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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* Issue 67 -- July 1998 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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Louella Parsons Interviews with Directors:
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J. Stuart Blackton, Herbert Brenon, William De Mille,
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Abel Gance, D. W. Griffith, Ralph Ince, Rex Ingram,
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Ernst Lubitsch, Fred Niblo, John S. Robertson, Victor Seastrom
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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A dealer of autographed photos is advertising a photo of Taylor which was
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autographed to Minter at http://www.pioneer.net/~jonelen/WilliamDTaylor.html
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And regarding autographed photos, if you are seeking an autographed photo of
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Mary Miles Minter, you should be aware that most early autographed photos do
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not contain her true signature. In an interview, she stated that her mother
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had always signed her autographs. Samples of the common fake autograph and
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the real autograph can be seen on the Silent Ladies web site. The typical
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fake is at http://www.uno.edu/~drcom/Silent/MMM16.jpg and the real signature
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is at http://www.uno.edu/~drcom/Silent/MMM18.jpg The real signature can
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also be seen on a photo at http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/MMMPhoto.pdf
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Louella Parsons Interviews with Directors
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Between 1918 and 1923, Louella Parsons conducted the following interviews
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with silent film directors who were contemporaries of William Desmond Taylor.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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J. Stuart Blackton
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May 9, 1920
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Louella Parsons
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NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
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Twenty-three years ago James Stuart Blackton was an artist on the
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Evening World. Some weeks his name was in the salary pot and other weeks he
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did not fare so well. It all depended how his creative mind was working and
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whether or not an elusive idea proved practical enough to be transferred to
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paper and sold. These little stories illustrated by young Blackton were
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called gold bricks, but it wasn't until later years that the commodore was
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able to see any joke in the name.
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While he was digging for material the new machine invented by Thomas
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Edison came to his attention. He picked up his drawing board, his crayon and
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his new gloves and sallied forth to meet the inventor. He was told politely
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but firmly by a pompous individual in charge of Mr. Edison's engagements he
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must not limit his stay beyond five minutes.
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"That is enough for any story," said the secretary, scornfully, eyeing
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the drawing board.
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But Thomas Edison had something to say about his engagements and he kept
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the artist there for two hours. He even volunteered to give an imitation of
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his own skill with the crayon and drew a square pig with a curly tail for the
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edification of his guest. The drawing Mr. Blackton says is probably as bad
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as anything in the world. He still has it among his treasurers, also the
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sketch he did of Mr. Edison that Summer day twenty-three years ago.
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The inventive mind of Thomas Edison asserted itself that very afternoon.
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Like many folk he had a profound admiration for a talent he did not possess.
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Mr. Edison was fascinated with the sketches. He asked the young man if he
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could draw pictures life size, large enough to be photographed, and Mr.
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Blackton, who at this time in his life would have agreed to reproduce a
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correct imitation of a Botticelli painting, said he certainly could. Mr.
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Edison, Mr. Blackton now thinks, must have been a gullible soul--he told him
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to be there the following afternoon. He was there and only three hours in
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advance of his appointment.
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"The Edison studio in those days," said Mr. Blackton, "was on wheels.
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Science at that time figured direct sunlight was essential in getting
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photographical results! The moving machine followed the sun--and it was one'
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man's job to keep track of the erratic movements of Old Sol."
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The gold brick days of young Blackton were destined to be short.
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He fell in with Albert E. Smith about this time and together the two youths
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contracted with Thomas Edison for one of his first machines. He had taken a
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fancy to the artist chap, and when six months later the machines were ready
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for the market young Smith and Blackton were the first to have their order
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filled.
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The days following the association with W. E. Rock, known affectionately
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as Pop Rock, form one of the most illuminating passages of screen history in
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the world. Its all been told again and again. It has all been used as the
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foundation for motion picture history by historians in search of material
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describing the juvenile industry. But oft told as it has been, both
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Commodore Blackton and A. E. Smith have expressed a hope that some day they
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may get time to put down the real romance in a book.
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What a book these two men could write. J. Stuart Blackton has started
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as many stars on the road to screen fame as David Belasco has stage
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favorites. The Vitagraph Company became a sort of legitimate screen-training
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school for girls. Hundreds of pretty school girls called there for
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engagements, and the commodore, who has a sixth sense for divining screen
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faces, used to select these applicants. There are names today rated among
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the famous screen stars of the world whose first peep at a studio was
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Vitagraph and whose first introduction to the camera was made by Commodore
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Blackton.
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"Anita Stewart came out to the studio and was put in a historical
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pageant," said Mr. Blackton. "One days the girls passed me on their way to
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the dressing rooms, and as I stood upon a raised dais with the cameraman I
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noticed a beautiful girl with a sensitive, shy face and I called her to me
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and asked her name.
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"'Anita Stewart,' she replied timidly, apparently frightened at my
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voice. 'Would you like to act in pictures?' I asked her. 'Oh, yes, indeed,'
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and her face lighted up with an animation I knew could be reserved for the
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screen. I made an appointment with her to come to the studio the next
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afternoon at 2 o'clock. I engaged her at $25 a week, and she was speechless
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with joy. I did not know for two weeks after I had engaged her she was Ralph
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Ince's sister-in-law.
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This is supposed to be an interview and not a chronological list of
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Vitagraph happenings. But the old Vitagraph days are so rich in film history
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and film adventure one feels the half has not been told. It was while Sidney
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Drew made his first Vitagraph picture he wooed and won his wife.
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"Mrs. Drew used the nom de plume in those days of Jane Morrow," said Mr.
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Blackton. "I introduced her to Sidney, who was working for us, and she went
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to Florida as a member of his company. The trip did the rest--they came home
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engaged.
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"Sidney Drew," went on Mr. Blackton, "wanted to make serious pictures.
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We knew his forte lay in comics, but I decided after talking with him to let
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him have full reign in the matter. He made a serious play called
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'Conscience.' He played an old miser, and while the picture had its strong
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points it could not be compared with his comedy work, which later he was
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sensible enough to see was his particular niche in the film world."
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Commodore Blackton--the commodore is derived from his association with
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the Atlantic Yacht Club. He was commodore for many years, during which time
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he entertained Sir Thomas Lipton and hundreds of other celebrities.
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Commodore Blackton, although still a stockholder in Vitagraph and director,
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makes his own pictures independent of Vitagraph.
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"Mr. Smith and I, contrary to general opinion, are the best friends in
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the world," he said. "We do not always agree on policy, but we have been
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close friends too many years to let business interfere in our personal
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relationship.
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"Mr. Smith," admitted Commodore Blackton, "is a far better business man
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than I am. I like to make pictures, but when it comes to dollars and cents I
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have to confess to a loathing for the commercial side. Even now I have a
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manager who looks after that end.
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"I never talk business to the people I engage. All contracts are made
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through my business office. I feel I can direct my players artistically with
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much better results if we let the commercial side remain separate and
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distinct."
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After twenty-three years of devotion to the screen James Stuart Blackton
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might be said to know pictures. He knows their virtues, their faults, their
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tricks and their many ways of deceiving the public.
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"Take a story," said Mr. Blackton, "that by every reason in the world
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should make a beautiful and artistic picture. The producer puts his heart
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and soul into its production. He brings out all the beauty of the story,
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emphasizes its strong points and tones down its weak places--and then when it
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comes out to have the public believe it lacks the essential punch.
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"That happened to me last year," said Mr. Blackton. I followed that
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story with a crook play of melodramatic type with enough action to start a
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train in motion. The picture after it was finished was a disappointment.
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It lacked artistic merit. But the public likes it. Where I had sold one
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print of my first picture I sold twenty of my last one.
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"What do you think a condition like that signifies?" asked Commodore
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Blackton, earnestly.
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"That the public wants to be entertained, not uplifted, and that it is
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generally wise to give the public what it asks."
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"My intentions in that direction," answered Mr. Blackton, "can be
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answered in three words: Please the public."
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But a man who has labored to get, like Commodore Blackton, the best in
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pictures may believe in his heart he is going to seek the path of the least
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resistance in films, but unconsciously he is constantly trying to make his
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pictures within the understanding of the mass mind and at the same time
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artistic. He has recently invented a photographic appliance he calls
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painting the lens. It gives the film the appearance of having been really
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painted and does away with some of the crude black and white in the print
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that is sometimes too sharp to be entirely satisfying to the eye.
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Although one of the oldest men in point of screen service Commodore
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Blackton is still a comparatively young man in years. He was only 19 when he
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tried to find ideas for the Evening World. That was twenty-three years ago.
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Figure it out for yourself. He has, in addition to his success in the
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picture world, a beautiful home in Brooklyn, a charming wife, a talented son
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and daughter. What more can man ask? The average man might feel he had made
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the most out of life, but Commodore Blackton will never think so until he has
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satisfied himself with his own picture-making.
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In summing up his motion picture career one might feel if at any time
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the commodore decided to rest on his laurels he could give a very excellent
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account of what he has done to promote pictures. We hope, of course, he will
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not want to resign. He is still a necessary factor in our cinema progress,
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but in speaking of what he has done we might mention "The Battle Cry of
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Peace," the first picture on preparedness, and later effectively used as
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propaganda. His taking over with Albert E. Smith the Criterion as a motion
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picture theatre in 1913. This, so far as any one knows, was the first time
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motion pictures were put on with a stage presentation. The Vitagraph
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pictures were shown at this theatre and they were supplemented with acts in
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which Vitagraph starts participated. The Criterion Theatre in 1913 furnished
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the foundation for the picture theatres to come, like the Strand, Rivoli,
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Rialto and Capitol.
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That deed in itself entitles Commodore Blackton and Albert Smith to
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eternal recognition. What would our lives be without these theatres now?--
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a place where pictures can be seen in appropriate settings.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Herbert Brenon
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October 6, 1918
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Louella Parsons
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NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
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Herbert Brenon sends the following chatty, entertaining letter from
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London. It was not send for publication, but there is so much of interest,
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we are risking Mr. Brenon's displeasure and passing it along to the many
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people who will be glad to hear first-hand of his picture making efforts for
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the British Government:
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Grosvenor Hotel, Chester
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12th September, 1918.
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Miss Louella Parsons,
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Care of Morning Telegraph.
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My dear Miss Parsons--This is the first letter about my picture to any
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one outside of my family. I shall write to you as a friend.
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I came here very quietly, as you know, quite unheralded. One does not
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wish to advertise the fact that one is doing national work. While I consider
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it the crowning honor of my career that I should have been invited over here
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to do this work I also realize the very great sense of responsibility; there
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were many messages from this war to the world, and if I could but bring home
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one of these to the masses I would have done a little bit, so I came. On the
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boat I imagined that the whole army and navy, indeed, the entire civic
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population would assist me. I had not been here one week before I realized
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that I was the one that had to fight. I began by seeing the fourth assistant
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secretary to the secretary of the first assistant of the chief secretary of
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the Director of the Cinematograph Division to the Ministry of Information.
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I was quite a stranger, the high officials of the government were beginning
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to realize the importance of the motion picture camera as a great
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demonstrator of propaganda, but the under officials scorned it.
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I gave up officialdom for a while and spent a few days with Sir Hall
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Caine. There is a man who does things. We went over the story together; we
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made up our minds we would see it through no matter what happened, and we
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went ahead.
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At first all the actors volunteered, and then one by one they dropped
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out. I had to make a beginning, so I began with the sub-plot, and with minor
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actors. I was waiting for the leading man and the leading lady and also the
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heavy man, with names. There was one leading woman above all others that I
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wanted. Her name was Miss Marie Lohr, the youngest and most charming woman
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star in England (like our sweet Elsie Ferguson). She had refused motion
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picture offer after motion picture offer. At first she was adamant, and then
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she melted. "I am putting on a new play," she said. "If it is a success I
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will play the lead for you." It was a failure, she had to put on a new play;
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there was one hope gone, so thinks I to myself, thinks I, "This sub-plot is
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getting too important, I must start on the main plot. I must hie me for
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leading man." Matheson Lang was the most popular leading man in England.
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"Certainly," says he, "if my play is a success, not just now. I am off to
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Brighton to put on the 'Purple Mask' next Monday." On Sunday night I prayed
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in every different language I knew. On Tuesday morning I got a telegram.
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"Play a success, will need six weeks to whip it into shape; will then be glad
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to play for you."
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I was wearing the sub-plot threadbare, so I started on some of my
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spectacular scenes.
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Dear old Ellen Terry, bless her heart, came along and did a little
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sequence for me. I shall never forget those few days as long as I live.
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What charm, what everlasting youth, what talent, what beauty, what an angel!
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She bucked me up a whole lot, and the mere fact that she had done her bit
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encouraged the others.
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It was drawing near to Mr. Lang's London opening. It was drawing near
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the time for Miss Lohr's opening. I had finished nearly all the scenes
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except those that they were in, when, one day, I come home from my exteriors
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and find a note to me from my secretary. "Factory burned up at 2 o'clock
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today," it said, "every foot of your negative is burnt." I do not think I
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shall ever forget those next few moments. I wanted to give up. I wanted to
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come home to America, I wanted my family, I wanted my friends; I felt my
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loneliness terribly; I felt weak for a second or two; I lacked courage, but
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only a second or two. A few comforting telephone messages came in: one from
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Miss Marie Lohr, who said, "Whether my play is a success or not, Mr. Brenon,
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I shall play that part for you." In another five minutes I decided to do it
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all over again, and the next morning, with a pretty heavy heart, but with as
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cheerful a face as I could dig up, I went to the studio, and, bless their
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hearts, my staff all set to with me again and in an hour we were in full
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swing again. That week Miss Lohr opened in London in "Nurse Benson" and Mr.
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Lang in "The Purple Mask," and both were great successes; in a few days they
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were both down at the studio, and although not paid one penny, they gave
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their hearts and souls to their work.
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The cast was now practically complete, with a lot of big names. I have
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never had so fine a company in my life. I do not think I ever shall again.
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Sir Hall Caine had given me the finest foundation for a plot I have ever had
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(not excepting "War Brides").
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The great difficulty has always been in making the times when the
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various stars could act fit in with each other, all having different
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matinees. Sometimes a star could only come for one hour, while another star
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could give six hours, but all their scenes were together, so we had to adjust
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circumstances to them.
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It was weeks before the War Office or the Admiralty would give us
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facilities, but when the officials began to see some of the dramatic scenes,
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they melted and soon all sorts of doors were opened.
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The plot calls for the German occupation of entire city. Not a village,
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mind you, but a city; imagine if you can, a city, say as large as Albany,
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overrun by the German army. I shall never forget the first day the German
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army marched into the city! I had the cooperation, of course, of the
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military and civil officials; in fact, I had with me in the car the Mayor,
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the chief of police, and the general commanding the Western Home Forces; a
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small army of military and civil police were also with me. We took
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possession about 10 o'clock without a word of warning or without any
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notification to the newspapers. Can you imagine the people's amazement! One
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headquarters officer, mind you, went to the chief of police and said that it
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was an outrage for German prisoners to be allowed to march through Chester
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under arms, even if it was for the cinema. Although he belonged to
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headquarters they had kept the secret so well that even he thought it was a
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private enterprise, and not official. In one street we passed a few hundred
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German prisoners on their way to work, and when they heard the band playing a
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German tune, and the German army marching through the entire town, their
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faces lit up with joy, they actually saluted the passing officers. They
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quite thought they had won, for it was during that terrific advance when the
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Germans got so close to Amiens. Their joy was very short lived, however;
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they soon found out it was play acting.
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We halted our German army once near the castle, when a woman shook her
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fist at a group of our German soldiers standing at ease, and cried out,
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"Curse you, you brutes, you killed two of my boys." I shall never forget
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her. I soon explained it, and her face in a moment was wreathed in smiles.
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She knew I was trying to bring home a message.
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Of course, you heard about the drowning incident. That was really
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dreadful. A young girl, Renee Mayer, a very popular actress over here, had
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to jump off a 45-foot bridge, a suicide, and her sweetheart is supposed to
|
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jump after to try and save her. She hit the water very hard, falling on her
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face, which was slightly cut. For the moment she was quite stunned. I was
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standing off on the bank watching the scene, but as I had told her not to
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come up for a long while, giving her rescuer time to jump in after her before
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she came up, I was not worried. She stayed under for a long while, then came
|
||
|
up and threw her hands around the man's neck. Not until they went down for
|
||
|
the fourth time did I realize that there was something wrong. I screamed to
|
||
|
the boats to pick them up, but they could not hear me, in fact, they thought
|
||
|
it was all part of the scene, and it was only after I dived in that all the
|
||
|
boats moved forward and picked all three of us out of the water a little the
|
||
|
worse for wear. Miss Mayer had lost her head and put her arms around the
|
||
|
actor's neck and her legs around his body, gripping him like death, so that
|
||
|
he could not move. The reason she had stayed under so long was that she had
|
||
|
caught her legs in the weeds, which abound at the bottom of the English
|
||
|
rivers. It was very nearly a tragedy, and it was some days before the actor
|
||
|
recovered. Miss Mayer and I were soon all right.
|
||
|
The picture is nearing the finish now, and it will only be a few weeks
|
||
|
before it is completed. In fact it will be in the market over here in
|
||
|
England early in December, and it should reach the American market about
|
||
|
Christmas.
|
||
|
I may be going to France next week with Roy Hunt, my photographer, to
|
||
|
get some scenes of the British advance. I shall not be over there very long,
|
||
|
but hope to get some interesting scenes.
|
||
|
I hope this is not too long a letter. I shall look forward to seeing
|
||
|
you again. I am awfully glad you are with The Morning Telegraph. With
|
||
|
kindest regards
|
||
|
I am, very cordially yours.
|
||
|
Herbert Brenon
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
William De Mille
|
||
|
March 12, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
If William De Mille has his way the villains of the screen will soon be
|
||
|
as dead as yesterday's newspaper. He has personally eliminated all the
|
||
|
Desperate Desmonds of the screen for the past three years because he thinks
|
||
|
the wily, wicked scoundrel who formerly laid low all the virtue that came his
|
||
|
way is a menace to our film literature.
|
||
|
Mr. De Mille did not express himself in exactly those preachy words.
|
||
|
He is not given to extensive moralizing. What he really said was:
|
||
|
"I never have a villain in my picture. Any man who would do the vicious
|
||
|
things attributed to him in some of our earlier films would be a moron, and
|
||
|
it is unpleasant to describe such a character. Most wickedness springs from
|
||
|
a diseased mind, and I do not believe disease should ever be featured.
|
||
|
People are not usually given to extreme viciousness unless they are sick.
|
||
|
People who are perfectly sane do not commit these continual crimes against
|
||
|
society for the pure pleasure of being evil."
|
||
|
William De Mille, who has been described again and again as one of our
|
||
|
most spiritual directors, makes four pictures a year, spending three months
|
||
|
on each one of his creative efforts.
|
||
|
"I do not attribute any success that I may have with my pictures as a
|
||
|
personal triumph," he said. "I know without my staff I could not get
|
||
|
results. We have our little company, and every member feels it is his
|
||
|
picture. They are as upset over any mistake I may make as I am myself. They
|
||
|
watch every move, and if I do something they feel is detrimental to the final
|
||
|
results they never hesitate to tell me."
|
||
|
In this little group mentioned in the William De Mille closed
|
||
|
corporation is included not only the scenario writer, but the cutter, the
|
||
|
cameraman and all the technicians who have any part, however small, in making
|
||
|
the production.
|
||
|
The De Mille brothers are curiously unlike in their method of presenting
|
||
|
the photo-drama. Cecil specializes on the spectacular and emphasizes it to
|
||
|
the nth degree at every opportunity. He is the Robert Chambers of the screen
|
||
|
and furnishes a best seller every time he makes a picture. William De Mille
|
||
|
makes the spectacular only incidental, and seldom thinks it necessary in his
|
||
|
type of film drama. He is more of a dreamer and a poet, unconsciously
|
||
|
seeking the more subtle problems of life as material for his photo-dramas.
|
||
|
He would probably resent being thought a propagandist, and yet he borders
|
||
|
very close on the edge in his interpretations.
|
||
|
Take "Miss Lulu Bett." Was anything ever a deeper psychological study
|
||
|
of a homely girl, with plenty of propaganda served deftly, it is true, but
|
||
|
none the less effectively in her behalf? One feels William De Mille has
|
||
|
never reached his greatest height. That one day he will make a picture
|
||
|
that will stand alone as an example of the highest type of screen art.
|
||
|
He sighed wearily when I suggested this.
|
||
|
"But I put my best in every picture I make now," he said.
|
||
|
A needless remark. One has only to see a William De Mille picture to
|
||
|
recognize the truth of this simple statement.
|
||
|
"The masterpiece will be inspirational," was the answer made to his
|
||
|
objection.
|
||
|
"Bought and Paid For," Mr. De Mille's latest offering to the Paramount
|
||
|
cause, is being shown today at the Rivoli. Some one who saw it in the
|
||
|
projection room spoke of the delicacy with which he handled some of the
|
||
|
scenes that might have been suggestive at the hands of a less skilled
|
||
|
director. Mr. De Mille came East purposely to bring the print of the
|
||
|
Broadhurst play and discuss the scenario of "Nice People" with Clara
|
||
|
Beranger, his scenario writer.
|
||
|
"I discuss the story with Miss Beranger, then she makes a rough draft
|
||
|
and we discuss it again," said Mr. De Mille. "I am able to follow her script
|
||
|
scene for scene when I make my picture. With a less capable writer I could
|
||
|
not do this. While I am finishing our picture Miss Beranger is getting the
|
||
|
scenario ready for my next one."
|
||
|
The De Milles returned home last Wednesday after burning the midnight
|
||
|
oil in an equal distribution of pleasure and business. Mrs. De Mille, who is
|
||
|
as charming as her husband and as big a social asset, was the daughter of
|
||
|
Henry George. So naturally she is well equipped to talk on the subject of
|
||
|
single tax. Mr. De Mille is equally conversant with the subject. He says
|
||
|
not that he was converted by his wife, but because his father was an advocate
|
||
|
of Henry George, so it is a matter of heritage with them both.
|
||
|
"Nice People" in the hands of a director like William De Mille should
|
||
|
fare well. It is in a way a preachment, although on a subject the world will
|
||
|
find timely now. The universal flapper and the danger of turning her loose
|
||
|
without restriction in circles where money is a menace is all taken up by
|
||
|
Rachel Crothers. The stage play fell down after the first two acts and
|
||
|
became a little obvious in its effort to drive home its message. This
|
||
|
undoubtedly will be obviated in the picture by Mr. De Mille, who sees great
|
||
|
possibilities in the story. The screen frequently, despite all that has been
|
||
|
said of its painful license with plays and books, takes a mediocre play and
|
||
|
elevates it to a position it would never attain in its original form.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Abel Gance
|
||
|
August 14, 1921
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
Not even in the good old pre-war days when Germany was looked upon as a
|
||
|
possible business and social companion, were there so many foreign film
|
||
|
producers as we have had with us this Summer. Every boat brings an influx of
|
||
|
foreign competitors, all of them prepared to exploit their motion pictures.
|
||
|
After meeting most of them and classifying them as to their place in this
|
||
|
great cinema world, we are forced to admit Abel Gance brings an agreeable
|
||
|
personality not often found in this drab workaday hemisphere, where the
|
||
|
pursuit of gold so often robs a man of his native charm.
|
||
|
Of course Mr. Gance comes to us from Paris with the halo of a playwright
|
||
|
and poet. He is not essentially a motion picture producer, combining rather
|
||
|
his film perquisites with his reputation as one of France's rising young
|
||
|
dramatists. In the course of four months he has succeeded in establishing
|
||
|
himself in New York in a manner that most foreigners would consider a feat in
|
||
|
four years. But that is due to the Gance personality--which is a tangible
|
||
|
thing--a force no one can gainsay after meeting the maker of "J'Accuse."
|
||
|
In was in fact "J'Accuse" that first brought Abel Gance to America.
|
||
|
That he came for three weeks and remained four months speaks well of our
|
||
|
country. His purpose originally was to place "J'Accuse" on the market. This
|
||
|
he succeeded in accomplishing by virtue of a contract with United Artists.
|
||
|
Still he lingers, impelled this time by a desire to see a Broadway
|
||
|
presentation of his picture, when it opens at the Strand later this month.
|
||
|
After seeing "J'Accuse" and Mr. Gance's treatment of the war, a subject
|
||
|
that has perhaps suffered from clumsy interpretation more than any event in
|
||
|
recent years, one instinctively knows there is something in this young French
|
||
|
producer that is not ordinary. He thinks in a plane not usual in our best
|
||
|
motion picture circles, and he understands the spiritual power of the cinema.
|
||
|
His idea is to portray on the screen what the eye cannot see--to put it more
|
||
|
simply, to give people something to think about and not to have their mental
|
||
|
labors performed for them.
|
||
|
These things he told me over the luncheon table with the aid of his
|
||
|
efficient secretary, Pierre. At times lapsing into his own French tongue he
|
||
|
told something of his early life in Paris. His love of literature was born
|
||
|
with him, and at the age most boys were devouring their "Nick Carter" dime
|
||
|
novels he was reading Shakespeare, Goethe, Corneille and Hugo. Some times he
|
||
|
dipped into Ibsen and Tolstoi, broadening out his literary foundation day by
|
||
|
day until he acquired a speaking acquaintance with all these famous writers.
|
||
|
A familiarity with these authors one would not think would inspire a
|
||
|
youth to leave home, still about this time young Gance ran away to Brussels.
|
||
|
He hadn't any money and he had to eat. A chance to become an actor was
|
||
|
offered him and he accepted it, not because it appealed to him but because
|
||
|
gentlemen as well as ladies must live. This little flier before the
|
||
|
footlights gave him an opportunity to keep in touch with the drama. As it
|
||
|
turned out later it became an excellent preparatory school for what was to
|
||
|
follow.
|
||
|
The young Frenchman about this time changed his mode of mental attack
|
||
|
and feasted on the philosophers, choosing Nietzsche, Confucius, Schopenhauer
|
||
|
and others of this school for his daily diet. And Mr. Gance hasn't forgotten
|
||
|
his philosophers; he talks about them quite as intelligently as he does about
|
||
|
motion pictures, uniting the two in an amazing fashion, although we do not
|
||
|
usually think of Schopenhauer and motion pictures as having any relative
|
||
|
association.
|
||
|
About this time motion pictures appeared on the horizon and he accepted
|
||
|
a job to write scenarios. Mr. Gance said when he began to make pictures to
|
||
|
the tune of a time clock he found the same difficulties that we have here--
|
||
|
a demand that all screen stories have a happy ending regardless of logic.
|
||
|
His only hope was that one day he would have a chance to produce a film
|
||
|
without all these obstacles, and finally one day along came Louis Nalpas, at
|
||
|
that time manager of the Film d'Art, France's most important film company,
|
||
|
with the very chance he wanted.
|
||
|
At the end of three days Mr. Gance was ready to produce "Mater Dolorosa"
|
||
|
from his own scenario. That it is one of the most successful films ever made
|
||
|
in Europe and shows the young man was born with a dramatic instinct that
|
||
|
needed only a little cultivation to encourage, a little experience to bring
|
||
|
out his latent talent as a producer.
|
||
|
Of course, he has followed "Mater Dolorosa" with other productions, and
|
||
|
while making pictures as he believes they should be made he has taken time to
|
||
|
write two stage plays. One is a mystery play, "La Dame du Lac," a drama of
|
||
|
the Middle Ages. The other "La Victoire de Somothrace," a tragedy, in five
|
||
|
acts will be produced at the Comedie Francais. To the Frenchman having a
|
||
|
play produced at the Comedie Francais is like an American having an opera
|
||
|
accepted at the Metropolitan Opera House--it has the same significance.
|
||
|
A contest held by the Comedia, a Paris newspaper, shows how Mr. Gance
|
||
|
stands in his own home town. The purpose of this contest was to determine
|
||
|
the most popular pictures in Paris. "The Cheat" received seventy-six votes,
|
||
|
Chaplin seventy-two and then came four of Mr. Gance's pictures, "J'Accuse,"
|
||
|
"The Tenth Symphony," "Mater Dolorosa" and "The Zone of Death," proving it is
|
||
|
not a case of one production that induces the admiration of France's output
|
||
|
of Gance pictures.
|
||
|
Although Mr. Gance has received a very cordial invitation to remain in
|
||
|
New York and produce his next three--"Ecce Homo," "The End of the World" and
|
||
|
"The Kingdom of Earth"--he evades this issue very politely by remarking he
|
||
|
loves America but hasn't decided yet whether or not he will make pictures
|
||
|
here. He is young, only 30, and yet with a future that impresses his
|
||
|
admirers as being one of the pivots that will turn the tread of film art in
|
||
|
the proper direction. He is ambitious, he is eager and he is enthusiastic--
|
||
|
this with his personality and his ability should make it possible for him to
|
||
|
achieve what he desires--a chance to redeem the screen from the banalities of
|
||
|
life, to show things as they are, and use some of the terrific power he says
|
||
|
he knows the motion picture offers. It has always been his plan to develop
|
||
|
social idea--a psychological situation--doing this gives him a field in the
|
||
|
broad area of the cinema possibilities almost untouched. After hearing him
|
||
|
talk and seeing "J'Accuse" it is no fulsome praise to say he will do those
|
||
|
things--he is doing them. He is taking the weak and heretofore undeveloped
|
||
|
side of pictures, the spiritual, mental side, and giving them the attention
|
||
|
they should have if the new art is to endure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
D. W. Griffith
|
||
|
November 26, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
What is the matter with the movies will be answered when some theatre
|
||
|
owner invents a remedy for the present handicap in the theatre of permitting
|
||
|
the public to see the last half of a picture before the first has been
|
||
|
unreeled, David Wark Griffith says. He believes conditions in the film world
|
||
|
will continue as black as some of our most erudite writers have pictured them
|
||
|
in the recent scathing magazine articles, until this crying evil is overcome.
|
||
|
"How long could David Belasco hold his supremacy as the stage's most
|
||
|
artistic producer," asked Mr. Griffith, "if his audiences straggled into his
|
||
|
theatres all during the performance, some of them seeing the big dramatic
|
||
|
climax before they had seen the events leading up to it. Brilliant as he is,
|
||
|
he would be a lamentable failure if the public were permitted to see the
|
||
|
surprises in his plays first; if the denouement was presented before the
|
||
|
first act was seen, he could not possibly survive.
|
||
|
The greatest dramatic producer in the world of any age could not have
|
||
|
any appeal to his public if he had to plan his plays with the idea in the
|
||
|
back of his mind that he must work out his plot step by step with the thought
|
||
|
it could be seen backward as well as in its logical sequence of acts and
|
||
|
scenes.
|
||
|
"Take my picture, 'One Exciting Night.' It is full of unexpected
|
||
|
moments. The audience is not supposed to know who murdered Johnson. The
|
||
|
name of the arch villain who is constantly killing some one is not known.
|
||
|
If the patrons of a theatre walk into the house and see the whole plot
|
||
|
exposed with the murderer brought to justice and the reason for all this wild
|
||
|
excitement, what is there left for him when the first scenes go on again?
|
||
|
The picture is ruined. You could not expect any one to find an evening's
|
||
|
entertainment in a mystery play with the mystery explained in advance."
|
||
|
Mr. Griffith feels so keenly on the evil of continuous performances he
|
||
|
believes it is as grave a problem as censorship.
|
||
|
"I talked with Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks on the harm that has
|
||
|
been wrought by this backward presentation," said Mr. Griffith. Mary talked
|
||
|
for half and hour and agreed with me something should be done.
|
||
|
"If any theatre owner," said Mr. Griffith, "blazed the trail and
|
||
|
announced he would show his features only at certain hours, he would probably
|
||
|
lose money. His fellow exhibitors would laugh at him for his visionary plan,
|
||
|
but he would be doing a big thing for the artistic future of motion pictures.
|
||
|
A plan might be devised on Broadway," went on Mr. Griffith, "whereby no one
|
||
|
would be seated after the feature had been on half an hour. If any one
|
||
|
arrived that late he would have to wait until the end of the photo-play.
|
||
|
There are comfortable divans and commodious lobbies to take care of the late
|
||
|
arriving patrons, but I am not sure this plan would be practical in the
|
||
|
smaller towns, where the theatre owner has no way of taking care of his
|
||
|
patrons outside of the theatre."
|
||
|
Mr. Griffith feels it is highly essential for some way to be devised for
|
||
|
a picture to be seen as the producer intended it when he made it, that he is
|
||
|
willing to award a prize to any one who can work out a practical solution of
|
||
|
the difficulty and offer some substitute for the haphazard plan that so upset
|
||
|
the soul of those who are striving to give the world better pictures.
|
||
|
"One Exciting Night" is not the sole motive for prompting Mr. Griffith
|
||
|
to make this plea, but every other production, he says, that has been made
|
||
|
with a care and earnestness that gives its producer the right to expect a
|
||
|
different presentation.
|
||
|
"We ask ourselves what is the matter with motion pictures. Why do some
|
||
|
of our most brilliant minds ridicule the motion picture as cheap and
|
||
|
ridiculous? Simply because many producers purposely make their pictures with
|
||
|
an obvious theme. They figure if they try any subtlety it will be submerged
|
||
|
when the films are run off with the last scenes first and the first scenes
|
||
|
last.
|
||
|
"There must be some way to overcome this evil that is holding the motion
|
||
|
picture down to a lower level and preventing it from attaining the place it
|
||
|
was destined to reach," said Mr. Griffith. "Even the stumbling over pairs of
|
||
|
feet in the dark is minor compared with the irreparable harm being done our
|
||
|
finest productions by the vogue now existing in the theatres where the films
|
||
|
are run off as quickly as the operator can operate the machine in order to
|
||
|
seat as many people as possible."
|
||
|
Some one suggested to Mr. Griffith that a system might be evolved
|
||
|
whereby the exhibitor would send out to his patrons postcards with the hour
|
||
|
the feature would be shown, asking that the patrons try and get to the
|
||
|
theatre at the time mentioned on the cards.
|
||
|
"Naturally the theatre owner wants to make as much money as he can,"
|
||
|
said Mr. Griffith. "No one blames him for that. The postcard might keep
|
||
|
people away. He would not want to do anything that would work a hardship
|
||
|
against his business. But I feel there is some brave soul somewhere who for
|
||
|
the sake of what it means to motion pictures will try the experiment of not
|
||
|
permitting his patrons to take their seats after the feature has been on for
|
||
|
half an hour. He would be doing a great good and every producer would rise
|
||
|
up and call him blessed."
|
||
|
Mr. Griffith says he will be happy to receive any suggestions either
|
||
|
from men who are in the film business or from outsiders. He is confident
|
||
|
there is some solution to this evil which threatens to be so disastrous to
|
||
|
the finer productions and he asks that every one who is sincerely interested
|
||
|
in giving not only New York, but Keokuk, Iowa, or Oshkosh, Wis., the best in
|
||
|
motion pictures try and help find the solution.
|
||
|
What is the matter with the movies, as Karl Kitchen and other writers
|
||
|
have asked in articles in the various magazines is not a desire on the part
|
||
|
of the producers to make cheap films with tawdry subjects, but an inability
|
||
|
to get away from these subjects so long as the films are presented backwards.
|
||
|
David Griffith always has something to say when he speaks, and we
|
||
|
believe this is worthy of consideration. We should like to hear from some
|
||
|
one else on the same subject.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ralph Ince
|
||
|
January 29, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
When February rolls around Ralph Ince always goes to the attic of his
|
||
|
country place and looks up the Lincoln disguise. He knows it is wise to be
|
||
|
prepared, for if there is a Lincoln picture he will be called upon to play
|
||
|
the martyred President. I suspect he would be rather hurt if any one else
|
||
|
was given that job; it has grown to be sort of a tradition with him. He
|
||
|
started it in the old Vitagraph days when "The Battle Cry of the Republic"
|
||
|
was being exhibited as an urge for patriotism, and he has continued it now
|
||
|
that he is with Selznick and the subject of Americanization is still a
|
||
|
favorite topic.
|
||
|
Every February--that is the last three since Mr. Ince made his famous
|
||
|
"Land of Freedom" for the Selznick company, playing his favorite role of
|
||
|
Abraham Lincoln, this picture has been brought out for the churches and
|
||
|
schools to help celebrate February 12 in fitting style.
|
||
|
"Are you getting your Lincoln picture ready for its annual revival?"
|
||
|
I asked Myron Selznick. A question that brought up the subject of Mr. Ince
|
||
|
and ended with my promise to go to the Selznick studios and meet the official
|
||
|
Lincoln of the screen.
|
||
|
Now a glance at the photograph on this page will prove Mr. Ince does not
|
||
|
look like Lincoln in the least. The late President, according to his
|
||
|
photographs, was very plain and in no sense an Apollo. Ralph Ince is very
|
||
|
good-looking. He has light curly hair, blue eyes and a well-shaped profile.
|
||
|
"You do not look like Lincoln," I said. "Why have you specialized in
|
||
|
Lincoln roles?"
|
||
|
"I suppose because I mastered the make-up in the first picture and
|
||
|
convinced every one I could look like him," replied Mr. Ince. "It was J.
|
||
|
Stuart Blackton who first gave me that part, and it has clung to me ever
|
||
|
since, frequently interfering with my directorial duties. Another reason may
|
||
|
be my interest in the man. I have read every book available."
|
||
|
Ralph Ince is one of the famous Ince brothers. The other two, Tom and
|
||
|
John, having distinguished themselves in the motion picture world as producer
|
||
|
and director, making the name Ince trebly valuable in the film world.
|
||
|
"I was the first Ince to go into pictures," said the official Lincoln of
|
||
|
the screen. "We were all on the stage. Our parents were of the theatrical
|
||
|
world, so it was natural we should follow their calling. I went out to
|
||
|
Vitagraph and acted in one-reel stories. I always liked to write, so I spent
|
||
|
all my leisure time pounding out scenarios. I wanted to direct, but for a
|
||
|
long time there was no opportunity given me."
|
||
|
"I heard," went on Mr. Ince, "that I could make a picture on my own and
|
||
|
sell it. One Sunday I went over to New Jersey with a cameraman, collected a
|
||
|
friend who had a car, and with his wife and my wife, produced a 500-foot
|
||
|
comedy. I made the picture in a day. Pat Powers saw it and paid me $300 for
|
||
|
my day's work, and I felt like a millionaire. I wrote another story and
|
||
|
filmed it on a pleasant Sunday. But this time I wasn't so lucky. I could
|
||
|
not sell my picture and I had to pay for the film I used without making a
|
||
|
cent."
|
||
|
This, Mr. Ince believed, was the turning point in his career. He knew
|
||
|
he had a good story, and if he had proper facilities for producing it he
|
||
|
could make a good one-reel picture.
|
||
|
"I had talent in my family," he said. "My wife, Lucile Stewart, could
|
||
|
act, and George Stewart, her younger brother, who was just a kid in those
|
||
|
days, was very good on the screen. All I needed was the opportunity."
|
||
|
That came when Albert Smith and J. Stuart Blackton turned him loose on a
|
||
|
story and he directed it to their satisfaction. From that time on his job as
|
||
|
leading man was gone. He was made a bona fide director and was one of the
|
||
|
brave souls who experimented with two-reel pictures in the early days. Those
|
||
|
Vitagraph dramas of 2,000 feet were the joy of all pioneers. They were the
|
||
|
first step forward for better pictures and were hailed as a triumph in the
|
||
|
new art.
|
||
|
Mrs. Ince, as Lucile Stewart, played in many of her husband's pictures
|
||
|
and became one of the well known screen actresses. About this time Anita
|
||
|
Stewart, Mrs. Ince's younger sister, in all her youth and beauty, flashed
|
||
|
across the horizon and became a sensation. Almost overnight she was welcomed
|
||
|
as another Mary Pickford and within a year she had become internationally
|
||
|
famous. Her first work was for Ralph Ince in "The Wood Violet."
|
||
|
But these rattling the skeleton reminiscences have nothing to do with
|
||
|
Ralph Ince's Lincoln. Still one cannot delve into his history without
|
||
|
mentioning a few of the outstanding facts in his career.
|
||
|
Mr. Ince remained with Vitagraph for some time, later joining the
|
||
|
Selznick company. He has been with Selznick for four years and was deep in
|
||
|
the throes of "Who Cares," a story by Cosmo Hamilton, when I saw him at the
|
||
|
Selznick studios.
|
||
|
"Are you going to do Lincoln this year?" I asked him, as he settled down
|
||
|
in a big chair with a Lincolnesque attitude.
|
||
|
"No; I am going to direct. Not even a chance to get out the old make-up
|
||
|
is going to interfere with my other duties," he replied, settling the
|
||
|
question of love and duty by choosing a capital D.
|
||
|
Mr. Ince says his wife has practically deserted the screen. She is so
|
||
|
contented and happy with her home duties at Bayside she prefers the life of
|
||
|
domesticity to that of the studio, he said.
|
||
|
Mr. Ince aimed the working side-by-side idea a terrible wallop when he
|
||
|
said he was delighted she had decided to remain at the home fireside.
|
||
|
"I come home worn out from work at the studio and I like a change of
|
||
|
atmosphere. If Mrs. Ince has been working with me she has been a part of the
|
||
|
day's happenings. As it is I go home, find her mind refreshed, and I forget
|
||
|
my work. I think that is as it should be. Although we were very happy in
|
||
|
our work together."
|
||
|
Mr. Ince says he thinks his brother Tom a great director.
|
||
|
"More than that, he is a great organizer and a fine business man. He is
|
||
|
the best business man of the three of us. He seems to combine his talents
|
||
|
with a practical side of pictures, a gift few directors possess."
|
||
|
While we were talking the assistant director, the cameraman, the
|
||
|
telephone and even the players were trying to coax Mr. Ince down on the
|
||
|
floor. After all these efforts I felt I should not interrupt any longer.
|
||
|
But Mr. Ince knows so much about the picture world--knowledge gained in his
|
||
|
fourteen years in the industry--if one is also a pioneer it is very
|
||
|
interesting. He can say he knew the film business "when" and since he has
|
||
|
profited by his many experiences one might say he has won the race. Only the
|
||
|
directors and players who have been able to weather the storm have survived.
|
||
|
Running the risk of being thought of having a Dulcy mind, we must say the
|
||
|
survival of the fittest, has been particularly true in the picture business,
|
||
|
and Mr. Ince is one of these survivors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rex Ingram
|
||
|
February 13, 1921
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
His name is Rex Ingram. He is the director of the "Four Horsemen of the
|
||
|
Apocalypse." That may have meant very little to you in the past, but it is
|
||
|
going to be a tremendous force in the artistic creation of motion pictures in
|
||
|
the future. In the few hushed moments of appreciation following the
|
||
|
unreeling of Ibanez's story, the name Ingram was on every one's lips.
|
||
|
The imagination, the technique, the splendid conception of the four
|
||
|
horsemen, the symbolic Christ figure--is not the work of a mere motion
|
||
|
picture director--it is the expression of genius.
|
||
|
The scattered groups of motion picture players, directors, producers and
|
||
|
writers stood waiting to look at this Rex Ingram who had wrought this
|
||
|
marvelous screen play. He did not appear. One after another of our most
|
||
|
prominent men and women in the theatrical and picture world passed down the
|
||
|
wide steps of the Ritz, but the star of the evening was nowhere in sight.
|
||
|
He had disappeared, as panicky and unwilling to face the crowd, as an
|
||
|
author on a first night. I was not only disappointed, I was personally
|
||
|
aggrieved. Jack Meador had made an engagement for me to meet Mr. Ingram at
|
||
|
that time. I had shown only a polite interest in Mr. Meador's suggestion
|
||
|
that I might like to talk with the director of "The Four Horsemen of the
|
||
|
Apocalypse." I had not seen the picture then.
|
||
|
"Where is he," I demanded.
|
||
|
"He isn't here," said Mr. Meador.
|
||
|
"But you said--"
|
||
|
"Sh! Sh!" whispered M. Meador. "Come with me."
|
||
|
Mr. Meador must have whispered this mysterious sh! sh! to other folk,
|
||
|
for presently we found ourselves in the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
|
||
|
Geraghty, with Luther Reed, John Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hatton,
|
||
|
Winifred Westover, Victor Fleming and other kindred spirits.
|
||
|
"Where is he?" I again demanded.
|
||
|
"He isn't here," said Mr. Geraghty.
|
||
|
Just when I had made up my mind to try and forget this elusive young man
|
||
|
who never seemed to be where he was expected Jack Meador brought up a
|
||
|
slender, boyish looking youth and presented him as Rex Ingram.
|
||
|
Just at first I thought it was a joke. It did not seem possible this
|
||
|
boy could have created the marvelous screen story we had just seen.
|
||
|
"Mr. Ingram?" I repeated questioningly?
|
||
|
"Yes," he said, " I came over here to meet you."
|
||
|
That sentence won me.
|
||
|
I expected him to say: "Here I am; what do you want to say to me?"
|
||
|
"But you are so young," I began. "Surely there is some mistake. You
|
||
|
did not direct 'The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse."
|
||
|
"I am not so young as I look," was his quiet answer. "I am 29 years old
|
||
|
and I have lived a long time."
|
||
|
"How did you do it?" I asked him, still under the spell of the picture.
|
||
|
"In the beginning June Mathis furnished me with a splendid continuity.
|
||
|
She knows more about construction than any writer in the world." For ten
|
||
|
minutes he spoke of what a large factor continuity is and how much of the
|
||
|
credit belongs to Miss Mathis.
|
||
|
I did not argue that point because the construction of "The Four
|
||
|
Horsemen of the Apocalypse" is so fine a piece of scenario workmanship it
|
||
|
establishes a new era in screen adaptation.
|
||
|
Then he spoke of Rudolph Valentino, the boy whose charm and Latin
|
||
|
warmth, contributes so largely to the colorfulness of the picture, and of
|
||
|
beautiful Alice Terry--whose Marguerite is gorgeously real and vital. After
|
||
|
all of these preliminaries with many promptings and questions on my part he
|
||
|
finally told me something of himself.
|
||
|
Rex Ingram was born in Dublin. He lived in the romantic atmosphere of
|
||
|
Ireland until he was seventeen when he came to America to seek his fortune.
|
||
|
That career he believed lay in becoming a great sculptor. He entered the
|
||
|
studio of Lawrie and there attempted to reach his ambition. We were just
|
||
|
going nicely on the young man's ambitions when he suddenly switched the
|
||
|
subject and started telling me about Lawrie.
|
||
|
"I owe anything I am to him," said Mr. Ingram. "He is a great genius, a
|
||
|
real artist. I only wish I had seen his statue of the Four Horsemen before I
|
||
|
made my picture. Saint John, in his Revelations, must have had Lawrie's idea
|
||
|
of War, Famine, Pestilence and Death in his mind."
|
||
|
"But your Four Horsemen is undoubtedly one of the high lights," I
|
||
|
interrupted. "Your conception is magnificent. The drawings of Albrecht
|
||
|
Durer are so horribly real."
|
||
|
"They might have been better," he insisted, "if I had seen the statue
|
||
|
first."
|
||
|
Continuing, Mr. Ingram said he had made pictures for two reasons; first,
|
||
|
because he needed the money and then because he had always liked photography,
|
||
|
and there was something about picturing an idea that appealed to him.
|
||
|
Despite his apparent youth he has been directing pictures for seven years.
|
||
|
He made "The Black Orchid," one of the first Bluebird pictures for Universal,
|
||
|
and managed to escape censorial wrath by an eyelash.
|
||
|
"Stroheim worked for me," he said. "I think he is one of our greatest
|
||
|
directors. We have had few better or finer screen dramas than 'Blind
|
||
|
Husbands.'"
|
||
|
Again this impulsive young Irishman was off on another subject. For
|
||
|
fifteen more minutes he spoke of Stroheim's mental qualifications and wide
|
||
|
literary knowledge. Before I had time to coax him back on the subject of Rex
|
||
|
Ingram he had launched into a discussion on why David Griffith is the
|
||
|
greatest of them all.
|
||
|
"We are all pupils of his. He leads and we follow. Any time any
|
||
|
director believes he has made a picture as good as Griffith, along comes a
|
||
|
new production with something new and again we are all followers. He creates
|
||
|
and we copy."
|
||
|
Coming after "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse," the best production
|
||
|
of the war ever made, and as fine a translation of a fine story as any of us
|
||
|
have ever seen, he paid David Griffith a real tribute.
|
||
|
Rex Ingram will go far. He has youth, he has brains, he has ambition,
|
||
|
and he has temperament. He is also very handsome. The latter may be
|
||
|
incidental, but none the less interesting. He has the blue-gray eyes of
|
||
|
Ireland, and the whimsical wit of the Irish. He sympathizes so deeply with
|
||
|
his country he longs to put on a big film play and let the world see how
|
||
|
Ireland has been oppressed.
|
||
|
All Mr. Ingram's affections are not centered on motion pictures. As a
|
||
|
recreation he occasionally models. Interesting as this may be, his career as
|
||
|
a sculptor will now fade in the background. He has found himself in pictures
|
||
|
--and when the public sees "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse," there will
|
||
|
be many laurel wreaths for young Mr. Ingram. We need him, his fine sense of
|
||
|
proportion and his artistic idea of screen drama.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ernst Lubitsch
|
||
|
January 1, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
The eyes of the American film industry have been focused on Ernst
|
||
|
Lubitsch, the young German director, who more than any other foreign maker of
|
||
|
pictures has established himself as a man of international reputation. From
|
||
|
the moment Mr. Lubitsch stepped off the American steamship from Bremen he has
|
||
|
been followed by newspaper reporters and film men, who have lingered to hear
|
||
|
from his own lips the question of his success.
|
||
|
Unless they speak German or have an interpreter, they will fare very
|
||
|
badly, because Mr. Lubitsch speaks no English. His German is spun off so
|
||
|
quickly, the German one learned at school is absolutely of no use, except to
|
||
|
catch an occasional phrase.
|
||
|
I met Mr. Lubitsch in the offices of the United Plays. Offices that
|
||
|
looked more as if they might have belonged to the suite of a grand duchess or
|
||
|
a member of the reigning family. Whoever thought to find a grand piano with
|
||
|
a cerise-colored drape, with curtains and heavy carpets to match, marble
|
||
|
statuary, pictures and other visible semblance of elegance on Broadway?
|
||
|
I rubbed my eyes to see if I had not suddenly stepped into an Arabian Nights
|
||
|
chapter instead of in a business office. But no, apparently business is
|
||
|
transacted in these luxurious offices.
|
||
|
Then Mr. Lubitsch came and I forgot the background in my interest in the
|
||
|
young German, who is about 29 years old and has a smile that is infectious.
|
||
|
He was dressed in a light-colored suit, apparently ready-made, and only a
|
||
|
distant cousin to the producer that comes from our Fifth avenue tailors, but
|
||
|
his clothes were only incidental.
|
||
|
He started speaking German at a rate of forty miles a moment, asking me
|
||
|
long questions, and punctuating each remark with a flourish of his arms.
|
||
|
"Please translate," I asked Mr. Blumenthal. "He is speaking so fast I
|
||
|
cannot catch a word he is saying."
|
||
|
And so Ben Blumenthal stepped into the breach and followed Mr. Lubitsch
|
||
|
with a literal translation.
|
||
|
I did manage to understand before Mr. Blumenthal started his
|
||
|
interpretation that Mr. Lubitsch believes our American films are "sehr gut."
|
||
|
"Take 'Forbidden Fruit' as an example, the little things (Mr. Lubitsch
|
||
|
meant the details) are amazing. I noticed a girl troubled over the proper
|
||
|
fork to use. She stopped short at her fish fork and waited for her hostess
|
||
|
to proceed so she would make no mistake. Such care for the minor things is
|
||
|
wonderful and is typical of the excellence of American direction."
|
||
|
Mr. Lubitsch spoke of "Broken Blossoms" as being very popular in
|
||
|
Germany. "It is so beautiful," he said, "so artistic. Mr. Griffith is a
|
||
|
wonderful director to be able to put such beauty on the screen."
|
||
|
Through Mr. Blumenthal's apt interpretation I gathered that things had
|
||
|
not been so rosy in making "Pharoh's Wife" as Mr. Lubitsch had expected. A
|
||
|
little of the spirit of American unrest crept into the studio. "Pharoh's
|
||
|
Wife," which Lubitsch made for Famous Players-Lasky, is an Egyptian story, a
|
||
|
mammoth spectacle in which 25,000 men and women are employed. A great battle
|
||
|
was in progress when one side of the army suddenly stopped work and refused
|
||
|
to go on with the picture.
|
||
|
"What is the trouble?" demanded Lubitsch.
|
||
|
"More money--money like the Americans get," was the cry.
|
||
|
This faction had no more been quieted with bigger salaries than the
|
||
|
other side of the army stopped short and staged a little strike of its own.
|
||
|
Both armies quieted, the picture progressed until the entire outfit put their
|
||
|
heads together and with due accord furnished a strike that took the entire
|
||
|
studio force to quiet.
|
||
|
"Pharaoh's Wife" will not be the cheap picture every one expected. Its
|
||
|
cost is on a par with any spectacle made in America. And it seems likely,
|
||
|
now that the Germans have learned not to work for nothing, that pictures made
|
||
|
on Teutonic ground will hereafter rank in price with our American-made
|
||
|
product.
|
||
|
Mr. Lubitsch was taken on a tour of inspection of the American motion
|
||
|
picture theatre. He saw the Capitol, the Strand, the Rivoli and the Rialto.
|
||
|
"They are very beautiful," he said. "Much more pretentious than
|
||
|
anything we have in Berlin. Our theatres have no such elaborate programs and
|
||
|
are not designed with so much thought and care. They are but simple
|
||
|
playhouses compared with these theatres."
|
||
|
In fact Mr. Lubitsch is the sort of young man who is prepared to give
|
||
|
his unqualified endorsement to anything American. He is very good-natured:
|
||
|
smiles continually. He has a personality that is both gracious and pleasing.
|
||
|
He says he likes Charlie Chaplin better than any actor he has ever seen and
|
||
|
the last time a Chaplin picture played in Berlin he went three times. Harold
|
||
|
Lloyd is also a great favorite of Mr. Lubitsch. He thinks he is one of our
|
||
|
best actors.
|
||
|
Perhaps one reason for his interest in our comedians is the fact he
|
||
|
started in life playing comedy roles. It was Max Reinhardt who discovered
|
||
|
him and engaged him for his own theatres. His success was rapid and he
|
||
|
toured Europe with the Reinhardt company. At the time when Lubitsch had made
|
||
|
a place for himself on the European stage Paul Davidson, owner of numerous
|
||
|
German film undertakings, saw him acting the leading role of the devil in
|
||
|
"The Green Flute." Impressed by the young man's talent, Mr. Davidson talked
|
||
|
films to the young actor, and a contract was signed making young Lubitsch
|
||
|
director and scenario writer, as well as actor of his own company. His first
|
||
|
undertaking was "Lubitsch Comedies." It was not until after that he became
|
||
|
identified with bigger features, but it is as an historical director that he
|
||
|
has become recognized in this country. It was he who discovered Pola Negri,
|
||
|
who was at that time an unknown cabaret singer. Her charm and her talent,
|
||
|
combined with his directorial skill, made "Carmen or Gypsy Blood" one of the
|
||
|
best-known pictures in the world market. Then followed "Passion,"
|
||
|
"Deception," and "One Arabian Night."
|
||
|
Mr. Lubitsch was highly amused at the questions asked about the papier-
|
||
|
mache sets, which we have been told are a part of his historical settings.
|
||
|
He laughed merrily and said he had never heard of them.
|
||
|
"Pharaoh's Wife" took six months to produce, but it took a very short
|
||
|
time to cut and edit. Mr. Lubitsch does his own cutting and editing and
|
||
|
believes no director should entrust this work to any one else, whether he is
|
||
|
German, American or English.
|
||
|
After a brief visit here he will go West to look over the studios in
|
||
|
California. He is in favor of our directors visiting Germany and European
|
||
|
directors visiting America for an exchange of ideas. Although his first
|
||
|
picture was for an American concern and belongs to Famous Players-Lasky, we
|
||
|
understand there are many film offers being made in his direction. Good
|
||
|
directors are scarce.
|
||
|
He said as I was leaving to make room for several other newspaper folk
|
||
|
who were waiting, "Next time we meet I shall try and learn English."
|
||
|
He said most of the sentence in good English, which makes me wonder if
|
||
|
he doesn't know more English than he pretends. Foreigners are always such
|
||
|
expert linguists.
|
||
|
As for Pola Negri, he says she is everything charming a woman should be,
|
||
|
and it is unnecessary for him to say more because she will visit America
|
||
|
early next year. This was said in German, with a twinkle in his eye. In
|
||
|
fact we suspect the young man of having a great sense of humor. He laughed
|
||
|
so frequently and with such enjoyment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fred Niblo
|
||
|
August 13, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
After Fred Niblo made "The Mark of Zorro" and "The Three Musketeers,"
|
||
|
two screen hits in rapid succession, the wise-acres leaned back in their
|
||
|
comfortable arm chairs and, drawing a long breath, said:
|
||
|
"He cannot do it again."
|
||
|
Then "Blood and Sand" burst across the Broadway film horizon in a
|
||
|
skyrocket of phenomenal glory, and the film world took another deep breath
|
||
|
and said with awe:
|
||
|
"He has done it"--wondering what secret method he had used to bring this
|
||
|
miracle to pass. And now Mr. Niblo has come to New York to arrange for
|
||
|
distribution with Metro of the productions to be made by his own company.
|
||
|
Broadway was his playground for a great many years and his coming and going
|
||
|
while events of interest in the past were by no means cause for any special
|
||
|
demonstration. As George Cohan's brother-in-law and an actor himself of
|
||
|
ability, Fred Niblo has always had a host of friends and admirers, but he was
|
||
|
never regarded in the past as one for whom the velvet carpet should be laid.
|
||
|
But with three huge pictorial successes to his credit his arrival in
|
||
|
Manhattan this time has equaled the visit of a foreign potentate--and the
|
||
|
town is his.
|
||
|
Fortunately he has a rare sense of humor and an idea of the fitness of
|
||
|
things, so that all this attention hasn't turned his head and hasn't even
|
||
|
changed his attitude toward life. Having known Enid Bennett, the attractive
|
||
|
and lovable wife of this famous one ever since she came to this country, and
|
||
|
won all hearts by her quaint manners and her English accent, I was curious to
|
||
|
meet her husband--the director of the hour.
|
||
|
An occasion was provided when Metro entertained Mr. Niblo at a luncheon.
|
||
|
Just by way of showing the interest every one feels in his work every seat at
|
||
|
the table was occupied with film writers, all eager to hear from his own lips
|
||
|
how he was able to make the grade three times in succession.
|
||
|
"I had to learn to make pictures," he said, after we were seated at the
|
||
|
table and he had listened to the united praise of some thirty people. "After
|
||
|
I married Miss Bennett, I gave up the stage to direct her. Some of those
|
||
|
first pictures were pretty bad, but by hard work and by profiting by past
|
||
|
mistakes and applying my knowledge of the theatre, I was able to overcome
|
||
|
some of the things that interfered with my progress as a director in the
|
||
|
beginning."
|
||
|
This admission was only obtained after considerable coaxing. Fred Niblo
|
||
|
doesn't talk about himself. He doesn't swagger and he isn't the type of
|
||
|
director who wears puttees and affects a soft silk shirt and flowing tie just
|
||
|
to look the part. He is a sincere, real person, who is honestly trying to
|
||
|
keep his place at the top of the ladder by hard work. He doesn't tell how he
|
||
|
had to teach the actor all he knows, and what difficulty he had in getting
|
||
|
the cameraman to get certain effects. In all the conversation he did not say
|
||
|
any words that detracted from the glory of any one who had a part in "Blood
|
||
|
and Sand." He spoke of Rodolph Valentino in the highest terms, both as actor
|
||
|
an a man. June Mathis's faithfulness to the author's text and her genius in
|
||
|
writing continuity came in for his earnest praise. Douglas Farirbanks's
|
||
|
knowledge of the techniques of films and his ability to make pictures was
|
||
|
another subject to which Mr. Niblo warmed, giving Doug the lion's share of
|
||
|
credit for "Zorro" and "Musketeers."
|
||
|
While Mr. Niblo is full of enthusiasm and high hopes for his future
|
||
|
work, he isn't carried away with his own importance and an idea that he has
|
||
|
conquered the film world.
|
||
|
Our conversation was punctuated with talk of Enid and the baby. The
|
||
|
baby is a year old now and her father admits she is probably the finest young
|
||
|
lady in captivity. As for Enid--he doesn't care how much people talk of her
|
||
|
beauty and charm. It's a subject that does not bore him.
|
||
|
Although Mr. Niblo admits Miss Bennett was instrumental in getting him
|
||
|
to come into pictures, he had considerable experience making travelogues.
|
||
|
During the lifetime of Josephine Cohan, his first wife, he traveled in
|
||
|
Africa, and in remote spots in this uncivilized country he was able to obtain
|
||
|
some exceptional films. He says he would probably have continued to give
|
||
|
Burton Holmes a race for his money, if his funds had not given out and he and
|
||
|
his wife had to return to the States to get some more of that necessary
|
||
|
article--U. S. dollars.
|
||
|
The luncheon brought forth the interesting news that the motion picture
|
||
|
rights to "Captain Applejack" have been purchased for Mr. Niblo and will
|
||
|
serve as his first independent production.
|
||
|
"At first I was a little afraid of 'Applejack,'" he said. "It is a
|
||
|
delicate thing that requires careful handling. The loss of the dialogue may
|
||
|
affect its value, too, but I believe it will make an unusual picture. I want
|
||
|
to make it as a straight story without any obvious comedy."
|
||
|
Mr. Niblo said the part where Wallace Eddinger kills the Chinaman in a
|
||
|
dream will have to be eliminated to please the "wrecking crew"--that elegant
|
||
|
phrase meaning the w. k. censor board.
|
||
|
"We always keep the 'wrecking crew' in mind," he said. "We had some
|
||
|
thrilling scenes in the bull fight in 'Blood and Sand,' when Valentino really
|
||
|
struggles with the bull, but we were afraid of the censorial scissors and so
|
||
|
we cut all that stuff out before they had a chance to ruin the continuity of
|
||
|
our picture"
|
||
|
"Captain Applejack" will be followed by three other equally well known
|
||
|
stage plays, and if Fred Niblo continues smashing records as a director--
|
||
|
well, we shall have him in a class by himself. He doesn't dare hope to have
|
||
|
all his productions 100 per cent, that is too much to expect, but he is going
|
||
|
to try mighty hard to come as near that average as is humanly possible.
|
||
|
And just to prove Mr. Niblo finds other subjects beside his own skill
|
||
|
worth discussing he had many pleasant things to say about "The Tailor Made
|
||
|
Man," Charles Ray's next picture. He also said he hoped to direct Mr. Ray in
|
||
|
a picture some day. He considers him one of the best actors on the screen
|
||
|
and a star whose future will continue to be one of the bright spots in the
|
||
|
industry.
|
||
|
Tomorrow Mr. Niblo will leave the scene of all this glory and hit the
|
||
|
trail back to Enid and the baby and work. He promises to come again and
|
||
|
bring them with him next time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
John S. Robertson
|
||
|
November 5, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
John Robertson progressed so far with the formation of his own company
|
||
|
that he even had the necessary capital to finance his project. He resigned
|
||
|
from Famous Players-Lasky and refused five definite offers from five
|
||
|
companies to produce pictures, all because back in his mind was the
|
||
|
overwhelming desire to be his own boss. Every man has that desire. It's one
|
||
|
of the foundations upon which human nature is built. Then without any
|
||
|
warning John Robertson dropped all talk of forming his own company and signed
|
||
|
a contract with Inspiration. Speedy work on the part of Charles Duell, said
|
||
|
one man who will never get over losing Robertson. But most people who know
|
||
|
John Robertson felt there must be something back of this sudden change other
|
||
|
than Charles Duell's persuasive tongue.
|
||
|
At the Algonquin--which is to the actors and directors what 729 Seventh
|
||
|
is to the exchange men and theatre owners--Mr. Robertson explained why he
|
||
|
turned down the five prominent producers and signed on the dotted line with
|
||
|
Inspiration, which is the newest producing company of them all.
|
||
|
"The responsibility of being in absolute control is enormous," said Mr.
|
||
|
Robertson. "When Mr. Duell, as president of Inspiration, came to me with an
|
||
|
offer I said no at first. I did not dread the responsibility exactly, but I
|
||
|
know so little about business. I can make pictures, I can direct stars, but
|
||
|
I cannot sell my product. I was originally an actor, and few actors have any
|
||
|
business ability. Then Mr. Duell and I talked again. He offered me
|
||
|
everything I had planned to have myself, with a freedom of all the business
|
||
|
end, and I accepted."
|
||
|
Mr. Robertson, in explaining why he changed his mind, said the idea of
|
||
|
being held responsible for other people's money was a thing that was too
|
||
|
important to be entered into without looking at it from every angle.
|
||
|
When John Robertson said that he had been an actor I thought I had
|
||
|
misunderstood him. But after repeating the question he assured me long
|
||
|
before he had ever had any hopes of making a picture like "Sentimental Tommy"
|
||
|
he had been an actor. He went out to the Vitagraph and worked as Anita
|
||
|
Stewart's leading man, under the direction of Ralph Ince.
|
||
|
After studying the technique of direction, Albert Smith permitted him to
|
||
|
try his skill, and he did so well he lost his job as an actor and became a
|
||
|
director. From Vitagraph he went to Famous Players-Lasky, where for five
|
||
|
years he turned out some of their finest productions.
|
||
|
I mentioned "Sentimental Tommy," although possibly of all the pictures
|
||
|
he made for Famous this one brought the least financial return. One of the
|
||
|
most artistic pictures ever made, and one of the few that really reflects the
|
||
|
spirit of Barrie--this film has never been considered a big box office
|
||
|
attraction.
|
||
|
Mr. Robertson said at first there was a suspicion that casting people
|
||
|
who were not stars for the leading roles might have something to do with the
|
||
|
difficulty in bringing people into the theatre to see it, but when the same
|
||
|
fate happened to "Peter Ibbetson," which boasted of Elsie Ferguson, Wallace
|
||
|
Reid, Montagu Love and an entire cast of stars, the fault seemed to be more
|
||
|
with the type of picture.
|
||
|
I was glad to hear Robertson say, even if "Sentimental Tommy" had not
|
||
|
approached the other films in monetary returns, he had never regretted making
|
||
|
it. He said he felt repaid in London when Sir James Barrie complimented him
|
||
|
and told him how much he liked the picturization of his story.
|
||
|
"Footlights" is another pet of Mr. Robertson's. This reversed the order
|
||
|
of things, however, and brought into the Paramount treasury enough money to
|
||
|
make up for the shortage of "Sentimental Tommy." Based on Rita Weiman's
|
||
|
story, "Footlights" is Elsie Ferguson's best and most popular picture.
|
||
|
John Robertson has great imagination; that is one reason the majority of
|
||
|
his pictures have been so successful. He sees things with a picture eye and
|
||
|
measures the possibilities of the camera before he starts work. His actors
|
||
|
all adore him, and enjoy working with him because of his appreciation of the
|
||
|
value of big scenes, and his knowledge of dramatic effects--a thing so many
|
||
|
directors lack.
|
||
|
Having just finished "Tess," Mr. Robertson was full of Mary Pickford's
|
||
|
extraordinary ability.
|
||
|
"She is the most wonderful girl I ever met," he said. "She knows
|
||
|
everything about picture making, from the most technical side to the dramatic
|
||
|
possibilities. I thought with her fame and success she would probably resent
|
||
|
taking direction. But she sought it. She was as nervous as a debutante for
|
||
|
fear she would not get the most out of every scene."
|
||
|
Mr. Robertson said frequently they had appealed to Douglas Fairbanks for
|
||
|
an opinion. When asked for advice he would give it, but he would never
|
||
|
venture a suggestion until asked for it.
|
||
|
"Their married life," said Mr. Robertson, "is ideal. They work
|
||
|
together, play together, and plan their pictures together. Just the way
|
||
|
people should do. I feel strongly on that subject, because my wife has been
|
||
|
such a help and inspiration to me."
|
||
|
Mrs. Robertson, as Josephine Lovett, has written most of Mr. Robertson's
|
||
|
scenarios, and has helped him to visualizing them for the screen.
|
||
|
"I was tempted to accept Miss Pickford's offer to remain with her, and
|
||
|
if Mr. Duell had not persuaded me to come into the Inspiration fold I think I
|
||
|
would have made her next picture.
|
||
|
"Inspiration offers me a big chance," said Mr. Robertson. "I shall have
|
||
|
Miss Lillian Gish, who, like Miss Pickford, is an actress of brains and
|
||
|
experience. I feel having all three of the Inspiration players--Richard
|
||
|
Barthelmess, Dorothy Gish and Lillian--I shall have an opportunity to put all
|
||
|
my ideas into operation."
|
||
|
Mr. Robertson said his first picture would be a Richard Barthelmess
|
||
|
feature. The play has not yet been chose, although Joseph Hergeshimer's
|
||
|
"Bright Shawl" has been discussed as a possible vehicle.
|
||
|
Over at the Algonquin one must always talk fast--there are so many
|
||
|
people to interrupt--and we did talk fast, for we had many things to say, but
|
||
|
an hour came and went quickly and we both had other engagements.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victor Seastrom
|
||
|
November 26, 1922
|
||
|
Louella Parsons
|
||
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
||
|
Victor Seastrom will never win a prize in a talking contest. His
|
||
|
silences are far more eloquent than his conversation. But when he does talk
|
||
|
he has something to say, and what he says is not prefixed with the pronoun I,
|
||
|
and filled with a long account of personal experiences. He is unbelievably
|
||
|
modest, so much so that when he named his salary it is said F. J. Godsol gave
|
||
|
him more than he asked, giving as his reason the man who made "At the Stroke
|
||
|
of Midnight," "Jerusalem," "Eyvinde of the Hills," "Sir Arne's Treasure" and
|
||
|
"You and I" is worth every penny he paid him.
|
||
|
Now you will admit this doesn't sound like a motion picture story. But
|
||
|
Victor Seastrom is unlike a motion picture man--at least not any I have ever
|
||
|
met. He is modest to the point of shyness, and approaches his new job with a
|
||
|
fear that he may not be as good as Mr. Godsol and others who have seen his
|
||
|
work know him to be. Coue would say Mr. Seastrom needs a little Coueism to
|
||
|
give him confidence, and any one meeting him for the first time might agree
|
||
|
with the Nancy pharmacist, but having seen some of the Seastrom pictures I
|
||
|
will have to modify that and say he may need Coue for himself but not for his
|
||
|
work.
|
||
|
After much effort on my own part and some prompting by Howard Dietz, who
|
||
|
went with me to the Plaza Hotel to call on the Swedish director, he modestly
|
||
|
volunteered some of his ideas.
|
||
|
"In Sweden," he said, "we erect monuments to Ibsen, Strindberg, Bjornson
|
||
|
and other famous writers. In America you give your homage to your Senators
|
||
|
and the men prominent in political life. The student body in our country is
|
||
|
very highly regarded; in your country it is not considered important."
|
||
|
Mr. Seastrom, with reservation and without any thought of offending
|
||
|
America, went on to say in his country poverty is no barrier to education.
|
||
|
The poorer classes know art and literature and music as well as the rich.
|
||
|
Swedish audiences are ready for Ibsen and Strindberg, but the American
|
||
|
audience must be prepared by any films in which no attempt is made to modify
|
||
|
a story and give it the usual conventional happy ending. He said it in less
|
||
|
the critical language perhaps, but the meaning is the same.
|
||
|
Being a stranger in a strange country this exceedingly modest director
|
||
|
is feeling his way along the ground and not doing any moving until he is sure
|
||
|
of himself. Coming from a country where he has worked in a badly equipped
|
||
|
studio with no facilities and where he has to do everything from washing the
|
||
|
film to photographing it, he is amazed at the vastness of it all. Instead of
|
||
|
saying:
|
||
|
"Well, here I am. Now American film history will begin." He says: "I
|
||
|
am here and I want to do my best. I hope I can please the American public."
|
||
|
Mr. Seastrom, hearing how fast Americans move, expected to see men walk
|
||
|
over each other on the street, and women trampled under foot in the mad rush
|
||
|
to succeed; expected to be caught in the commercial maelstrom and swept away
|
||
|
in the fast-moving current. Instead he found a calm people who had time to
|
||
|
listen to him, and who had watched his work with interest and admiration.
|
||
|
"I was agreeably surprised," he confessed with a smile. "I am lonesome
|
||
|
for my family, but I have to admit this town grows on one."
|
||
|
After Mr. Seastrom tries a little Hollywood air and begins his motion
|
||
|
picture work, he will send for his family. His wife is Ethel Erastoff, a
|
||
|
famous actress, who is now playing the lead in "Loyalties" in Copenhagen.
|
||
|
"I went to see the American production of 'Loyalties,'" he said.
|
||
|
"How does it compare with your wife's work, we asked him.
|
||
|
"I do not know," he replied, "I have never seen my wife but once on the
|
||
|
stage."
|
||
|
"What?" both Mr. Dietz and I exclaimed in one breath, thinking that
|
||
|
perhaps Fanny Hurst's doctrine had struck the Seastrom home.
|
||
|
"I take her to the theatre and call for her," he said, "but I never see
|
||
|
her on the stage. It makes her so nervous when she knows I am in the
|
||
|
audience she cannot act. 'If you come to see me,' she said, 'you will not
|
||
|
love me.'"
|
||
|
So, modesty, we believe, must run in the Seastrom family.
|
||
|
This man, who was discovered by America in Sweden, and who with Pola
|
||
|
Negri and Ernst Lubitsch has come to the United States to remove the gnawing
|
||
|
fear in the American hearts that there is a threatened foreign invasion, has
|
||
|
directed as well as played in his pictures. The term artist has been
|
||
|
wrongfully applied so many times we hesitate to use it in the case of this
|
||
|
man, who is in reality an artist, but it is the only word we can think of
|
||
|
that properly expresses Victor Seastrom's ability.
|
||
|
Victory Seastrom may bring us just what we need--a little more subtlety,
|
||
|
less obvious explanation and the delicate touches that make his pictures more
|
||
|
than mere films.
|
||
|
"Americans," he said sadly, "do not like beautiful mountains, rivers and
|
||
|
trees. They must have action. In Sweden we can express so much with our
|
||
|
scenery we love to see it."
|
||
|
About this time the conversation began to lag and Freckles, who is
|
||
|
called the Wesley Barry of press agents, began to talk in grandiloquent tones
|
||
|
about the Vikings, asking Mr. Seastrom if he came from a family of Vikings.
|
||
|
But alas and alack our stalwart and handsome hero failed to rise to
|
||
|
Freckles's bait and only shook his head and said:
|
||
|
"My family have followed the sea if that is what you mean."
|
||
|
It wasn't all Freckles meant. He who loves romance smelt a story in
|
||
|
which a noble Viking of the Northland figured and because we hated to have
|
||
|
him disappointed we broke up the party--suspecting Mr. Seastrom was
|
||
|
delighted. He seemed so worried for fear between us Freckles and I would
|
||
|
concoct a story that should not be printed. I hope we have not wronged him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|
||
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available on the Web at any of the following:
|
||
|
http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology/
|
||
|
http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/Taylorology/
|
||
|
http://www.uno.edu/~drcom/Taylorology
|
||
|
Full text searches of back issues can be done at http://www.etext.org/Zines/
|
||
|
For more information about Taylor, see
|
||
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
||
|
*****************************************************************************
|