Skip to main content
BFI logo

Home

Film

Television

People

History

Education

Tours

Help

  search

Search

Screenonline banner
Mitchell and Kenyon: Lady Godiva Procession (1902)
 

BFI

Main image of Mitchell and Kenyon: Lady Godiva Procession (1902)
 
Mitchell and Kenyon 531-534: Lady Godiva Procession in Coventry
35mm, black and white, silent, 445 feet total
 
Production CompanyMitchell and Kenyon
Commissioned bySydney Carter

A procession, probably in Coventry owing to the Lady Godiva connection and probably celebrating the coronation of King Edward VII (1902).

Show full synopsis

Godgifu, a Saxon noblewoman, famously rode naked through the streets of Coventry to save her people from what Daniel Donoghue described (in Lady Godiva: A Literary History of the Legend) as 'an oppressive and shameful servitude'. This is one of four two-minute extracts from a two to three-hour procession, held to commemorate her legend in Coventry on the afternoon of 9th September 1902, as part of the city's coronation celebrations.

The procession starred the fabulously voluptuous and successful London Hippodrome actress Vera Guedes as Godiva. The Coventry Herald and Free Press judged the film thus: 'A very interesting item is the reproduction of the Godiva Procession'. This extract begins with a lingering shot of Godiva, in her flesh-coloured dress, on her horse highlighting her significance in the procession. The remaining extracts lose her as a focus, as the procession is used as a vehicle to exhibit local trade.

To read more about this and other processions and parades in the Mitchell and Kenyon Collection, see Professor Andrew Prescott's article in The Lost World of Mitchell and Kenyon: Edwardian Britain on Film (ed. Vanessa Toulmin, Simon Popple, Patrick Russell, BFI, 2004).

Rebecca Vick

Click titles to see or read more

Video Clips
Mitchell and Kenyon 531 (2:16)
GALLERY / SCRIPTS / AUDIO
SEE ALSO
Mitchell and Kenyon: Bradford Coronation Procession (1902)
Mitchell and Kenyon