Showing posts with label The Adventures Of Dollie (1908). Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Adventures Of Dollie (1908). Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2020

Born Today September 28: Stanner E. V. Taylor


1877-1948

Stanner Edward Varley Taylor may be better remembered as the husband of silent Biograph starlet Marion Leonard, but he was a director and screenwriter in his own right.  Taylor was born on this date in St. Louis in 1877.  Taylor started out as a newspaper man, writing news stories and editing copy. He apparently worked on shifts for the morning edition publication and therefore had time to write his own material in the afternoons.  In this capacity, he began as a playwright until he went to work at American Mutoscope and Biograph as a screen or scenario writer. He would become, basically, their head writer in time.  His first scenario gig with them consisted of adapting a play for the screen: he worked out the adaptation of a western play--The Kentuckian--written by Augustus Marvin, for a short form film directed by the elder Wallace McCutcheon in 1908 (the film, incidentally, sported an appearance the younger McCutcheon Jr., who would go on to make rather a big fool of himself at the company as a "director"). Without a doubt, his most famous enduring work from the time period is the screenplay for The Adventures of Dollie, today famous for it's (co)direction by D. W. Griffith released in July of 1908.  Taylor also made his directorial debut that same year on the short Biograph melodrama Over the Hill to the Poorhouse, which was interestingly based on a poem by Will Carleton and not his own original work.  He would not direct again until 1911 (with The Left Hook), and that was the only film he directed that year.  It was not until 1912 that this part of his career really took off, when he and Leonard went to work for Rex Motion Picture Co/Universal.  Throughout the rest of his career, both in writing and direction, he is seen as a western specialist; and despite directing his wife in many non-westerns like Carmen in 1913, it for westerns that he is best remembered today.  Many of the his earliest "frontier" scenarios were worked up in partnership with Griffith and he in fact has the writing credit on In Old California in 1910, which was the very first film ever made in Hollywood (the film was thought lost, but was discovered--at least in par--in the early part of this century). Despite being associated with westerns/Native American scenarios, Taylor directed a large number of melodramas in the years 1912 and 1913--and he in fact continued to write for Griffith at Biograph during this time (see, for example, The Yaqui Cur--1913). Marion Leonard was a very big movie star in the teens (her engagement to Taylor was big news in 1911), and she was able to found--with Taylor--her very own production house, which bore her name. The two worked in this capacity until she decided to retire from film acting in 1915.  While the company was in operation, Taylor wrote and directed exclusively for the house; and many of their films featured respected stage actor Henry B. Walthall. [It was during this period of his career that he is credited as Stanley E. V. Taylor or S. E. V. Taylor.]  Their last production together under the auspices of the studio appears to be The Vow, released in the spring of 1915.  His very next film was for Balboa, with whom he worked for a very short time; his 1915 Balboa directed film was the Noah Beery drama The Purple Night.  The film that he wrote while with the company--The Dragon's Claw--was also his wife's last acting job in the business. After her exit from film acting, he would stay in the business both as a director and writer for a further 13 years. His first production after his career collaboration with his wife ended was Her Great Hour starring the Scottish born Molly McIntyre. He next directed Clara Kimball Young in the Hal Young produced melodrama The Rise of Susan, released in December 1916; that film also featured Warner Oland.  It was at this time that his directing career slowed and he saw a resurgence of his writing career. He wound up writing under a pen-name for Griffith again in 1918, when Griffith was directing for Paramount (that would be the war drama The Great Love under the name Captain Victor Marier--which by the way, Griffith, who co-wrote the film with Taylor, also used). From this time forward he penned 15 screenplays, and directed four features. Of those, only The Mohican's Daughter  and The Lone Wolf  has him adapting short stories and directing as well.  His last time in the director's chair was on the self produced project The Miracle of Life in 1926.  He wrote four more films after this--all produced in 1928 and 1929--all of which were westerns or adventure scenarios of some sort. The last of these was the Robert Vignola film The Red Sword, a fully silent picture released on the 17th of February of 1929.  He then joined his wife in retirement from the business, but not much is recorded about their life after this, except they stayed in the Los Angeles area. He passed away on the 23rd of February there at the age of 71. There is NO information on his interment, but when Marion joined him in death some eight years later, she was cremated at the Chapel of the Pines and her ashes interred at the Memory Hall there. 










Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Born Today July 12: Linda Arvidson


1884-1949

Silent film actress and first wife of D. W. Griffith, Linda Arvidson was born Linda Arvidson Johnson in San Francisco, CA on this day.  She met Griffith in 1905 while they were both acting in the same play on the stage; and they wed the following year in May.  She was the star of his earliest films.  Her first film appearance came with the American Mutoscope and Biograph (of course!) produced Mr. Gay And Mrs. in 1907.  She next worked under director Wallace McCutcheon, at Biograph, acting along side her husband.  The first film she is absolutely credited with in one of his films came in The Princess In The Vase in 1908.  The two also worked with Wallace McCutcheon Jr. (see At The Crossroads Of Life (1908), which Griffith also penned).  The first time she was directed by her husband came in The Adventures Of Dollie (1908), which is a rather famous surviving silent and marked Griffith's directorial debut (she was often credited as Linda A. Griffith going forward in her movie acting career).  She added scenario writing to her list of credits in 1911 with How She Triumphed, a film she wrote for her husband to direct.  In all, she has 5 writing credits to her name, two the most important to history are the two Enoch films that Griffith made.  The vast majority of her acting career did come under the direction of her husband at Biograph; however around 1912 or so, the two separated (they didn't formally divorced until 1936).  When this event took place, she then signed a contract as the leading lady with Kinemacolor Company and company that had built it reputation on it's own early color film process; the first film that she made for them was A Christmas Spirit in 1912.  The contract lasted only for one year. She next went to work at Klaw & Erlanger, a company that had a partnership with Biograph; ultimately winding back up at Biograph.  She appeared in her last film in 1916, and that came in Charity a film on white slavery, directed by Frank Powell under the umbrella of his own production company.  She then retired from film acting altogether.  In 1925 she published a memoir When Movies Were Young, it has since be reprinted several times.  Arvidson died in New York City on the 26 of July 1949 at the age of 65.  She is buried in the Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California under the name Linda A. Griffith in a family plot.



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Friday, May 26, 2017

Born Today May 26: Arthur Marvin



1859-1911

Silent cinematographer Arthur Weed Marvin was born on this day in Warners, New York (for some reason the year of his birth is erroneously cited as being 1861 in a minority of sources). He was a camera operator at Biograph and he was the brother of Harry Marvin, the inventor of the Biograph camera and one of the founders of the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company.  The very first film that he operated that camera on was A Bowery Cafe' in 1897; it was a short narrative film--which was the vision that the founders of the company had for their films.  Despite the narrative focus, very many of the films that Arthur shot were newsreel documentaries, possibly to field test the camera itself.   The first of these was The Christian Herald's Relief Station, Havana in 1898.  During 1899, he spent considerable time making a series of shorts featuring heavy weight boxing champion James Jeffries.  Also in 1899, he tested the camera in series of on-location shoots in the St. Clair Tunnel located in Michigan.  He would make his directorial debut in 1900 with the first known film adaptation of a Sherlock Holmes story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle with Sherlock Holmes Baffled.  Toward the end of his life, he would go on to shoot a few very early D. W. Griffith films, when Griffith was hired by Biograph.  Probably the best known of these is The Adventures Of Dollie, which happened to be Griffith's directorial debut.  The last film that he shot was Priscilla's Engagement Ring, a 1911 film featuring Mack Sennett. Marvin died on the 18th of January 1911 at the age of 51.  He died in Los Angeles, making him one of the earliest cinematographers to make the "film migration" out to the west coast.   He body was shipped back to New York, where he is buried in the Calvary Cemetery in Queens.  The next year, his nephew (Harry's son) lost his life aboard the Titanic, a tragic event that he thankfully didn't live to witness.  



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