Draft:Robert L. Pryor
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Submission declined on 13 May 2024 by Umakant Bhalerao (talk). This submission's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article—that is, they do not show significant coverage (not just passing mentions) about the subject in published, reliable, secondary sources that are independent of the subject (see the guidelines on the notability of people). Before any resubmission, additional references meeting these criteria should be added (see technical help and learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue). If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Wikipedia.
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- Comment: Parts of this draft reads more like a personal account of User:Oconnorlee’s research and interviews with the article subject, rather than an objective encyclopedic entry. Additionally, it includes references to the user themselves, which is not appropriate even if a conflict of interest has been disclosed. Most of the sources cited, apart from an article on old films, are drawn from the user's own YouTube interview, which raises concerns about the reliability of the references. Ktkvtsh (talk) 17:04, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
Robert L. Pryor (1928–) is an American filmmaker whose documentary movies from the 1960s and '70s cover Spokane Garry; the Nez Perce; the City of Spokane, Washington; the development of the Spokane River and Columbia River; and recreation at Priest Lake, Idaho. The importance of his contributions to documenting history have been recognized by PBS and the Spokesman-Review.
Early life and education
[edit]Pryor was born in Spokane, Washington, in 1928 and raised in Cheney where he received his master's degree from Eastern Washington State College (now Eastern Washington University) in 1959. After a year of teaching in Oregon, he moved to Spokane and worked for Spokane Public Schools for 32 years. For 23 of those years he served as the district's Instructional Media Coordinator, a position that allowed him to screen thousands of educational films and teach himself the art of filmmaking.[1]
Film career
[edit]When Pryor could not find films about the history of the Spokane area, he decided to make the films himself. "I felt a need for films on local subjects," Pryor told Spokesman-Review reporter Shawn Vestal in 2015.[2] Beginning in the 1960s, Pryor made films with his company Northwest Film Productions and with the Instructional Materials Service of Spokane Public Schools. He worked with film editor Robert C. Horn of Crown Film Co., artist Patricia Christensen who worked in Pryor's Instructional Media department, narrator Stanley G. Witter, Jr., of KREM TV and radio, photographer William J. Benish, and Alpha Cine Lab of Spokane.[3]
Filmography
[edit]Pryor made seven films.
- Chief Spokane Garry: Indian of the Northwest (1966, 23 min)
- Utilizing Fresh Water Resources: The Columbia River (1968, 14 min)
- Spokane: The First 100 Years (1969, 26 min)
- The Spokane River (1970, 17 min)
- Aqua Summer [Priest Lake, Idaho] (1973, 14 min)
Two of Pryor's films are currently considered lost:
- Nez Perce: Bring Us the Black Book (release date and runtime unknown)
- An unreleased film about surfing in Hawaii (runtime unknown)
Loss and Rediscovery
[edit]As 16mm film projectors became less common, Pryor's films disappeared from public view. Then, the Washington State University MASC (Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections) department digitized Chief Spokane Garry and posted it to YouTube in 2014, bringing Pryor's first film back into the public spotlight. Historians took notice. Eastern Washington University history professor Larry Cebula saw the film and wrote in the video's comment section: "Wow, I had no idea that this video existed! Though a bit condescending in tone it is pretty fair and holds up well. I would love to know more about who made it." WSU MASC replied, "We believe he may have died in 1993." Lee O'Connor, author of Take Cover, Spokane: A History of Backyard Bunkers, Basement Hideaways, and Public Fallout Shelters of the Cold War (2014), found that Pryor was still alive and secured permission from the pioneering filmmaker to digitize five of his movies and share them online. O'Connor posted the films in a Pryor playlist on YouTube.
Film scanning
[edit]O'Connor hired Lightpress in Seattle to digitize Pryor's films in 2015. The process of scanning Pryor's Aqua Summer is documented in the O'Connor video How to Digitize Vintage Films, Jeff Tillotson Talks 16mm Film Scanning at Lightpress in Seattle.
Recognition
[edit]Pryor's filmmaking has been recognized in an interview of Pryor conducted by O'Connor, a documentary video about Pryor produced by Bob Lawrence for KSPS PBS Public TV, and an article by Shawn Vestal that appeared in the print and online editions of the Spokesman-Review.
- Interview: Robert L. Pryor, A Pioneering Northwest Filmmaker (2017) by Lee O'Connor
- Northwest Profiles: Pryor Knowledge (Historic Filmmaker) (2017) by Bob Lawrence for KSPS PBS Public TV
- Shawn Vestal, "Four old documentaries on Spokane worth watching," Spokesman-Review, 24 November 2015.
- Shawn Vestal, "Rediscovered Films Put Spokane in Focus," Spokesman-Review, 25 November 2015.
Preserving Pryor's Film Legacy
[edit]In 2024, Pryor gifted his physical films and the copyright in works to O'Connor so that O'Connor could preserve Pryor's filmmaking legacy and legally share the movies with others who may wish to showcase Pryor's films.
References
[edit]- ^ Lee O'Connor, Interview: Robert L. Pryor, A Pioneering Northwest Filmmaker (2017), YouTube, (Accessed March 24, 2024).
- ^ Shawn Vestal, "Four old films worth watching," Spokesman-Review, 24 November 2015.
- ^ Lee O'Connor, Interview: Robert L. Pryor, A Pioneering Northwest Filmmaker (2017), YouTube, (Accessed March 24, 2024).