Men's styles
SUMMARY Based on the newspaper comic strip by "Pop" Mormand, featuring a husband oppressed by his wife's obsession with high society and consumer fashion. These two samples are from a series begun in September 1915 based on the Keeping Up with the Joneses newspaper comic by "Pop" Momand. The films begin with "out of the inkwell" drawings of the sort seen in Winsor McCay films and later elaborated by Max Fleischer. Like other comic strips and animated films of the era, notably Bringing Up Father (published from 1912; filmed 1916-18), Keeping Up with the Joneses features a husband oppressed by a wifes obsession with high society and consumer fashion. The series ended abruptly in February 1916 after its animator, Harry S. Palmer, lost a patent infringement suit brought by John Randolph Bray over the use of transparent celluloid sheets. CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : Mutual Film Corp., [1915]. NOTES Digital file includes a piano score composed and performed by Philip Carli. SUBJECTS Fashion--United States--Drama. Men's clothing--United States--Drama. Hats--Drama. Husbands--United States--Drama. Wives--United States--Drama. Comedy--Animation--Short. DIGITAL ID animp 4066 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mbrsmi/animp.4066

Women's styles

Inside the Library of Congress

Wood Engraving and the Art of Nature

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AFC50: An Evening of Jewish Music with Lily Henley

The Boys Think They Have One on Foxy Grandpa, but He Fools Them

The enchanted drawing

Veterans History Project 25th Anniversary Gala

The first circus, Part 2

Liam O'Connor Oral History

Policy and pie, Part 1

"Kumbaya" and the Kronos Quartet's Three Bones

Betsy Ross Dance

We Play with Elizabeth Hargrave

Humorous phases of funny faces

How the 1876 World's Fair Launched the Telephone Revolution

Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse at the circus

Doc Pomus and "Save the Last Dance for Me"

The Appalachian Trail: A Printed Journey

