Wednesday, September 24

6:30 – 8:00 PM
Carriage House Theater
Auburn, NY 13021

Film Screening & Discussion

The Flying Ace

Introduction by Cornell Professor, Dr. Samantha N. Sheppard

Presented in partnership with the Wharton Studio Museum, this program explores the 1926 race film The Flying Ace directed by Richard E. Norman and starring Lawrence Criner. In 2021, the film was selected for preservation in the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. 

Dr. Samantha Sheppard, Associate Professor of Cinema and Media Studies in the Department of Performing and Media Arts at Cornell University, will introduce the film and a Q&A will follow the screening.

Admission is “Pay What You Wish”

Synopsis

A skilled flyer and decorated war hero, Captain Billy Stokes returns from military service overseas to resume his former job as head of the intelligence department of one of the big American railroads. Called upon to investigate a theft and the curious disappearance of paymaster Kimball, he finds that all signs point to the guilt of stationmaster Thomas Sawtelle. But as Stokes continues to follow the clues, he solves the mystery, exonerates Sawtelle, and exposes the real villains. Throughout his investigation, he is ably assisted by his former mechanic, one-legged “Peg” (Norman’s favorite actor, who appears in all of the Norman productions) and by Sawtelle’s daring daughter Ruth.

Significance in Race Film History

“Unlike the stereotypical roles that Black actors usually played in studio films, Norman’s characters in The Flying Ace were dignified and dutiful examples of racial achievement. They included a Black stationmaster, a Black dentist, a Black deputy, and a daring heroine Ruth (played by distinguished Black actress Kathryn Boyd). But the most impressive of all was war hero Captain Stokes (played by J. Laurence Criner, Boyd’s real-life husband). Notably, Stokes—whom Norman depicts wearing his military uniform throughout the film—was a hero more aspirational than actual. Black men, after all, had been denied opportunities to serve as pilots in World War One and were restricted in their service in other military branches. By giving his audience the prominent and accomplished characters they wanted to see on screen, however, Norman lauded Black ambition, encouraged race uplift, and celebrated race pride.”

Barbara Tepa LupackAuthor & Historian

Film Credits

Cast: J. Laurence Criner (Captain Billy Stokes), Boise De Legge (Blair Kimball), Steve “Peg” Reynolds (Peg), George Colvin (Thomas Sawtelle), Sam Jordan (Dr. Maynard), Harold Platts (Finley Tucker), Lyons Daniel (Jed Splivins), Kathryn Boyd (Ruth Sawtelle), Dr. R. L. Brown (Howard McAndrews)

Producing Credit: Norman Film Manufacturing Company

Director & Producer: Richard E. Norman

About the Facilitator

Dr. Samantha Sheppard

Samantha N. Sheppard is an associate professor of cinema and media studies and Chair of the Department of Performing and Media Arts at Cornell University. She is the author of Sporting Blackness: Race, Embodiment, and Critical Muscle Memory on Screen (University of California Press, 2020) and the forthcoming book The Basketball Film: A Cultural and Transmedia History (Rutgers University Press) among other edited collections, book chapters, and articles. She is currently working on her third book, A Black W/hole: Phantom Cinemas and the Reimagining of Black Women’s Media Histories, for which she was named a 2021 Academy Film Scholar by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Her writing on film and media can be found in both academic and popular venues, including The Atlantic, Film Quarterly, Flash Art International, and Los Angeles Review of Books, among many others. As a cultural critic, Dr. Sheppard has been quoted in The New York Times, CNN, Vox, BBC News, The Washington Post, Business Insider, NBC News, Miami News Press, and LA Weekly. She has also been featured in several documentaries and podcasts and was a special guest presenter on Turner Classic Movies.

This program is part of the Finger Lakes Film Trail’s
Race Film/Race Matters Series

This series is made possible in part by the Fred M. Everett & Ora H. Everett Charitable Trust, Bank of America, N.A.