‘Newhallywood’ festival to celebrate silent films 

The Newhallywood Silent Film Festival is taking place Friday through Sunday.
The Newhallywood Silent Film Festival is taking place Friday through Sunday.
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News release 

Residents can step back in time and experience the magic of early Hollywood at the Newhallywood Silent Film Festival, taking place Friday through Sunday at the Newhall Family Theatre (24607 Walnut St.) and The Main (24266 Main St.) in Old Town Newhall.  

This three-day festival pays tribute to the pioneers of silent cinema, celebrates film preservation and highlights Santa Clarita’s rich ties to Hollywood’s earliest days, said a news release from the city.  

This year’s festival shines a spotlight on two giants of silent film history, Rudolph Valentino and F.W. Murnau, with special Centennial celebration screenings and official induction ceremonies into the Newhallywood Silent Film Hall of Fame.  

On Friday, the Newhallywood Silent Film Festival will kick off at 8 p.m. at the Newhall Family Theatre with a special Centennial screening of F.W. Murnau’s “Faust” (1926) and the induction of Murnau into the Newhallywood Silent Film Hall of Fame, followed by the presentation of two prestigious awards: the Marc Wanamaker Film Pioneer Awardhonoring early cinema trailblazers the Lumière Brothers, and the John Bengtson Hollywood Preservation Awardhonoring the legacy of film historian John Bengtson, who died earlier this year.  

The evening will conclude at The Main with a Silent Screams screening of Murnau’s most famous film, “Nosferatu” (1922), at 11 p.m. 

On Saturday at 10 a.m., guests are invited to join film historian, author and official tour guide Karie Bible for a guided tour of the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, the final resting place of Rudolph Valentino, who died in 1926. Then, at 4 p.m., back at the Newhall Family Theatre, there will be a screening of Valentino’s “Blood and Sand” (1922). The screening will be followed by his induction into the Hall of Fame and a Centennial screening of “The Son of the Sheik” (1926), starting at 8 p.m.  

Bible will join the screening to share about the life of Valentino and her role as the Lady in Black.  

Once again, as soon as it gets dark, Silent Screams takes over the Main beginning at 11 p.m. with a Centennial screening of Teinosuke Kinugasa’s “A Page in Madness” (1926). 

On Sunday, the festival continues at the Newhall Family Theatre at 1 p.m. with the Centennial screening of the oldest surviving animation feature film, Lotte Reiniger’s “The Adventures of Prince Achmed” (1926). At 4 p.m., F.W. Murnau’s Sunrise: “A Song of Two Humans” will be screened. It was one of the two films awarded best picture at the first Academy Awards in 1929.  

Wrapping up the festival at 8 p.m. will be the 50th Anniversary screening of Mel Brooks’ “Silent Movie” (1976). 

For a complete schedule of screenings and events, visit NewhallywoodFilmFest.org

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