A Fool There Was (1915 film)

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A Fool There Was

Theda Bara in A Fool There Was
Directed by Frank Powell
Produced by William Fox
Written by Roy L. McCardell
Frank Powell
Starring Theda Bara
Edward Jose
Distributed by Fox Film Corporation
Release date(s) Flag of the United States January 1915
Running time 67 min.
Country Flag of the United States U.S.A.
Language Silent film
English intertitles
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

A Fool There Was (1915) is a silent film starring Theda Bara, one of the first sex symbols of the early 20th century. Bara plays a vamp who uses her charms to seduce and corrupt a moral Wall Street lawyer, John Schuyler (Edward Jose). A Fool There Was was long considered controversial for such risqué title cards as "Kiss me, my fool!"

A Fool There Was was based on a play by Porter Emerson Browne, in turned based on Rudyard Kipling's poem The Vampire. The producers were keen to pay tribute to their literary source, having a real actor read the full poem to the audience before each initial showing, and presenting passages of the poem throughout the film in intertitles. Bara's official credit is even "The Vampire"; for this reason the film is sometimes cited as the first "vampire" movie.

A Fool There Was was also a watershed in early film publicity. At a press conference in January the studio gave an elaborate fictional biography of her, making her an exotic Arabian actress, and presented her in a flamboyant fur outfit. Then they made an intentional leak to the press that the whole thing was a hoax. This may have been one of Hollywood's first publicity stunts.

The film also marked the first onscreen appearance of the popular World War I era film actress May Allison.

This is one of the few films of Theda Barra to still exist. The others are: The Unchastened Woman (1925), The Stain (1914), East Lynne (1916), and two short comedies she made for Hal Roach in the mid-1920s. It showcases Barra's status as the original screen vamp (so named for her now lost portrayal of a female vampire) as she ruins a married diplomate through her sexual enticements.

[edit] References

  • J. Gordan Melton ed. (1999). "Theda Bara", The Vampire Book, 2nd. ed., New York: Visible Ink Press. 
  • J. Gordan Melton ed. (1999). "Vamp", The Vampire Book, 2nd. ed., New York: Visible Ink Press. 

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