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University; the expeditions from 1955 through 1961 (the “Peabody Museum Kalahari Expeditions”) by the Peabody, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Transvaal Museum of Pretoria. These expeditions produced Lorna Marshall’s The !Kung of Nyae Nyae (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976), a substantial, early ethnographic study of the San of the Kalahari; Elizabeth Marshall Thomas’s The Harmless People (New York: Vintage, 1958), a beautifully written reminiscence of her and her family’s experiences with the San during the 1951, 1952–53, and 1955 expeditions; and a considerable series of films, beginning with !Kung Bushmen of the Kalahari, which John Marshall says was edited by “my mother, my father, and filmmaker Jerry Ballantine”; and First Film, which Lorna edited from the same footage in 1951 (fig. 1).5

      FIGURE 1. Lorna Marshall with Ju/’hoansi mother and children in the 1950s. Courtesy Documentary Educational Resources.

      While The Hunters is usually considered the first important Marshall film about the !Kung and the instigation of the long series of !Kung films that followed, this is unfair to the accomplishments of First Film. While the Marshalls’ visit to Gautscha in Nyae Nyae in 1951 was only six weeks (Lorna Marshall has indicated that the 1952–53 expedition was “the most productive period of our study”),6 it was long enough to produce footage that not only served as warm-up and précis for the long saga of films that would follow, but was at some point edited into a film that has remained remarkably underappreciated. Shot in a very functional manner—Laurence had told John, “Don’t try to be artistic. Just film what you see people doing naturally. I want a record, not a movie”7—what became First Film was edited so as to provide an information-filled overview of !Kung life at Nyae Nyae.

      After a bit of indigenous music and a map locating Gautscha, a group of !Kung arrive and set up their temporary village. During the hour-long film, we see men making karosses (the cloaks made from animal skin that women wear), men and women getting and sharing water, women gathering foods (“women’s principal work”), a child dancing (the earliest imagery of N!ai, who would become a central character in John Marshall’s films about the Ju/’hoansi), boys setting snares for guinea fowl, men hunting for spring hare, the making of bows and poison arrows, men hunting gemsbok and wildebeest and the distribution of meat, eating and cooking, women making beads and a man playing music on his bow, boys playing, the group dancing and singing, a man falling into trance and coming out of it, children dancing, the group smoking, talking, and laughing; then, packing up and leaving to walk to the next temporary village. A bit of indigenous music ends the film. John Marshall’s later films would focus in on many of the particulars of Lorna Marshall’s overview, often using virtually the same language in his voice-overs as she uses in hers.

      It is the nature of Lorna Marshall’s voice-overs in First Film that makes this film distinctive and memorable—probably more distinctive and memorable than it seemed in 1951, precisely because of the way in which voice-over in documentary has been debated during the past sixty years. It is not clear precisely when this voice-over was married to the imagery (Cynthia Close, director of Documentary Educational Resources [DER], suspects that it was in the 1970s, but John Bishop, who worked with the Marshall materials at the Peabody Museum, has suggested that, whenever the soundtrack was recorded, the comments that became the voice-over had had a history in advance of their inclusion on the soundtrack of First Film: “I imagine John cut it [the first version of First Film] for her soon after their return so she could use it to illustrate a lecture, or possibly to be used for multiple performances of the lecture, a popular use of documentary footage in the 1950s.”8 As Bishop suggested to me, the tone of the narration “is as if she was projecting to a large audience.”

      What seems noteworthy now about Lorna Marshall’s voice-over on First Film is the degree to which she seems to have avoided many of the problems of conventional documentary voice-overs, including those in early ethnographic films. She is certainly not a “voice of god” or even a “voice of goddess.” While the imagery John Marshall recorded and put together for his mother (presumably under her direction) must have seemed exotic to the original audiences, and still may seem exotic to audiences unfamiliar with ethnographic filmmaking, the voice-over commentary in First Film reveals not merely Lorna Marshall’s familiarity with the people gathered at Gautscha, but her unpretentious empathy with them, as a parent. There are statements that seem to mean to protect the San from stereotyping by the audience—“We observed no theft nor aggression; we observed impressive honesty, cooperation, and integration among this far away and independent group”—and comments that remind us of the physical difference between the San and the viewer: as one woman cuts meat with a knife close to her face, Marshall comments, “A good way to eat if one belongs to a short-nosed race.”

      The overall tone of the voice-over is quite informal, something like the comments of a good teacher telling a class about some people she knows (Marshall, who graduated from the University of California at Berkeley with a B.A. degree in English, had taught English at Mt. Holyoke College before meeting Laurence Marshall). When Old Gaú is smoking, she comments, “Like every good bushman, he passes the pipe around,” and a moment later, as we see Old Gaú with his grandson, “Little ≠Gao. . . loves his grandfather and, I think, wants to be just like him. The grandfather adores this child.” As we see young N!ai dancing, Marshall notes, “She is a blithe child,” and as we see a widow, Marshall comments that she “sometimes looked lonely. Not always, but sometimes.”

      In one instance Marshall engages gender relations in a manner that suggests a kind of insight that goes beyond, or beneath, detached scholarly observation: within a composition where the “head man” is in the left foreground and his wife and several other women are sitting in a circle in the right background, Marshall indicates that the head man “rarely gives orders, but . . . ,” then says, “Watch his wife!” The wife makes a gesture with her hand as if to say, “Leave us alone, mind your own business,” after which Marshall says, “But they do what he says.” Marshall adds that the head man “watches over his people,” and that his wife is a “lively woman”: “One felt she would not be easily imposed upon.” Throughout Lorna Marshall’s voice-over in First Film, and despite what seem to be moments of humor meant to amuse the audience, one can feel Marshall’s immense, unpatronizing respect and affection for the people she is introducing to us; these people, she suggests, are not simply types, generic representatives of a way of life, but individuals that she is coming to know and working to know better.

      JOHN MARSHALL: THE HUNTERS

      John has 6000 feet of film—He created a documentary—to be called The Water Hole. I yearn to see it. He will edit it. He has 2 more sequences to make. How he has opened to this and taken hold! At last his creative powers are geared to achievement. Laurence and I are deeply happy. Laurence and John are planning to order more film, so John can feel an abandon of creation, not worry about using or wasting some footage.

      LORNA MARSHALL’S DIARY9

      The filmmaker’s response is in many ways the reverse of that of other viewers. For the filmmaker, the film is an extract from all the footage shot for it, and a reminder of all the events that produced it. It reduces the experience onto a very small canvas. For the spectator, by contrast, the film is not small but large: it opens onto a wider landscape. If the images evoke for the filmmaker a world that is largely missing, in the spectator they induce endless extrapolations from what is actually seen. . . . But for the filmmaker the same images only reaffirm that the subject existed. Instead of imagining, there is remembering; instead of discovery, there is recognition; instead of curiosity, there is foreknowledge and loss.

      DAVID MACDOUGALL10

      The Hunters (1957), shot and edited by John Marshall (with some postproduction assistance by Robert Gardner),11 remains, by far, the best-known film in the Marshall family’s saga of Ju/’hoansi life, and among the best-known of all ethnographic films. Indeed, in the United States The Hunters seems to have revived a tradition of representing far-flung cultures that was begun by Edward Curtis in In the Land of the Head-Hunters (also known as In the Land of the War Canoes) (1914) and Robert Flaherty

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