music and the singers’ voices. The making of the records, the cabinets and every detail that enters into the completed Victrola were most interestingly illustrated in the moving pictures. There were seven reels of pictures, or about 6500 feet of film, and the show was interesting throughout the nearly two hours of continuous movement of the film. The last reel showed the 6000 Victor employees assembled outside the mammoth plant.