Oct. 4, 1895— The son of vaudevillians, Joseph Frank Keaton was born on a barnstorming tour in Piqua, KS—but he would become better known to audiences as Buster Keaton, part of the “Great Triumvirate” of the most popular silent film comedians, along with Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lloyd.
At six months old, the child survived falling down a
flight of stairs. A visiting family friend, Harry Houdini, picking him up, said
the youngster could really take a “buster,” or fall, giving rise to his
nickname. At three months old, the boy was incorporated into his parents’
vaudeville act.
If his father Joe gave Buster an early boost in the
entertainment industry, he also foreshadowed his own fate. The elder Keaton
fell victim to alcoholism, breaking up his family and his act, falling on hard
times until the love of another woman years later led him to curb his drinking
at last—all circumstances repeated in the case of his son.
But at the height of his popularity in the 1920s, “The
Great Stone Face” (a nickname given for his cinematic impassivity in the face
of staggering disaster) set standards for comedy that influenced filmmakers for
generations.
In a series of shorts from 1917 to 1920, Keaton
learned the tricks of the trade from another ex-vaudevillian, Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle. Several years later, when Hollywood shunned the roly-poly comic after
a sensational sex scandal and three manslaughter trials in which he was eventually
cleared of all charges but still found his name blackened, Keaton showed his
loyalty by giving him financial assistance, securing directing work for him,
and even testifying publicly on his behalf.
Keaton’s reputation rests on nearly 20 shorts and 11
silent features in which he wrote, directed and starred in the 1920s that made
use of his of the acrobatics he learned in vaudeville. Several not only still
leave modern audiences shaking with laughter but industry professionals shaking
their heads that Keaton could even pull off such hair-raising stunts on his own
so early in the life of Hollywood.
The Steamboat Bill Jr. sequence, for instance, when a house collapses around him and he miraculously escapes unscathed, could no longer be filmed as is because of insurance-company considerations, according to Gary Giddins’ “Speechless” essay on Keaton and Chaplin in the critic’s 2006 collection, Natural Selection.
Stunt men are still flabbergasted that he could be pulled onto a speeding train with just one outstretched arm in the short Cops. And Keaton did not realize until a doctor visit years afterward that he had broken his neck while filming a railroad water-tank scene in Sherlock Jr.
Many of his gags resulted from his fascination with
mechanics and his careful discussion with associates on how to use this to pull
off a sequence. In the 1921 two-reeler, The Boat, he finally figured out
how to film the launch of the ship from a pier. (The boat name in this film
gave rise to the identification used by members of The International Buster Keaton Society: the Damfinos.
This fascination with mechanics may have reached a
height in Sherlock Jr., where his projectionist character falls asleep,
dreams that film’s villain and love interest are his rival and girlfriend, and
leaps into the theater screen to set matters right. (Woody Allen would use the
same idea in his 1985 comedy, The Purple Rose of Cairo.) And, in The
General, the climactic train crash cost the equivalent of more than half a
million dollars in today’s terms, in what is believed to be the most expensive
scene in silent film history.
No account of Keaton’s persona can fail to mention two
other items: his pork pie hat and still, unsmiling face.
The actor, feeling he needed a different kind of hat
to distinguish himself from other screen comics, decided to fashion the pork
pie by cutting a Stetson, stiffening the brim with sugar water, adding
granulated sugar in a teacup of warm water, then wetting the top and bottom of
the brim before letting it dry until it became stiff. He would have to make
multiple such hats for each picture, as he did more water stunts than most
comics of the time.
As for the face: he would later claim that he was so caught
up in the details of making a movie that he didn’t realize he wasn’t smiling. But
it turned out to be an ideal counterpoint to the manic motion of his stunts. As
critic James Agee explained:
“He used this great, sad, motionless face to suggest
various related things; a one-track mind near the track's end of pure insanity;
mulish imperturbability under the wildest of circumstances; how dead a human being
can get and still be alive; an awe-inspiring sort of patients and power to
endure, proper to granite but uncanny in flesh and blood. Everything that he
was and did bore out this rigid face and played laughs against it. When he
moved his eyes, it was like seeing them move in a statue.”
The prospect of talkies did not faze Keaton in the
least, because his voice had been trained in vaudeville. But he was tripped up
from an unexpected quarter: his brother-in-law, Joseph Schenck.
Schenck, who had handled the business end of operations while Keaton handled the creative details, persuaded him, following the box-office failures of Steamboat Bill Jr. and The General, that he should give up his own studio and join MGM. The new arrangement proved a straitjacket for Keaton, as the studio sharply curtailed his practice of performing his own stunts and required prior script approval from an artist who depended heavily on improvisation.
At the same time, the collapse of his
marriage led wife Natalie Talmadge to initiate bitter divorce proceedings—and Keaton
to drink heavily, lose his contract with MGM and suffer a nervous breakdown.
On the rebound, Keaton married his nurse—but that
relationship fell apart, too, in a few years. It was not until 1940, when
Keaton wed his third wife, dancer Eleanor Norris, that he achieved emotional
stability, and not until the end of the decade—a full generation after his
emotional and creative downward spiral began—that he came back into the public’s
consciousness, through three major events:
*Agee’s seminal 1949 Life Magazine essay, “Comedy's
Greatest Era,” spotlighted Keaton and fellow silent comics Chaplin and Lloyd;
*Sunset Boulevard (1950) included Keaton among bridge
players who meet at the home of fellow silent-film star, the fictional Norma
Desmond (played by the real-life Gloria Swanson);
*Limelight (1952) teamed Keaton for the first
and only time with Chaplin.
From the 1950s through the mid-1960s, Keaton worked
constantly, mostly in television, with the occasional film supporting appearance
(e.g., Beach Blanket Bingo, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
Forum). By his death in 1966, he had gained a new generation of admirers, a
cadre that, over the years, has included Orson Welles, Peter Bogdanovich, Mel Brooks,
Richard Lewis, Bill Hader, and Dick Van Dyke (another physical comedian, who
gave the eulogy at the funeral for his friend).
Appreciation of this multi-talented innovator only
grows. Earlier this year, for example, the U.K. newspaper The Guardian
published an account of two previously unpublished sketches—typed out
completely by Keaton, most likely in the 1950s—that spell out two of his gags.
The discovery was likened by Alek Lev, vice president of the International
Buster Keaton Society, to a “holy relic.”
1 comment:
Very good article. One of my first jobs, as an adult, was working at the Fort Lee Film Warehouse -- on Joseph St (?), off of Main St. It was an old WWI soldiers barracks. I was assigned to inventory films that dated back to silent movies and the first years of the industry ... because I didn't smoke. Early films had a nitrate compound that was explosive and flammable. The building where I worked once processed film, built-in gutters were built into the walls. Your article brought all this back to me. Thanks. Be well, Michael M
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