logo
Deal's Museum of the Moving Image reopens with new exhibits

Deal's Museum of the Moving Image reopens with new exhibits

BBC News02-04-2025
A museum of moving images in Kent will reopen this weekend with new exhibitions.The Museum of the Moving Image (Momi) in Deal will reopen for the summer season with additional new exhibitions about World War One in film and media, and Peeping and Projecting looking at peephole cinema.The new exhibitions will include stills from the film The Battle of the Somme which are thought to have been shot in Deal.Prof Jocelyn Marsh, curator of Momi, says visitors to the museum are "always taken aback" by the exhibitions.
Prof Marsh said: "Cinema wasn't a virgin birth. It had many ancestors. The primary one was the Magic Lantern but there were also shadow puppets, the silhouette and even photographs."The Battle of the Somme, which is featured in the new exhibition, was the first film to recreate on screen dead bodies of British soldiers, a scene which proved controversial in 1916 when it was released.Prof Marsh added: "Virtually every British adult saw it. There is a suggestion that these were [filmed] in practise trenches some of which were here outside Deal."You can't set up an 80lb (36kg) camera on a tripod and shoot the trenches for real because you would be dead within seconds."An existing display of film posters at the museum which advertises the Ealing Studios output was recently added to by the daughter of artist S John Woods.She revealed that he had lived in Deal's Water Street for 40 years and his paint-stained apron and brushes are on loan to the museum, alongside posters from some of the studio's most well-know movies.The museum was opened in April 2018 by Prof Marsh and David Francis, who helped create the original Momi in London.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97
Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97

Western Telegraph

time16 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97

Nicknamed the First Lady of Jazz, she was a leading figure of the British jazz music scene along with her late husband, saxophonist Sir John Dankworth, for many years and worked with the likes of Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra. The Stables, a charity and venue founded by Dame Cleo and Sir John, said in a statement it was 'greatly saddened' by the news that 'one of its founders and Life President, Dame Cleo Laine has passed away'. Jazz singer Dame Cleo Laine with her jazz musician husband Sir John Dankworth (Peter Jordan/PA) David Meadowcroft, chairman of the charity, said: 'Dame Cleo was a remarkable performer who was loved by audiences around the world, and her commitment to ensuring young people had access to great music and music education will continue through the work of The Stables.' Monica Ferguson, chief executive and artistic director of The Stables, said: 'Dame Cleo was admired greatly by fans, other musicians and by The Stables staff and volunteers. She will be greatly missed, but her unique talent will always be remembered.' Sir John, who had been a mainstay of the British jazz scene for more than 50 years, died aged 82 in 2010. She was the daughter of a Jamaican father and English mother whose childhood in Southall, west London, was supported by her father's busking talents. Her early singing experience started at home, with group family singalongs alongside her music-loving father. But before her musical career really took off, Dame Cleo was confined to the life of a hairdresser's assistant. She never gave up, entering talent contests and she sang on a semi-professional basis before finally auditioning for the Johnny Dankworth Seven. Dame Cleo Laine (Ian West/PA) After that, she never looked back. She and Sir John, who married in 1958, worked with some of the top names in the music business – and she scored a UK top 10 hit in 1961 with You'll Answer To Me. She previously told the PA news agency: 'At the age of three I was singing, because our family sang, and we entertained each other. So right from a very early age there was this kind of Cinderella dream that I was going to do all this. 'When I wrote my autobiography I realised it was quite a Cinderella story in some ways. 'To me the wonderful thing is actually having done it, not the accolade, but to be singing, and to be singing at the age I am now. That is the best part of it.' She became a dame in the 1997 Birthday Honours list, saying at the time: 'I am of course, deeply honoured, but I think they have got the reason for it slightly wrong. 'It is British jazz that should have received the accolade for its service to me – it has given me a wonderful life, a successful career and an opportunity to travel the globe doing what I love to do, listening to and working with some of the world's most creative musicians. 'I'm a very lucky lady and I'm extremely grateful.'

Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97
Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97

Glasgow Times

time17 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Dame Cleo Laine, the ‘First Lady of Jazz', dies aged 97

Nicknamed the First Lady of Jazz, she was a leading figure of the British jazz music scene along with her late husband, saxophonist Sir John Dankworth, for many years and worked with the likes of Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra. The Stables, a charity and venue founded by Dame Cleo and Sir John, said in a statement it was 'greatly saddened' by the news that 'one of its founders and Life President, Dame Cleo Laine has passed away'. Jazz singer Dame Cleo Laine with her jazz musician husband Sir John Dankworth (Peter Jordan/PA) David Meadowcroft, chairman of the charity, said: 'Dame Cleo was a remarkable performer who was loved by audiences around the world, and her commitment to ensuring young people had access to great music and music education will continue through the work of The Stables.' Monica Ferguson, chief executive and artistic director of The Stables, said: 'Dame Cleo was admired greatly by fans, other musicians and by The Stables staff and volunteers. She will be greatly missed, but her unique talent will always be remembered.' Sir John, who had been a mainstay of the British jazz scene for more than 50 years, died aged 82 in 2010. She was the daughter of a Jamaican father and English mother whose childhood in Southall, west London, was supported by her father's busking talents. Her early singing experience started at home, with group family singalongs alongside her music-loving father. But before her musical career really took off, Dame Cleo was confined to the life of a hairdresser's assistant. She never gave up, entering talent contests and she sang on a semi-professional basis before finally auditioning for the Johnny Dankworth Seven. Dame Cleo Laine (Ian West/PA) After that, she never looked back. She and Sir John, who married in 1958, worked with some of the top names in the music business – and she scored a UK top 10 hit in 1961 with You'll Answer To Me. She previously told the PA news agency: 'At the age of three I was singing, because our family sang, and we entertained each other. So right from a very early age there was this kind of Cinderella dream that I was going to do all this. 'When I wrote my autobiography I realised it was quite a Cinderella story in some ways. 'To me the wonderful thing is actually having done it, not the accolade, but to be singing, and to be singing at the age I am now. That is the best part of it.' She became a dame in the 1997 Birthday Honours list, saying at the time: 'I am of course, deeply honoured, but I think they have got the reason for it slightly wrong. 'It is British jazz that should have received the accolade for its service to me – it has given me a wonderful life, a successful career and an opportunity to travel the globe doing what I love to do, listening to and working with some of the world's most creative musicians. 'I'm a very lucky lady and I'm extremely grateful.'

Grammy winner Dame Cleo Laine dies aged 97
Grammy winner Dame Cleo Laine dies aged 97

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Grammy winner Dame Cleo Laine dies aged 97

The star, known best for her incredible vocal range, has died aged 97. Jazz singer Dame Cleo Laine has died at the age of 97. ‌ The star, known best for her incredible vocal range, performed with legends the like of Frank Sinatra and Ray Charles and became the first British singer to win a Grammy Award. The Mirror reports that she began her career with her late husband and composer John Dankworth in the 1950s. ‌ The couple went on to collaborate many times together over the years. They created the Stables artis centre in Buckinghamshire, with its chairman David Meadowcroft sharing a statement today over the sad news of her death. ‌ He said: "Dame Cleo was a remarkable performer who was loved by audiences around the world and her commitment to ensuring young people had access to great music and music education will continue through the work of The Stables." ‌ Laine was born on October 28 1927 in Southall, Middlesex, to labourer and busker Alexander Sylvan Campbell and Minnie Bullock, a farmer's daughter. Most of her childhood was spent in Southall, however, the family moved frequently. She began singing and dancing lessons at an early age, but went on to work as an apprentice for a variety of jobs, including as a hat-trimmer and librarian. Laine managed to successfully audition when she was 24 for a small group with husband-to-be Dankworth's small group. She then performed with a number of his big bands until 1958, the year they wed. She starred in a number of theatre productions through the 50s and 60s, including as the lead in Barry Reckord's Flesh to a Tiger at London's Royal Court Theatre and the title role in The Barren One. In 1971, she landed her role as Julie in Wendy Toye's production of Show Boat at the Adelphi Theatre in London in 1971.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store