Humpty Dumpty Circus (lost animated short; 1908)

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Revision as of 22:26, 18 October 2018 by Binzy Boi (talk | contribs) (Binzhou5 moved page The Humpty Dumpty Circus (lost stop-motion animated short; 1898) to Humpty Dumpty Circus (lost stop-motion animated short; 1908): Original name and date from IMDb, found the actual name and date through an official book.)
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The Humpty Dumpty Circus 1898 film still.jpeg

A still from the short.

Status: Lost

The Humpty Dumpty Circus was a stop-motion short from 1898 that was directed by J. Stuart Blackton and produced by Albert E. Smith. The short, known for being the earliest known example of stop-motion animation, used Smith's daughter's toys which were photographed scene by scene to create an illusion of constant movement. The short was likely named after the Humpty Dumpty Circus toy set released by A.Schoenhut Company, which highly resembles the toy set in the short[1].

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