Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Beggars of Life: The Sounds of a Louise Brooks' Silent Film

Beggars of Life is the opening night presentation at this year's San Francisco Silent Film Festival! The acclaimed 1928 Louise Brooks film, directed by Oscar winner William Wellman and starring future Oscar winner Wallace Beery, will be shown on Thursday, June 2nd at 7:00 pm at the historic Castro Theater in San Francisco. The film will be shown with live musical accompaniment by the acclaimed Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. More information, including ticket availability, may be found at HERE. This special presentation is not-to-be-missed, as you never know which "different drummer" will show up.


Los Angeles, California – October 1928


Though shot as a silent and released in some markets in that format, Beggars of Life has the distinction of being Paramount’s first sound film: a synchronized musical score, sound effects, a few lines of dialogue, as well as a song sung or two were added to prints at the time of the film’s release.

The addition of sound to the film lends another, even more important distinction to Beggars of Life, as the film on which a "boom mic" may have first been used. According to David O. Selznick, "I was also present on the stage when a microphone was moved for the first time by Wellman, believe it or not. Sound was relatively new [this was Beggars of Life, 1928] and at that time the sound engineer insisted that the microphone be steady. Wellman, who had quite a temper in those days, got very angry, took the microphone himself, hung it on a boom, gave orders to record--and moved it."

In the annals of film history, others have been credited with first moving a microphone during the production of a film. Selznick's anecdote, which comes from Kevin Brownlow's The Parade's Gone By, is one of the earliest accounts.

Cincinnati, Ohio – September 1928

Though the sound elements for the film are lost, newspaper articles and advertisements of the time tell us a little about the nature of the sound version of Beggars of Life. Commenting on its New York City premiere at the Paramount Theater, Women's Wear Daily noted "All of these stars outdo themselves in this picture. Wallace Beery talks in this picture, sings a hobo song and ends with an observation about jungle rats in general." The New Yorker also commented on "the synchronized accompaniment of sentimental music."





Elsewhere, the New Orleans Item observed, "Vitaphone helps the story along with music that is fitting and well arranged. The 'Hallelujah I'm a Bum' rhythm helps the story's speed." Peggy Patton of the Wisconsin News wrote "Wallace Beery, Richard Arlen (also playing in Wings) and Louise Brooks play the featured roles. All do praiseworthy work. By the way it is a sound picture and Wallace Beery speaks a few lines and sings a song. His speaking voice is splendid." Frank Aston of the Cincinnati Post penned, "The direction is admirable. Vitaphonic sounds lend some extra force. Beery is heard singing." The San Diego Union added, "Accompanied by a synchronized musical score of more than average excellence, the picture provides an hour and a half of film entertainment radically out of line with the general run of cinema drama. It is pungent, powerful, appealing, masterfully directed and superbly acted."

Where the sound version of the film played, newspaper advertisements often proclaimed something along the lines of “Come hear Wallace Beery sing!” But what that song was is uncertain. The stout, gravel-voiced actor was not known as a crooner. Reliable sources, including the director's son, site one of two similar titles, “Hark the Bells” or “Don’t You Hear Them Bells?” While at least two newspaper advertisements for the film, including the NYC advertisement pictured above, mention the songs "I Wonder Where She Sits at Night" and "Beggars of Life."



At the time of the film's release, various 78 rpm recordings of  “Beggars of Life” (by J. Keirn Brennan and Karl Hajos) were released. The label on some of those recordings describe it as the “Theme Song of the Film." The best known and most popular of these recordings was by The Troubadours (pictured here); others recordings were issued by Scrappy Lambert, Seger Ellis, and other artists of the time.  

 Recordings of the theme song proved somewhat popular, and the availability of discs were advertised in newspapers in the United States, England and elsewhere. Below is a newspaper advertisement from Yorkshire, England which promotes the Troubadours' recording of the song.


Below is a video recording The Troubadours' version. It was issued as Victor 21683-B in 1928. Press play to listen. Otherwise, follow these links to hear versions by Scrappy Lambert or the Bar Harbor Society Orchestra. These versions and others can be heard as well on RadioLulu, the online radio station of the Louise Brooks Society.



Recordings of the "Beggars of Life" theme song are one of a small number of product tie-ins issued around the time of the film's release. Along with an illustrated photoplay edition of Jim Tully's book (the basis for the film), at least two different versions of the "Beggars of Life" sheet music were also issued, each with Wallace Beery on the cover.


There was even a music roll of "Beggars of Life" released at the time. A copy of this recording, by Harold Wansborough on the QRS label (# 4437), is in the archive of the Louise Brooks Society. However, since it meant for playback on player piano, the LBS doesn't have a way to play or record it! (To get some sense of what this obsolete technology would have sounded like, a piano roll of Wansborough playing "C'est Vous" can be seen and heard here.)


"Beggars of Life"  is a rather enjoyable song. The lyrics read:

"Beggars of life, beggars of life;
Gypsy hearts that are sighing
For skies of blue, sunlight and dew,
Out where swallows are flying.
Each one longing to be led
To a happy homestead,
Where love will cry,
'Don't pass me by!'
Beggars of life, come home!"


UPDATE Beggars of Life in the 21st century: According to Mark Kermode’s book, The Good, The Bad and the Multiplex (2012), The Dodge Brothers musical group once accompanied Beggars of Life at the inaugural New Forest Film Festival in 2010, where in accordance with the Festival theme of sustainability, the film projector at the event was powered by a bicycle! The musical group, which includes Kermode (a popular British film critic) and Neil Brand (a well known silent film accompaniest), has played to the  film all over England, including once in 2014 at a historic screening at the famed Glastonbury Music Festival.




UPDATE: It has just come to the attention of the Louise Brooks Society that a Vitaphone disk for reel 1 of "Beggars of Life" still exists, and is in the hands of a private collector.

Monday, May 23, 2016

Beggars of Life trivia and more

Beggars of Life is the opening night presentation at this year's San Francisco Silent Film Festival! The acclaimed 1928 film, directed by Oscar winner William Wellman and starring future Oscar winner Wallace Beery, will be shown on Thursday, June 2nd at 7:00 pm at the historic Castro Theater in San Francisco. The film will be shown with live musical accompaniment by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. More information, including ticket availability, may be found at HERE.

This advertisement promotes sound versions of two great William Wellman films. For Beggars of Life,
the ad elicits viewers “Come hear Wallace Beery sing the theme song, ‘Beggars of Life,’ destined to be
as big a hit as ‘Ramona.’”  Buffalo, New York – September 1928
Here is some trivia about the film:

Beggars of Life (1924) is one of five autobiographical books Jim Tully (1886 – 1947) wrote which detail his transient childhood; a fictionalized memoir, it contains stories of the criminal tramp Oklahoma Red and the prostitute Nancy, who shoots and kills her abusive father. A play loosely based on these stories was woven into Outside Looking In (1925), a Broadway drama by Maxwell Anderson which starred James Cagney (as Oklahoma Red) and Charles Bickford and was produced by a group that included the Nobel Prize winning dramatist Eugene O’Neill. In 1925, Louise Brooks attended a performance of the play in the company of Charlie Chaplin.

One of my treasures: Colleen Moore's first edition copy of Beggars of Life, with her bookplate and an
inscription by the author to the actress.


— Brooks disliked Tully. “He was the most repulsive little Quilp I ever knew,” Brooks wrote years later to film historian Kevin Brownlow. “Short and fat with his belly hanging over his belt, yellow teeth to match his face and hair, full of the vanity of Vanity Fair and H.L. Mencken.” Nevertheless, Tully — who once served as Charlie Chaplin’s press agent, had his admirers, including the famed critic H.L. Mencken. Robert E. Howard, who authored the “Conan the Barbarian” stories, is oftentimes famously quoted as remarking that of all the writers living and working in his time there were only two whose work would endure — H. P. Lovecraft  and Jim Tully.

— Brooks respected director William Wellman. Her account of the making of Beggars of Life is found in her Lulu in Hollywood essay “On Location with Billy Wellman.” 

— The Wellman connection to the film didn't end  with the director. Included among the cast was Jacque Chapin, Wellman’s then 17-year old brother-in-law. Wellman’s wife served as script girl.

On location with Beggars of Life: from left to right, Jim Tully, Louise Brooks, Wallace Beery and Richard Arlen.
 — Girls will be boys: By dressing her in men’s clothing, Beggars of Life was the first film to capitalize on Brooks’ androgynous appeal. The August 1928 issue of Motion Picture Classic ran a full-page spread of Brooks in male attire, stating “Many a girl has wished – or said she wished – she were a boy. Louise Brooks goes one better and becomes one in her portrayal of one of the Beggars of Life in Jim Tully’s screen story." Motion Picture Classic approved.  The article went on to say, "Any time Louise wants a nickel for a cup of coffee, she has only to come to us. In fact, if she’d let us have one with her, we’d go as far as to wrench loose a dime.”


— Included in the cast in a supporting role is the African American actor Edgar Washington (1898 – 1970), a one-time prizefighter and noted semi-pro baseball player (in the Negro Leagues) who entered films in the late Teens. He was a pioneer among African-American actors, and was given the nickname “Blue” by friend Frank Capra. The Afro-American newspaper wrote, “In Beggars of Life, Edgar Blue Washington, race star, was signed by Paramount for what is regarded as the most important Negro screen role of the year, that of Big Mose. The part is that of a sympathetic character, hardly less important to the epic of tramp life than those of Wallace Beery, Louise Brooks and Richard Arlen, who head the cast.” Beggars of Life has a second baseball connection. Also in the film in a bit part was Michael Donlin, an outfielder whose Major League career spanned from 1899 to 1914.

Beggars of Life was especially popular throughout the American West.  
Reno, Nevada – March 1929

Saturday, May 21, 2016

On the road and around the world with Beggars of Life

Beggars of Life is the opening night presentation at this year's San Francisco Silent Film Festival! The acclaimed 1928 Louise Brooks film, directed by Oscar winner William Wellman and starring future Oscar winner Wallace Beery, will be shown on Thursday, June 2nd at 7:00 pm at the historic Castro Theater in San Francisco. The film will be shown with live musical accompaniment by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. More information, including ticket availability, may be found at HERE.

Beggars of Life was a big hit in the United States, and was perhaps even more popular abroad. Under its American title, documented screenings of the film took place in Australia, Canada, China, France, India, Ireland, Jamaica, New Zealand, South Africa, Sweden, and the British Isles (England, Isle of Man, and Scotland).

Elsewhere, this motion picture was known to have been shown under other-language titles including Bettler des Lebens (Austria); Meias indiscretag (Brazil); Mendigos da vida (Brazil); Mendigos de la Vida (Chile); Žebráci života (Czechoslovakia); Žebráky živote (Czechoslovakia); De Lovløses Tog (Denmark); Menschen Zijn Nooit Tevreden (Dutch East Indies); Les mendiants de la vie (France); I mendicanti della vita (Italy); Bettler des Lebens (Latvia); Bettlers des Lebens (Les Mendiants de la Vie) (Luxembourg); Mendigos de vida (Mexico); Menschen Zijn Nooit Tevreden (The Netherlands); Zwervers (The Netherlands); Ludzie bezdomni (Poland); Mendigos da vida (Portugal); Strada cersetorilor (Romania); and Mendigos de vida (Spain).

Here are vintage advertisements for Beggars of Life which ran when it showed around the world.

Cape Town, South Africa 1930

Calgary, Alberta, Canada 1928

Sao Paulo, Brazil – 1929    

Paris, France – 1929

Warsaw, Poland 1929

Kingston, Jamaica – 1929    

Friday, May 20, 2016

Lulu by the Bay: Beggars of Life Exhibition History

Beggars of Life is the opening night presentation at this year's San Francisco Silent Film Festival! The acclaimed 1928 film, directed by Oscar winner William Wellman and starring future Oscar winner Wallace Beery, will be shown on Thursday, June 2nd at 7:00 pm at the historic Castro Theater in San Francisco. The film will be shown with live musical accompaniment by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. More information, including ticket availability, may be found at HERE.

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival first screened the film in 2007. It first showed at the Castro Theater on February 17, 1929.

The film made its Northern California debut at the Modesto Theater in Modesto on October 16, 1928. It then played at the California in Pittsburg (Oct. 28-29, 1928) and Strand in Gilroy (Nov. 5-6, 1928) before opening in San Francisco at the Warfield (Nov. 10-16, 1928). Later San Francisco screenings include the New Fillmore in San Francisco (Jan. 19-20, 1929); New Mission in San Francisco (Jan. 19-20, 1929); Alexandria in San Francisco (Feb. 3, 1929); Irving in San Francisco (Feb. 7-8, 1929); Alhambra in San Francisco (Feb. 23, 1929 with Forbidden Love); Royal in San Francisco (Feb. 24, 1929 with Forbidden Love); Haight in San Francisco (Feb. 27-28, 1929); Metropolitan in San Francisco (Mar. 3, 1929); New Lyceum in San Francisco (Mar. 6-7, 1929); Harding in San Francisco (Apr. 3-4, 1929); Avenue in San Francisco (Apr. 28, 1929);  Riviera in San Francisco (May 1, 1929); Excelsior in San Francisco (May 8-9, 1929); Roosevelt in San Francisco (May 22-23, 1929); and Casino in San Francisco (June 20-21, 1929).

San Mateo, California


Other Bay Area showings from the time include the California in San Jose (Nov. 17-19, 1928); Orpheus in San Rafael (Nov. 19-21, 1928); New Stanford in Palo Alto (Nov. 21-23, 1928); Tamalpais in San Anselmo (Nov. 22-24, 1928); New Niles Theatre in Niles (Nov. 25-26, 1928); Hippodrome in Napa (Nov. 27-28, 1928); Hub in Mill Valley (Nov. 27-28, 1928); Oakland Theater in Oakland (Dec. 1-7, 1928); Royal in South San Francisco (Dec. 4-5, 1928); Sequoia in Redwood City (Dec. 5-6, 1928); Princess in Sausalito (Dec. 6-7, 1928); U.C. in Berkeley (Dec. 12-14, 1928); Mountain View Theatre in Mountain View (Dec. 13-14, 1928); Playhouse in Calistoga (Dec. 16-17, 1928); Fox California in Richmond (Dec. 19-20, 1928); New San Mateo Theater in San Mateo (Dec. 19-21, 1928); California in Petaluma (Dec. 21-22, 1928); El Campanil in Antioch (Jan. 6, 1929); and Theatre of the Golden Bough in Carmel (Jan. 13-14, 1929). In fact, the film continued to be shown as late as December of 1929 (more than a year after its release), when it screened at the Century in Oakland on December 6-7, 1929 on a double bill with Trent’s Last Case.

Salinas, California

In 1965, director William Wellman wanted to bring Louise Brooks to San Francisco and screen Beggars of Life as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival, but it never came to be. Instead, he screened Wings for a packed house at the Masonic auditorium.

The film (likely William Everson's print) was next screened at the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley (Aug. 17, 1976) with It’s the Old Army Game, and then again at an impromptu showing at the old San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (Aug. 22, 1976 with It’s the Old Army Game). Later it was shown at the Avenue Theater in San Francisco (June 26, 1981) with Hollywood Without Makeup.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Beggars of Life screens at San Francisco Silent Film Festival

Two weeks from today, the San Francisco Silent Film Festival will screen the acclaimed 1928 Louise Brooks' film, Beggars of Life, with live musical accompaniment by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. The festival's Facebook page wrote, "#‎SFSFF21‬ is just a few weeks away! You won't want to miss our opening night film BEGGARS OF LIFE, starring longtime SFSFF favorite Louise Brooks and accompanied by the inimitable Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra."




Thursday, June 2 at 7:00 pm at the Castro Theater in San Francisco
Live musical accompaniment by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra


BEGGARS OF LIFE

Directed by William A. Wellman, USA, 1928
Cast Louise Brooks, Richard Arlen, Wallace Beery
Print Source George Eastman Museum

Louise Brooks, in her best American film, is luminous as a freight-train hopping runaway who dresses in a flat cap and trousers to escape capture by the police. She joins up with young vagabond Richard Arlen, and along the way they encounter a hobo encampment and its charismatic leader, played by Wallace Beery in a performance that Brooks later called “a little masterpiece.” William A. Wellman, whose Wings (1927) had just won the first-ever Academy Award for Best Picture, directs with nuance and grace.

Approximately 81 minutes

Sponsored by McRoskey Mattress Company

Copresented by California Film Institute and San Francisco Film Society

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Rare British clipping - It Pays to Advertise

Here is a rare British clipping I found while in London researching Louise Brooks. This write up of the 1931 comedy It Pays to Advertise comes from The Astorian, which, as far as I can tell, was the official magazine of the Paramount Astorias, which as far as I could tell, were four London theatres named Astoria (the others being Brixton, Old Kent Road and Finsbury Park) taken over by Paramount in 1931. This was back when film studios owned theater chains.



According to this page, It Pays to Advertise was playing at the Brixton Astoria theater commencing the week of December 21st, 1931.

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