The Cinema Museum’s redoubtable tour guide, Morris Hardcastle, was offering his
hand at £50 per shake given he had once shook Charlie Chaplin’s hand, for David
Robinson and Kevin Brownlow he was suggesting a bargain £100 given the number
of silent performers these two have met over the years. But before Exit Smiling, our final film of the packed, inspirational Saturday programme, Mr Robinson told us of meeting its inimitable
star, Beatrice Lillie at a screening of the film at the BFI in the late 1960’s
and raised the stakes once more.
David said she was often described as the
funniest woman in the World and on that night in her seventies she still
dazzled in unpredictable ways slaying the audience and laughing throughout the
screening: “she’s very good, she does things the way I do them!” she remarked
at her younger self… a one-off performer with unique timing and sense of the
ridiculous and yet who could also reduce you to tears (with or without an
onion…).
In her excellent, in-depth introduction, Michelle Facey related the
opinions of Chaplin and Keaton on this Anglo-Canadian marvel including the
latter sleeping outside her hotel room door – a slapstick guard of honour for
this toweringly-talented Torontian. Sadly (for us) Hollywood couldn’t easily
cast this quirky and stunningly individual talent and, for this and no doubt
several other reasons (maybe she just didn’t want to?) this was Bea’s only
silent film and she made few after, much preferring the more interactive and
improvisational freedoms of the stage.
Tonight, we watched not only Kevin Brownlow’s 16mm copy of Exit Smiling but, as it turned out, Miss
Lillie’s own, so I’d make that another £50 for shaking the hand of
projectionist Dave Locke.
Beatrice Lillie and Jack Pickford |
We are truly blessed by these associations with the silent
past and also by expert accompaniment from the Bioscope Players. Meg Morley, a
jazz musician by night and, a silent film accompanist by er, other nights,
played along with a thoroughly modern mix of jazz-age themes and improvised
scoring that sound for all the world like it’s been months in the preparation.
I always imagine the music as a duet and Bea is such a graceful performer with
a dancer’s arm extensions and amazing timing, that the music followed suit; to
this extent Meg riffed with Bea and took some bold decisions along the way (a
flash of Carmen for the vamping!) enjoying the tones as much as the audience.
I’ve previously raved about the actress and the film here if you want a
fuller synopsis. I'd watched the Warner Archives DVD but, as ever, it's still a treat to see this film on screen especially in what
Ms P. Hutchinson once described as a silent speakeasy: this crowd are
fascinating as well as fascinated and all respect the subject.
Raymond Griffith and Vera Reynolds not in a night club... |
With Miss Lillie tonight and Mabel Normand last week, it’s
easy to forget that men can also be funny too… The day opened with Raymond Griffith
in The Night Club (1925) a film that
didn’t actually feature a club but as Kevin Brownlow’s introduction made clear,
had been logged down as a title before script or even story. Block-booking in
advance meant that there had to be a film of this title and so it was squeezed
into the first title card as a gentlemen’s club dedicated to avoiding marriage.
Griffith’s character get’s jilted at the alter as his
fiancé’s ex returned at the last minute from a presumed death on a desert
island and so keen was he to marry that he tries to ban all women from his
life. His fortune turns when an uncle dies and leaves him a million, but the
condition is that he must marry his second cousin (Vera Reynolds).
He heads off for foreign climes only to find not only bump
into but fall in love with Vera’s character, but things get awkward when they
both realised, and she miss-hears his intentions. There’s a nice cameo from
Wallace Beery (a bad-tempered Mexican) and an even better one from Louise
Fazenda who plays his “Carmen” for whom he would kill whether you pay him or
not.
Griffith is so watchable, he takes everything in his stride
– even this daft script – with a wide-eyed smile and a look straight to the
audience. Costas Fotopolous joined in the fun on piano, twinkling the ivories in sympathy with Raymond's knowing gaze.
Henrietta Watson, Pauline Johnson and the impossibly youthful Leslie Howard |
Then we had Tony Fletcher’s traditional sweep through rare and early British film and a revelation to me with a silent and very young Leslie Howard
in Bookworms (1920). Based on a scenario from AA Milne (yes, him) it told the story of a young chap, Richard (Howard) and his
attempts to woo his neighbour Miranda Pottlebury (Pauline Johnson) away from
her over-protective Aunt and Uncle. The Pottlebury’s all use the local library
and Richard starts to leave notes in books they order in the hope of
communicating with the girl of his fancy… The results are gently amusing, and
it is a very charming film with glimpses of post-War English gardens and sitting
rooms.
A Fugitive Futurist
(1924) was your standard time-travelling con which did feature some interesting
special affects showing London as it will be in the future… a derelict Strand
and water-filled Trafalgar Square are, of course, only just around the corner
now thanks to Brexit…
Lillian Hall-Davis, Sybil Rhoda, Humberston Wright and Phyllis Neilson-Terry in Boadicea (1927) |
Starlings of the
Screen (1925) featured a host of young gals looking for fame with the Stoll
Picture Company, including Sybil Rhoda who was to feature in Hitchcock’s Downhill as well as Boadicea (1927) – her favourite performance – with Lillian
Hall-Davis. Various screen tests are
featured including professionals such as Moore Marriott playing alongside the
hopefuls who include Molly Weeks, Phyllis Garton, Nancy Baird and Shailagh
Allen but Sybil wins and gets the part of Melody Rourke in Sahara Love (1926).
“Look at all that
sand, dozens of it…”
Crossing the Great
Sagrda (1924) is almost indescribable; a mock ethno-graphical film with
title cards that could have been written by a Goon had they yet been invented.
It featured sand courtesy of Blackpool Borough Council and free-form
intertitles each one attributed to a different film company. Whatever it was about, I liked it and I
laughed.
Almost as barmy was Beauty and the Beast (1922) featuring
Guy Newall as The Beast and Ivy Duke as… you can guess. Meg Morley brought
musical method to all the madness.
After lunch it was time to cut to the Chase, Charlie Chase… as Matthew Ross took us
through some more highlights from the second
coolest silent comic who was so much his own man any comparison belittles his
suave majesty.
Charlie helps a pal pull his car out from a muddy patch and
ends up losing his own car to Hal Roache’s ACME mud pool and then goes in a
brilliantly desperate search of trousers in The
Way of all Pants (1927). The session ended with plastic-surgery farce Mighty Like a Moose (1927) which is a
work of World-cultural significance.
Mr Sweeney stayed cool at the keys and kept pace with the
Chase.
Monty Banks bronze medalist in the Freestyle Moustache |
Then in a surprise entry for moustache of the day (he came
third…), Monty Banks twitched his winning ways through A Perfect Gentleman (1927). You can’t fail to like Monty in this
well-balanced comedy, as he chases around a ship trying to prove his innocence
after having crashed his own wedding inadvertently drunk and then doubled his
disgrace by being accused of robbing his former fiancé’s father’s bank. Not the
day’s first wedding nor the last bank robbery.
Costas was really on the beat for this lightweight charmer
and he was clearly enjoying himself as his punchy lines accompanied Banks' every
pratfall.
The KB weekenders are great for bringing attention to
performers such as Banks and Griffiths, but we were about to be reminded of the
sheer excellence of one of those who is deservedly still widely remembered.
Four commentators were given the essentially impossible task of choosing a
favourite moment from a Buster Keaton film.
Even married to the star, Natalie Talmadge wonders why sisters Constance and Norma always had easier gigs... |
David Robinson chose the breath-taking closing scenes from Our Hospitality (1923) when our hero
rescues Natalie Talmadge from the rapids, a waterfall and over-bearing
relatives. Then Kevin Brownlow’s choice was the Tong war from The Cameraman including a mini-tribute
to the camerawork in Intolerance I
hadn’t previously spotted.
Poly Rose (known to many on The Twitter, as The Flying
Editor) is a film editor (natch) who revealed some secrets about Keaton’s own
editing for Sherlock Junior. It takes
one to know one and it was fascinating to see how this mind-boggling segment
was constructed through double exposure. Publicity stills, and contemporary
reviews also suggest that there were other versions of Buster’s somnambulant
transition from what we see, Keaton test screened his work and fine-tuned the
brilliance.
Last up was David Macleod, broadcaster and president of the
Blinking Buzzards, the UK Keaton Society, who has written extensively on the
comedian’s sound films which extend far beyond his relatively-short silent
period. He chose the pulsating climax to Steamboat
Bill Jr (1928) as our hero literally risked life and limb in a town torn
apart by hurricanes and another extraordinary river rescue.
Buster to the rescue as Marion Byron clings on in Steemboat Bill Jnr |
John Sweeney accompanied and once again demonstrated
extraordinary fluidity for those river-chase sequences but most of all he
really Keatoned those keyboards!
A day of pure concentrated silent bliss – where else would
we see these films and hear these musicians?! Thankyou Bioscope and the Cinema
Museum.
The Way of all Pants! |
Wow, what a wonderful evening! It sounds brilliant. And I really appreciated your review of Exit Smiling. I only saw this in the last year or two, and I loved it so much. Lillie is just wonderful, and that ending is really remarkable: brave, and unexpected.
ReplyDeleteIt was great programming and having Mr Robinson and Mr Brownlow share their memories is a real treat! You wonder what would have happened to Bea's character... she was still learning about herself and maybe she ended up with a Cary Grant rather than a Jack Pickford? She's one of those performers who just shines!
Delete