In 1898, vaudeville actors Saint Suttle and Gertie Brown joyously embraced in a short silent film titled Something Good—Negro Kiss.
The first known film to portray African American affection, it was lost
for over a century until its rediscovery inspired contemporary
audiences with a powerful and enduring depiction of Black love. More
than a missing piece in an untold history of Black cinematic
performance, Something Good—and the magnetism of Suttle and
Brown—attests to the power of Black performance on stage and screen from
the nineteenth century to today.
In Acts of Love: Black Performance and the Kiss That Changed Film History (University of California Press, 2026), Allyson Nadia Field tells the story of Something Good
and recovers the forgotten yet fascinating lives of its performers and
their world. Drawing a vivid picture from sparse historical records, Acts of Love
examines popular culture's negotiation of blackness to reconsider the
intersections of minstrelsy, vaudeville, and cinema in ragtime America.
This book not only presents the story of Something Good, its
performers, and the drama of its rediscovery; it shows how the
rediscovery of this short early film changes our understanding of
American film history.
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