Lummox is a 1930 American pre-Code sound film directed by Herbert Brenon and starring Winifred Westover. It was released through United Artists, and based on a 1923 novel by Fannie Hurst.[1][2]
Lummox | |
---|---|
Directed by | Herbert Brenon Ray Lissner (assistant) |
Written by | Fannie Hurst (novel, dialogue) Elizabeth Meehan (adaptation) |
Produced by | Joseph M. Schenck |
Starring | Winifred Westover |
Cinematography | Karl Struss |
Edited by | Marie Halvey |
Music by | Jack Danielson Hugo Riesenfeld |
Production company | Feature Productions |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
|
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English intertitles |
Sound engineer Ed Bernds did not have fond memories of Brenon. "So many of the silent film directors were phonies. I didn't think highly of Herbert Brenon, for instance. He was the old, imperious type of director. Lordly, demanding. There was a scene in Lummox, where Winifred Westover was supposed to be betrayed by Ben Lyon, who has gotten her pregnant. He throws some money down and she takes the money and tears it up with her teeth. Well, Brenon demanded real money! And several takes. The poor propman was going around borrowing money from the crew. It was the Imperial syndrome of silent film directors."[3]
Plot
editBerta Osberg, an uneducated Swedish servant, was given the derogatory nickname of Lummox, which means a slow or stupid person. Most people she met criticized her, but Rollo Farley, her employers' son, felt inspired by Berta, and wrote poetry about her, with lines that included "A tower of silence under the sea."
Rollo seduced Berta, and when she discovered she was pregnant, she left her employment without telling anyone of her condition. Her child was given to a wealthy family, and she sometimes learned about him from one of the family's servants. She was told the boy played the piano, and that his parents were sending him to Europe to study music. He was inspired to be a musician because of a concertina Bertha anonymously sent to her son.
Berta learned her son will be playing at Carnegie Hall. She bought a standing-room ticket and was able to see and hear her handsome son play the piano. At the end of the film Bertha was too old to be hired as a servant. She went into a bakery run by a kind widower, and was asked to live in his home and care for his motherless children.[4]
Cast
edit- Winifred Westover – Bertha Oberg
- Dorothy Janis – Chita (*billed as Dorothy King)
- Lydia Yeamans Titus – Annie Wennerberg
- Ida Darling – Mrs. Farley
- Ben Lyon – Rollo Farley
- Myrta Bonillas – Veronica Neidringhous
- Cosmo Kyrle Bellew – John Bixby
- Anita Bellew – Mrs. John Bixby
- Robert Ullman – Paul Bixby
- Clara Langsner – Mrs. Wallenstein Sr.
- William Collier, Jr. – Wally Wallenstein
- Edna Murphy – May Wallenstein
- Torben Meyer – Silly Willie
- Fannie Bourke – Mrs. McMurtry
- Myrtle Stedman – Mrs. Ossetrich
- Danny O'Shea – Barney
- William Bakewell – Paul Charvet
- Sidney Franklin – Mr. Meyerbogen
- Dickie Moore – Bit
- Billy Seay – Petey
Production
editIn order to portray the heavyset servant Westover ate fatty food, avoided exercise, and gained forty pounds. To help her appear to be a person who worked long hours of wearying labor the director gave her shoes soled with fifteen pounds of lead, and had her wear a dress with five pounds of lead weights in the collar, five pounds of lead in each of the sleeve cuffs, and ten pounds of weights in the hem of her skirt.[5]
She received praise for her acting, with one newspaper stating: "Winifred Westover’s characterization of the buxom servant girl, whose little world has been the drab atmosphere of cheap lodging houses, shabby humanity and cruel employers, reaches heights rarely ever attained."[6] It has at times been incorrectly reported that she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in the film.[7] Academy Awards databases make no mention of such a nomination however.[8]
Preservation status
editA copy of the film survives at the British Film Institute,[9] and archival copies of the soundtrack are preserved at the UCLA Film and Television Archive on five discs.[10] The film had a Movietone soundtrack, however, discs were prepared for theaters not yet wired for sound-on-film.
References
edit- ^ The American Film Institute Catalog Feature Films: 1921-30 by The American Film Institute, c.1971
- ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films : Lummox
- ^ Eyman, Scott. The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution 1926-1930. Simon and Schuster, New York: 1997.
- ^ A Bleak Life, The New York Times, March 24, 1930
- ^ Film Star Builds Up Her Weight By Strange Methods, Great Falls Tribune (Great Falls, Montana), June 30, 1929, page 21
- ^ 'Lummox' Takes Place With Screen’s Best, The Morning Call (Allentown, PA), February 9, 1930, page 9
- ^ "WINIFRED WESTOVER HART". The New York Times. March 22, 1978. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 29, 2023.
- ^ 3rd Academy Awards
- ^ "Collections Search | BFI | British Film Institute". collections-search.bfi.org.uk. Retrieved September 9, 2023.
- ^ "Lummox / Feature Productions ; presented by Joseph M. Schenck ; directed by Herbert Brenon ; adaptation, Elizabeth Meehan ; dialogue, Fannie Hurst". search.library.ucla.edu. Retrieved September 9, 2023.