About

Blissville…an Investigation is a video about a community in a remote corner of Queens, NY.  Blissville is the actual former name of the tiny triangle bounded by the Newtown Creek, the Long Island Expressway, and Calvary Cemetery (the largest cemetery in the US in terms of number of burials). In addition to the world’s largest fortune cookie factory, there is a factory with the exclusive rights for making replicas of the Statue of Liberty, a sushi factory, an Afghan bakery, and a giant car crusher. Through street interviews we investigate the origin of the name of Blissville, and the character(s) of the town.

We learn of a nearby Romani village in the 1930’s. It was the largest gathering of Romani in the US,
with the people actually building houses. They were Ludar from Romania, noted for training bears for
circuses including the WPA Circus. The village was condemned and razed to make way for highway
access to the 1939 World’s Fair. The video features an interview with a woman who grew up in the village
and who remembers having to move when she was 6.

The structure of the piece is in chapters to facilitate the breadth of subjects. I think of the form
as a hybrid docu / poem with purposeful and incidental visual diversions. Many of the images are lyrical,
metaphoric, and often humorous, collected in affordable video and presented in a non precious but sculptural way.
Accompanying music ranges from subway musicians, to rare finds. Some music contrasts with the imagery –
as in the use of the Chinese version of Loch Lomond, juxtaposed with the car crusher facility.

The video is not so much a mourning of things past, nor a nostalgia, although both those elements are present.
It is more  about the resiliency of community remarkably rich in nationalities and ethnicity
many of the people on the first rung of immigration; and it is about residential neighbors
living in close proximity with active industries. With development threatening from all sides it is not to be idealized
by any means, it is a precarious dynamic mix.

The purpose of the video is to engender empathy, and to engage the viewer in their own daily visual aural tapestry,
and beg the question of  what makes community.

The purpose of the website is to provide a framework for the project and a place for shared interest
in community stories whether in description, photographs, and / or video in the spirit of the of Blissville.

– Hank Linhart

hlinhart@gmail.com

Related Articles

Times LedgerMarch 31,2018  Blissville Documentary Tells Story of a Little Town With a Little Bit Of Everything

Sunnyside Post – ‘Blissville’ Explores Remote, Forgotten Triangle of Queens By Sunnyside, Greenpoint

DNA Info – Filmmaker Chronicles Decades in LIC’s ‘Overlooked’ Blissville Neighborhood

This project has received production support from NYFA and NYSCA. 
Post Production support from BACA, the Puffin Foundation, and NYSCA / Southern Tier Arts Council. 
Distribution and Exhibition funds are provided by NYSCA, administered by Wave Farm.
Website administration and design with John Culhane