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Talk about contrasts!
In preparing to create music for 'The Shakedown' (1929), a terrific late silent melodrama, I found myself oddly captivated by the fate of its two leading performers.
Think of it. James Murray, following up his acclaimed performance in 'The Crowd' (1928), would in a few years be destitute and reduced to panhandling on the streets of New York.Barbara Kent, one of the era's most popular starlets, would soon fall out of fashion, making her last screen appearance in 1935.
But then, what different paths fate had in store for either performer.
Murray would die just a year later, in 1936, by drowning in the Hudson River. He was just 35.
Kent, however, would go on to a very long and active life outside the movies, flying her own airplane into her mid-80s.She would live until 2011, passing away at age 103.
That contrast, I think, lends an element of poignancy to 'The Shakedown' when viewed today.
Although a picture ought to stand by itself, our knowledge of what would later happen to the people in it (in some cases, much later) is something that's hard to forget entirely.
Consider child actor Jack Hanlon, who in 'The Shakedown' delivered a memorable performance as an orphan. See him on screen: he would go on to be a member of 'The Little Rascals' troupe, but then leave show business to serve in World War II, and afterwards worked as a professional mover.
He died in 2012 at age 96. Another long life! Was it well-lived? How can we really know? And in wondering, you can find yourself also asking about your own life. Is it being well-lived?
Equally hard to know, really. But knowing the basic outlines of what would happen to the people captured in movies a century ago is all part of the experience of seeing the films today.To me, it adds a layer of interest that wasn't present in the original release.
I'm accompanying 'The Shakedown' on Thursday, Sept. 9 at the Flying Monkey Moviehouse and Performance Center in Plymouth, N.H. Showtime is 6:30 p.m., and a lot more info is in the press release below.
To generate interest in the film, I decided to focus on director William Wyler (at left, later in life), partly because it's an early work from someone who would go on to a major career during Hollywood's Golden Age. (There I go again, projecting into the future.)But I was also inspired by something I didn't realize until reading liner notes for the recent reissue of 'The Shakedown' by film writer and historian Nora Fiore, who often blogs and posts online as the Nitrate Diva.
In her notes, Nora pointed out Wyler's brief comic cameo during the climax of 'The Shakedown.' It's a memorable moment, and I had no idea it was the director himself until Nora revealed this.
So we'll all play "spot the director" on Thursday, Sept. 9 as we screen 'The Shakedown.' Hope to see you there! More info below.
* * *
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1, 2021 / FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Jeff Rapsis • (603) 236-9237 • jeffrapsis@gmail.com
Gritty boxing melodrama ‘The Shakedown’ (1929) at Flying Monkey on Thursday, Sept. 9
Early effort by legendary director William Wyler to be screened with live music at historic venue
PLYMOUTH, N.H.—He received a dozen nominations for Best Director, more than anyone in Hollywood history.
He
was three-time Oscar-winning director William Wyler, whose 50-year
Hollywood career included such Golden Age milestones as 'Roman Holiday'
(1953) and 'Ben Hur' (1959).
But everyone needs to start
somewhere. And one of Wyler's earliest efforts, the silent melodrama
'The Shakedown' (1929) for Universal Pictures, will be screened with
live music on Thursday, Sept. 9 at 6:30 p.m. at the Flying Monkey
Moviehouse and Performance Center, 39 South Main St., Plymouth.
The
screening, the latest in the Flying Monkey's silent film series, will
feature live accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis, a New Hampshire-based
composer who specializes in creating music for silent films.
Admission is $10 per person, general admission. Tickets are available online at www.flyinghmonkeynh.org or at the door.
'The
Shakedown,' a boxing story about a crooked prizefighter who adopts an
orphan, shows a young Wyler already fluent in the language of cinema.
Wyler weaves an on-screen tale that flows deftly from action to suspense, but also includes moments of light-hearted comedy.
Starring
James Murray and Barbara Kent, 'The Shakedown' is set in a hard-boiled
world of professional swindlers who hustle small-town crowds with fixed
boxing matches.
After saving an orphan's life, boxer Dave Roberts
is forced to decide whether to continue his low-life ways, or turn the
tables and escape those who control him.
As the small-town
fighter, actor James Murray was following up his acclaimed performance
in King Vidor's 1928 drama 'The Crowd.'
Original poster art promoting 'The Shakedown' (1929).
Murray's promising career as a leading man, however, would soon be undone by alcoholism, which rendered him unemployable.
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