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George Albert Smith
| George Albert Smith | |
| Born | January 4, 1864 London, England |
|---|---|
| Died | May 17, 1959 (age 95) Brighton |
G. A. Smith, a British filmmaker, inventor, started out with a Second Sight act which led to his being used as a subject by the Society for Psychical Research.
In the early 1880s Smith began to perform in small Brighton halls as a hypnotist. From 1882, Smith and his partner, Douglas Blackburn, performed a second sight act and feats of Muscle Reading. Smith would claim that genuine telepathy was practiced, though Blackburn would later admit that the act was a hoax. Representatives of the Society for Psychical Research did believe that Smith and Blackburn had a gift. Smith would become closely involved with the Society's activities, becoming the private secretary to its Secretary, Edmund Gurney. He held this post from 1883 to 1888. In 1887, Gurney carried out a number of 'hypnotic experiments' in Brighton, with Smith as the 'hypnotizer'. Smith would co-author the paper, Experiments in Thought Transference for the Society's journal.
Smith had left the SPR by 1892. By 1897, he acquired his first camera and would make thirty-one films that year. Smith knew and corresponded with Georges Méliès.[1]
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