Screening the Stage: Case Studies of Film Adaptations of Stage Plays and Musicals in the Classical Hollywood Era, 1914-1956 - Softcover

Neale, Steven

 
9780861967261: Screening the Stage: Case Studies of Film Adaptations of Stage Plays and Musicals in the Classical Hollywood Era, 1914-1956

Inhaltsangabe

Introduced by a comprehensive account of the factors governing the adaptation of stage plays and musicals in Hollywood from the early 1910s to the mid-to-late 1950s, Screening the Stage consists of a series of chapter-length studies of feature-length films, the plays and musicals on which they were based, and their remakes where pertinent. Founded on an awareness of evolving technologies and industrial practices rather than the tenets of adaptation theory, particular attention is paid to the evolving practices of Hollywood as well as to the purport and structure of the plays and stage musicals on which the film versions were based. Each play or musical is contextualized and summarized in detail, and each film is analyzed so as to pinpoint the ways in which they articulate, modify, or rework the former. Examples range from dramas, comedies, melodramas, musicals, operettas, thrillers, westerns and war film, and include The Squaw Man, The Poor Little Rich Girl, The Merry Widow, 7th Heaven, The Cocoanuts, Waterloo Bridge, Stage Door, I Remember Mama, The Pirate, Dial M for Murder and Attack.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Steve Neale is Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the University of Exeter. He is author of Genre and Hollywood, author (with Sheldon Hall) of Epics, Spectacles and Blockbusters: A Hollywood History, editor of The Classical Hollywood Reader, editor (with Frank Krutnik, Brian Neve and Peter Stanfield) of 'Un-American' Hollywood: Politics and Film in the Blacklist, and editor (with John Belton and Sheldon Hall) of Widescreen Worldwide.

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Screening the Stage

Case Studies of Film Adaptations of Stage Plays and Musicals in the Classical Hollywood Era, 1914–1956

By Steve Neale

Indiana University Press

Copyright © 2017 John Libbey Publishing Ltd.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-86196-726-1

Contents

Acknowledgements, vi,
Introduction, 1,
Chapter 1. The Squaw Man, 25,
Chapter 2. The Poor Little Rich Girl, 41,
Chapter 3. The Merry Widow, 57,
Chapter 4. 7th Heaven and Seventh Heaven, 73,
Chapter 5. The Cocoanuts, 87,
Chapter 6. Street Scene, 101,
Chapter 7. Waterloo Bridge, 115,
Chapter 8. Stage Door, 131,
Chapter 9. The Pirate, 147,
Chapter 10. I Remember Mama, 165,
Chapter 11. Dial M for Murder, 177,
Chapter 12. Attack, 197,
Bibliography, 211,
Index, 231,


CHAPTER 1

The Squaw Man

The 1914 film version of The Squaw Man was based on a four-act play by Edwin Milton Royle. Itself based on a one-act version written by Royle in 1904, the four-act version premiered at the Wallack's Theatre in New York on 23 October 1905 and ran for 222 performances with a cast that included William Faversham as Captain James Wynnegate (later known as Jim Carston), Selene Johnson as Lady Diana, Mabel Morrison as Nat-u-ritch, William S. Hart as Cash Hawkins, Theodore Roberts as Taby-wana, and a number of Ute Indians in minor roles employing 'their own speech and sign language'. The play was roadshown throughout the USA and was performed in London and elsewhere abroad as The White Man, at which point it was novelised by Julie Opp Faversham and went on to form the basis of a 1906 burlesque version entitled The Squawman's Girl of the Golden West. The Squaw Man was revived in the US in 1907, 1908, 1911 and 1921, and provided the basis for The Kentuckian, a single-reel film directed by Wallace McCutcheon in 1908, as well as for the 1914 version and its subsequent remakes. Following the plethora of one-reel and two-reel Westerns produced by companies such as Essanay, Kalem, the New York Motion Picture Company, Pathé West Coast and Selig in the period between 1909 to 1911, the 1914 version also helped inaugurate a trend toward feature-length Westerns.

The Squaw Man was one of number frontier plays written in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Among the former were The Indian Princess, or La Belle Sauvage (1808) by John Nelson Barker, The Indian Prophesy (1827) by George Washington Parke Curtis, The Lion of the West (1831) by James Kirke Paulding, Across the Continent (1870) by James J. McCloskey, Davy Crockett (1872) by Frank Murdock, The Girl I Left BehindMe (1893) by David Belasco and Franklyn Fyles, and The Cowboy and the Lady (1899) by Clyde Fitch; and among the latter were The Virginian (1904), a stage-play adaptation of Owen Wister's 1902 novel, The Girl of the Golden West (1905) by Belasco, which went on to form the basis of Puccini's 1910 opera, and Billy the Kid (1906) by Walter Woods. While most of the nineteenth century plays came and went, later ones such as The Cowboy and the Lady and The Girl I Left Behind Me formed the basis of one-reel film versions in 1903 and 1908 respectively, and feature-length versions in 1915.

The idea of producing a feature-length film version of The Squaw Man appears to have been mooted by Jesse L. Lasky and Cecil B. DeMille in 1913. Cecil was the youngest member of a famous theatrical family. His father (Henry C. de Mille) and his elder brother (William de Mille) were both successful playwrights ('de Mille' was the family spelling, but Cecil used 'DeMille' as his professional name), and Cecil also wrote plays and helped manage the family's theatrical agency. While doing so, Cecil cemented a lasting friendship with Lasky, who at this point produced vaudeville shows and stage plays exclusively. But as is noted in the introduction, the prospects for stage plays in 1913 were particularly bleak, and well aware of new film companies such as the Famous PlayersMotion Picture Company, Arthur Friend, Samuel Goldfish (later Goldwyn), and Lasky andDeMille decided to establish the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company along similar lines. The company was capitalised at $20,000 and The Squaw Man was chosen as the basis for its first feature-length film, possibly because some of DeMille's earlier plays, among them The Stampede and The Royal Mounted, dealt sympathetically with Native American characters and themes.


The Play

The storyline and settings of Royle's play can be summarised as follows. Act One takes place at Maudesly Towers, the English estate of the Earl of Kerhill, which Royle describes as a 'court' that looks out on 'a typical English park'. The house, which is on the left, 'is one of the timber edifices of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries', and across the back and on the right lie 'the ruins of an abbey of a much older date'. Amidst those present at the mansion there is much talk of noblesse oblige and the forthcoming donation of twenty thousand pounds to charity by the officers of the 16th Lancers. However, amidst the cant and double-dealing that marks the upper classes, it emerges that Henry, the Earl's son and Captain James Wynnegate's brother, has used the money to engage in a swindle on the stock exchange, and on learning that Henry has lost the money, James takes the blame in order to spare Henry's wife Diana, with whom he is in love. Forced to leave England in disgrace, James takes Diana's hand, 'looks lovingly into her eyes', then 'turns away and starts through the park' as the curtain falls.

Act Two takes place two years later in the Long Horn Saloon inMaverick, a cow town on the Union Pacific Railroad in Wyoming. A train has just arrived outside and its observation car is in view through the saloon window. Calling himself Jim Carston, Wynnegate is now a rancher, and some of his hands are in the saloon when he sends them a message advising them to avoid the villainous Cash Hawkins and his henchmen. Tourists from the train enter the saloon as Hawkins joins his men in a plan to swindle cattle from Taby-wana, chief of the Utes. Nat-u-rich, Taby-wana's daughter, appears in the doorway, and as Hawkins plies her father with alcohol she decides to intervene. But at this point Jim enters and prevents Hawkins from molesting Nat-uritch, and as Nat-u-ritch leaves with her father, Henry, Diana and Sir John Applegate enter the saloon from the train outside. In order to conceal his presence Jim steps back into the crowd. But as Hawkins makes more trouble, Jim intervenes and is recognised by Diana and the others. Diana and Jim begin to converse. But the train is ready to leave and their conversation is truncated. Jim buries his head in his hands and Nat-u-ritch looks on in sorrow. Then Hawkins re-enters and brandishes his guns, and unbeknown to all those present, he is shot and killed not by Jim, but by Nat-u-ritch, who walks over to Jim, kneels at his side, touches his hand, and simply says 'Me killum'.

For Richard Wattenberg, Act Two articulates 'Jim's descent into the world of western American savagery'. But the limitations of English nobility have already been exposed in Act One, and the dichotomies of savagery and civilisation are further blurred by the presence and the actions of Nat-u-ritch and Taby-wana, who represent 'native savagery' but also occupy their own social space, and who, in the case of Nat-u-ritch, help dispense justice by killing Cash Hawkins,...

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