Wray Bartlett Physioc (November 23, 1890 – May 8, 1933) was an American film director, producer and artist.[1] His film The Gulf Between (1917) was the first Technicolor film ever produced.[2][3]
Wray Physioc first entered the film industry when he acted in the 1911 short film The Wrong Bottle and was a charge scenic artist for the French film equipment and production company Pathé-Frères.[2]
In January 1913, Physioc organized the Directors Film Corporation and Ramo Films, which was the brand name for films produced by the Directors Film Corporation.[6] Ramo Films would release two short films per week: a comedy directed by Epes Winthrop Sargent, and a drama directed by Physioc.[6] In March 1913, it was claimed that Physioc was the youngest director in the film industry at just 22 years of age.[7] In a surprise move in July 1913, Physioc resigned as Ramo Films' Director of Productions and the next month he was Manager of Productions at General Film Company.[8][9]
In 1914, he directed Hearts of Oak for the Mohawk Film Co. However, during production Physioc was on a schooner preparing for a scene when a premature explosion occurred forcing him to leap overboard and causing burns to his face and neck.[10][11] By July 1915, he would be a director for Biograph Company and spent two years there.[2][12][13]
In 1917, Physioc directed The Gulf Between, which was a critical and commercial failure but notable in that it was one of the first color films ever produced and the first to use Technicolor.[14]
In 1919, he was directing a series of weekly shorts entitled Facts and Follies which were produced by Bernarr Macfadden for the Pioneer Film Corporation.[15][16][17] In 1921, Physioc formed his own production company in New York: Wray Physioc Productions.[2][13] In February 1922, it was announced that Physioc and the distribution company Wid Gunning, Inc. had come to an agreement to distribute four Wray Physioc Productions, beginning with The Madness of Love (1922).[18] However, a fourth film was never released.
In the mid-1920s, Physioc spent a couple years in the West Indies directing films before returning to New York in March 1928.[1]
Physioc died on May 8, 1933, in Manhattan, New York.[19]
^"Massachusetts Marriages, 1841–1915", database with images, FamilySearch(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N4NM-9C3 : May 25, 2018), Wray B Physioc and Mary L Rohmere, Oct 23; citing Massachusetts, United States, State Archives, Boston; FHL microfilm 2,411,237.
^"Image 8". The Washington times (LAST AND HOME ed.). April 15, 1914. p. 8. ISSN1941-0697. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
^"Image 8". The Ogden standard (4 P.M. City ed.). Ogden City, Utah. April 15, 1914. ISSN2163-4793. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
^New York, Chalmers Publishing Company (1915–17). Moving Picture World (Jul–Sep 1915). Media History Digital Library. New York, Chalmers Publishing Company.
^Moving Picture Exhibitors' Association (1907). The Moving picture world. California State Library. New York : The World Photographic Publishing Company.
^Chalmers Publishing Company; Chalmers Publishing Company (1919). Moving Picture World (Sep 1919). New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. New York, Chalmers Publishing Company.
^Moving Picture Exhibitors' Association (1907). The Moving picture world. California State Library. New York : The World Photographic Publishing Company.
^"New York City City Municipal Deaths, 1795–1949", database, FamilySearch(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2WK8-PRK : February 10, 2018), Wray Physioc, May 8, 1933; citing Death, Manhattan, New York City, United States, New York Municipal Archives, New York; FHL microfilm 2,070,582.