Maria P. Williams: First African American Woman Film Producer

Maria P. Williams is a name that few film buffs and even film historians would know, but she is the earliest known African American woman film producer.  She has one film to her name, The Flames of Wrath (1923). Currently, only one frame of the film is known to exist, and it is housed in the George P. Johnson Negro Film Collection, 1916-1977 in the Young Research Library at the University of California Los Angeles.

Maria P. Williams pictured at left                             with her husband, Jesse L. Williams

How would I know this?  Well, back in 2006 I took a U.S. film history course at Indiana University (South Bend) which helped to pique my interest in women filmmakers.  I ended up doing a presentation on Lois Weber (another fascinating and prolific filmmaker about whom much more is known), but through it all I was mostly interested in the names of women filmmakers which few people outside of academe might know.  Maria Priscilla Williams is one of those filmmakers.

She was based in Kansas City, Missouri, and worked with her husband, Jesse, in their film production company, the Western Film Producing Company and Booking Exchange.  Jesse was President and General Manager while Maria was Assistant Manager, Secretary and Treasurer.  I have spent several years researching Maria P. Williams.  I’ve utilized every electronic resource I can find; accessed (and purchased copies of) physical records through the Kansas City Public Library; communicated with film scholars such as Charles Musser at Yale, Jane Gaines who was at Duke at the time (and now at Columbia), Black women filmmaker expert Yvonne Welbon, and Charlene Regester at the University of North Carolina; bought a membership to Ancestry.com to access census forms and marriage and death records; even secured a reader’s card to the Bodleian Library of Oxford University (with some help from an Oxford contact).  I couldn’t find much, though.  Williams has haunted me for years, and she still remains a mystery.  Jane Gaines invited me to write a piece for the Women Film Pioneers Sourcebook back in 2006 (originally a physical book schedule to be published by the University of Illinois Press but now an exclusively online project at the Center for Digital Research and Scholarship at Columbia University).  The piece included four other Black women filmmakers from the silent and early sound era of American cinema, but Maria P. Williams stood out as someone I have always wanted to research more.

Dr. Yvonne Welbon dedicated her doctoral studies to researching and revealing African American women filmmakers from the earliest days of cinema up through the present day (this was back in the 1990’s).  She set up the Sisters In Cinema website as a resource and wrote not only her doctoral dissertation on this topic, but also made a documentary film called Sisters In Cinema in which she interviews a number of Black women filmmakers. (If you’re interested in reading her dissertation, you can find it through university interlibrary loan, and you can purchase her documentary through her website.)

I look forward to the day when I’m able to dedicate more time to furthering my research on Williams.  Until then, I remain a devoted admirer.  If you research silent era women filmmakers, or Black women filmmakers of the early cinema, (or are simply interested in this topic), please get in contact with me!

Come back next week to read my piece on Eslanda Cardozo Goode Robeson, activist, scholar, wife of Paul Robeson, and filmmaker in her own right.

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9 thoughts on “Maria P. Williams: First African American Woman Film Producer

  1. I love hearing about ‘lost’ women filmmakers and I’m intrigued to learn about Maria P. Williams, hope you can find out more, maybe through a reader of this post! Love reading about other people’s research processes, too! And I’ll be back to read about Eslanda Cardozo Goode Robeson! This also makes me want—more than ever—to support films that tell stories about contemporary women artists whose stories may otherwise be lost, thinking of Sheila Jackson Hardy’s Nice and Rough: Black Women in Rock and its Indiegogo campaign.

  2. Pingback: Today’s Links | Nubian Stylez

    • Thanks so much, Dr. Welbon, for your comment and for all your amazing work! You have been such a pioneer in this area and laid such a strong foundation for future research.

  3. Thank you for your hard work and research. My daughter who wants to produce film has added a new heroine to her list.

    • Thank you so much for your comment, June. I am so extremely gratified to hear about your daughter — she should shoot for the moon and go for her dreams! I’m glad my post helped expose her to one of the many forgotten and ignored film pioneers. I’d love to know what films your daughter ends up making; maybe she’d like to discuss them here on Her Film?!

  4. I am so happy to have found this blog courtesey of the International Black Man Film Festival Facebook page. I am an aspiring filmmaker, while the task seems daunting, reading pieces like the ones posted here give me confidence and courage! Best wishes to all and thanks for your research and the sharing of it.

    • Hi Marilyn, thank you so much for your lovely comments! I’m so glad you found Her Film through the IBMFF facebook page; it’s always great to know where the interest and support comes from. I’m an aspiring filmmaker, too, so I understand! Maria P. Williams is a huge inspiration to me, particularly given the social, cultural, economic, political and financial obstacles she was faced with back in the 1920’s as an African American woman running a film company and making movies. Wishing you a continued rise in confidence, courage, and success with your cinematic creations!

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