That Royle Girl

That Royle Girl
Directed by D. W. Griffith
Produced by Jesse L. Lasky
Written by Paul Schofield
Based on That Royle Girl by
Edwin Balmer
Starring Carol Dempster
W. C. Fields
James Kirkwood
Harrison Ford
Studio Famous Players-Lasky
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) December 7, 1925 (1925-12-07)
Running time 114 minutes
Country United States
Language English

That Royle Girl (1925) is a silent film directed by D. W. Griffith and released by Paramount Pictures. It is considered a lost film.

Contents

Production

The film was based on the novel of the same name by Edwin Balmer. A poor young woman (Carol Dempster) from the slums of Chicago singlehandedly saves a jazz bandleader (Harrison Ford) after he is improperly convicted and sentenced to death for murder.[1]

This film along with Sally of the Sawdust marked Griffith's return to working for an important Hollywood studio, (Paramount), something he hadn't experienced since leaving Biograph in 1914. He also had to work with a tight shooting script as Paramount executives Adolph Zukor and Jesse L. Lasky insisted the film be brought on schedule and on budget.

Griffith had been a founding partner in Triangle Studios in 1915 and United Artists in 1919, and these ventures allowed him leeway in the way he made films. However, now the leisurely approach to filmmaking Griffith had enjoyed at his own Mamaroneck, New York was gone. Griffith had been for all intents and purposes an independent producer since leaving Biograph. Griffith shot That Royle Girl on locations across Chicago. The film’s climactic sequence, a devastating tornado, was filmed on a football field at Paramount’s Astoria Studio in Queens, New York, where Griffith created a fully built village. Griffith used the power of 24 airplane propellers to recreate the wreckage and ruin of the tornado’s fury.

While the production was underway, Griffith added W. C. Fields to the cast for a comedy relief supporting role as the heroine’s inebriated stepfather.[2]

No print of That Royle Girl is known to exist in any archive or private collection. In 1980, the American Film Institute included this title among its list of the “Ten Most Wanted” lost films of all time.[3]

Cast

References

  1. ^ “American Film Cycles” by Larry Langman, Google Books
  2. ^ Fields, Ronald J. “W.C. Fields: A Life on Film,” pages 31-33. St. Martin’s Press, 1984. ISBN 0-312-85312-2
  3. ^ Thomson, Frank. “Lost Films: Important Movies That Disappeared,” page xiv. Citadel Press, 1996. ISBN 0-8065-1604-6

External links