Hey guys,
More press about Phineas Gage (and my little film).
Enjoy!
(Google for the photo itself)
Picture of a legendary brain-injury patient surfaces
By CATHERINE BAUM
Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
NORTHAMPTON - A Northampton filmmaker said he was amazed to hear of the recent
release of what is reportedly the only known photographic image of 19th-century
legendary brain-injury patient Phineas Gage, whose accident is the subject of a
short film he shot in Westhampton and area towns last month.
"It's like people discovering old photos of Lincoln," said Richard "Chip"
Roughton, who last week started editing the short film "Phineas Gage," the
preface to Roughton's full-length film on the rise and fall of lobotomies.
Roughton lives in Northampton and has a film studio in Easthampton.
"He's not at all what I envisioned him to look like," said Roughton, who has
researched brain and behavior and Gage's accident for a decade. The man in the
image is tall with slick, dark hair and one eye shut.
"It's funny; Maybe it's the name Phineas Gage," Roughton continued. "I always
imagined him red-headed and curly-headed, with big bushy sideburns. Kind of all
Irish, even though I know he's not Irish."
Massachusetts photographers last week discovered a daguerreotype image of Gage
holding the 13-pound rod that penetrated his head in 1848 in a notorious
accident on a Vermont railroad. The former railroad construction foreman's
behavior changed after the incident - he died 11 years after the accident.
The image, to be published online this week in the Journal of the History of
Neurosciences, has been in the possession of Jack and Beverly Wilgus for 30
years, according to the Los Angeles Times. The couple thought Gage was a whaler
holding his harpoon, the newspaper reported, but whaling experts online disputed
that claim and someone else suggested it was Gage.
The daguerreotype was brought to Harvard Medical School's Warren Anatomical
Museum, where Gage's life mask is kept. The creation of so-called life mask was
a frequent practice in the 19th century. It is a cast made from someone's face
post-mortem. It was common to make life masks of famous poets and authors to
reveal representations of their nose and face.
Roughton learned of the finding Monday and immediately called the cast and crew
to tell them the news.
At first, Roughton said he didn't believe the image was Gage because he had
trouble seeing the scar on Gage's cheek. In addition, he said, the rod, which
was propelled in an explosion through Gage's left cheek and out through the top
of his head, looked too thick to Roughton to actually be the one that injured
Gage.
But upon further research, Roughton learned the writing on the metal rod in the
image matches the writing on Gage's rod.
"They were able to line up the engravings," said Roughton. "It seems pretty
foolproof that it is the actual guy and that's pretty amazing."
Mia Bauman, a New York City makeup artist on set for Roughton's film last month,
said the scar appears more prominent on Gage's life mask than it looks in the
daguerreotype. She also studied the wound on his skull at the museum.
"From the photograph I can't even see the scar," Bauman said. "I didn't even
think it was him at first. As a makeup artist, I feel I didn't do his scar
justice."
She was on point with Gage's hair, however. In that time period, Bauman said men
either parted their hair to the side or in the middle. Considering Gage's social
position for his character development in the film, Bauman decided to part
Gage's hair on the side and comb it close to his head. The character, played by
Sean McCormick, also wore an eye patch.
"It's weird to see him alive and young and fresh looking," Bauman said. "It gave
him more humanity." Roughton, who owns Rough Pictures in Easthampton, said he
hopes to have the final cut of the short film complete in the next couple of
weeks. He may show "Phineas Gage" to friends and people involved when its
complete, but said he has no plans to release the film to the public until he
releases the full-length film.
Catherine Baum can be reached at cbaum@....