As of Apr 22, 2025

Mills Novelty Company

Lot 63038
Panoram "Soundies" Machine, 1939
Mixed media

74.5 x 36 x 28 In

Lot 63038
Panoram "Soundies" Machine, 1939
Mixed media
74,5 x 36,0 x 28,0 In

Estimate: US$ 8,000 - 12,000
€ 6,900 - 10,000
Auction: 17 days

Heritage Auctions

City: Dallas, TX
Auction: May 15, 2025
Auction number: 8217
Auction name: Where Magic Begins: The Collection of Jenette Kahn and Al Williams Art & Design Signature® Auction

Lot Details
Mills Novelty Company Panoram Soundies Machine USA, 1939/1940 Wood, glass, metal, plastic 74-1/2 x 36 x 28 inches (189.2 x 91.4 x 71.1 cm) Applied manufacturer's labels to interior Only briefly in production prior to World War II, the Panorams manufactured by Mills Novelty Company are often referred to as movie jukeboxes. With a glass screen and a concealed film projector, the Panoram played short films called Soundies. Coin-operated and placed in bars and pool halls, they were a an early and popular form of public audiovisual entertainment. With a segregated programming catalogue, business owners had the ability to restrict content played on the Panoram for their similarly segregated businesses. Despite this, Soundies became an important part of Black film history. Fritz Pollard, a legendary professional football player and first Black head coach of a National Football League team, became manager of the Soundies New York office in 1942. Cultivating talent and recording in Harlem and the Bronx, Pollard brought Black audiences around the country Panoram content. These short films featured stars like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong, but also lesser known musicians, actors, and bandleaders, particularly Black women bands that would otherwise not have access to a national audience. Though short-lived (they disappeared from commercial activity not long after the war's end), the Soundies were a significant stepping stone in the evolution of Black entertainment culture. Sold with a 16mm reel of eight period Soundies selected by Jenette Kahn. Soundies were designed to be looped in groups of eight, and Kahn selected an integrated mixture of acts for her reel, which includes performances by Fats Waller, Hoagy Carmichael, Louis Armstrong, and others. An additional example of this work can be found in the collection of the Museum of the Moving Image, Astoria, New York. HID12401132022 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved www.HA.com/TexasAuctioneerLicenseNotice
Overall in very fine condition and presents well. Scattered surface scratches and minor losses to edges of wood frame, as expected with age, material, and display. Small areas of restoration to proper left side at back edge. Some fraying to cord where it meets plug. With an RCA Manufacturing Co. 1340-A 16mm projector, serial no. P-5195. Some parts of mechanism not original to work; Heritage does not guarantee the working order or overall completeness of electrified mechanisms. Keys, service manual, and advertising banner included.
Lot Details
Mills Novelty Company Panoram Soundies Machine USA, 1939/1940 Wood, glass, metal, plastic 74-1/2 x 36 x 28 inches (189.2 x 91.4 x 71.1 cm) Applied manufacturer's labels to interior Only briefly in production prior to World War II, the Panorams manufactured by Mills Novelty Company are often referred to as movie jukeboxes. With a glass screen and a concealed film projector, the Panoram played short films called Soundies. Coin-operated and placed in bars and pool halls, they were a an early and popular form of public audiovisual entertainment. With a segregated programming catalogue, business owners had the ability to restrict content played on the Panoram for their similarly segregated businesses. Despite this, Soundies became an important part of Black film history. Fritz Pollard, a legendary professional football player and first Black head coach of a National Football League team, became manager of the Soundies New York office in 1942. Cultivating talent and recording in Harlem and the Bronx, Pollard brought Black audiences around the country Panoram content. These short films featured stars like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong, but also lesser known musicians, actors, and bandleaders, particularly Black women bands that would otherwise not have access to a national audience. Though short-lived (they disappeared from commercial activity not long after the war's end), the Soundies were a significant stepping stone in the evolution of Black entertainment culture. Sold with a 16mm reel of eight period Soundies selected by Jenette Kahn. Soundies were designed to be looped in groups of eight, and Kahn selected an integrated mixture of acts for her reel, which includes performances by Fats Waller, Hoagy Carmichael, Louis Armstrong, and others. An additional example of this work can be found in the collection of the Museum of the Moving Image, Astoria, New York. HID12401132022 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved www.HA.com/TexasAuctioneerLicenseNotice
Overall in very fine condition and presents well. Scattered surface scratches and minor losses to edges of wood frame, as expected with age, material, and display. Small areas of restoration to proper left side at back edge. Some fraying to cord where it meets plug. With an RCA Manufacturing Co. 1340-A 16mm projector, serial no. P-5195. Some parts of mechanism not original to work; Heritage does not guarantee the working order or overall completeness of electrified mechanisms. Keys, service manual, and advertising banner included.
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