- Raoul Grimoin-Sanson
Raoul Grimoin-Sanson (1860 - 1940) was an inventor in the field of early cinema. He was born in
Elbeuf , as Raoul Sanson; he added the surname Grimoin later. He had an early interest instage magic as well asphotography .In the 1890s, Grimoin-Sanson began experiments in moving pictures, and desired to project films, like those from
Thomas Edison 'skinetoscope , on screen. In 1896, he invented a crude camera/projector combination called thePhototachygraphe . In 1897, he patented theCinéorama , a panoramic film projection system involving ten synchronized projectors. The Cinéorama was demonstrated at the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris, but problems with heat from the projectors caused it to be shut down. Despite the failure of his Cinéorama company and of later film work, in the 1920s Grimoin-Sanson would attempt to claim to be one of the major pioneers of film, alongside Marey and the Lumières.References
*cite web|title=Raoul Grimoin-Sanson|author=Laurent Mannoni|work=Who's Who of Victorian Cinema|url=http://www.victorian-cinema.net/grimoinsanson.htm|accessdate=2006-08-21
*cite journal|title=The Wide Screen of Yesterday and Tomorrow|author=Kenneth MacGowan|journal=The Quarterly of Film Radio and Television|volume=11|issue=3|month=Spring|year=1957|pages=217–241|doi=10.1525/fq.1957.11.3.04a00020
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