The Lottery Man is a 1916 American silent comedy film written by Theodore Wharton and Rida Johnson Young. It was directed by Leopold Wharton and Wharton, and stars Oliver Hardy, Thurlow Bergen and Lottie Alter. It was produced at the Whartons Studio in Ithaca, New York, and distributed by Whartons Studio. The film was released on June 26, 1916. A print of the film exists in the film archive of the Library of Congress.[1][2]
The Lottery Man | |
---|---|
Directed by | Leopold Wharton Theodore Wharton |
Written by | Theodore Wharton Rida Johnson Young |
Produced by | F. Ray Comstock Leopold Wharton Theodore Wharton |
Starring | Thurlow Bergen |
Cinematography | Levi Bacon |
Edited by | Bess Spencer |
Distributed by | Whartons Studio |
Release date |
|
Country | United States |
Languages | Silent film English intertitles |
Cast
edit- Thurlow Bergen as Jack Wright-a son
- Elsie Esmond as Miss Helen Heyer-foxeys cousin
- Carolyn Lee as Lizzie Roberts-Mrs Peytons pet goat
- Allan Murnane as Foxey Peyton-his chum
- Lottie Alter as Mrs. Wright-little mother
- Ethel Winthrop as Mrs. Peyton-foxey's mother
- Mary Leslie Mayo as Hedgwig Jensen-physical instructor
- F.W. Stewart as Mcquire the newspaper publisher and the local constable
- Oliver Hardy as Maggie Murphy
- Edward O'Connor as The Butler
- Malcolm Head as Vegetable cart man in accident
- Louis A. Fuertes as Lottery drawing host
- Clarence Merrick as Chauffeur
- Joseph Urband as Newspaper workroom clerk
- Frances White as Mrs. Peyton's maid
Plot
editJack Wright is a young college man and football hero who after graduating, discovers that his mother has lost the family property, so that he must go to work. He becomes a newspaper reporter and induces the paper to start a lottery with himself as the prize, agreeing to marry the woman who holds the lucky number. Jack then falls in love with his chum, Foxey Peyton's cousin Helen, and repents the lottery plan, but it is too late. Helen, Jack and Foxey all begin buying up papers in the hope that she may get the lucky number and straighten everything out. The drawing is held in front of the City Hall, in the presence of an excited crowd of women. Picture the hero's dismay when a kitchen maid and not his sweetheart, holds the lucky number. True love triumphs when the kitchen maid decides she would rather marry the butler and divide the $100,000 prize money.
- Synopsis — (1916) Motion Picture News[3]
Reception
editFilm critic Harvey F. Thew said the film is a "most compact and well-constructed comedy, and the interest is maintained throughout, without resort to slapstick methods or business. In addition, there is some good character drawing, and an atmosphere of healthy, happy outdoor life has been brought into the story".[4]
Lynde Denig of the Moving Picture World said that it lacked much of the humor of the stage comedy from which it was taken, but it is not without redeeming features in the acting of Thurlow Bergen and the situations developed from a first rate farcical plot. It is hardly a picture for audiences accustomed to the niceties of expert studio workmanship, but for those who are not over particular, and who respond to comedy and sentiment in the elementary forms, there should be entertainment in the production.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Bennett, Carl (October 18, 2010). "Progressive Silent Film List: The Lottery Man". Silent Era. Retrieved July 19, 2010.
- ^ Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress. American Film Institute. 1978. p. 107.
- ^ "The Lottery Man From Unity Sales Second Week In September". Motion Picture News. Vol. 14, no. 9. Quigley Publishing Company. September 2, 1916. p. 1396.
- ^ Thew, Harvey F. (1916). "The Lottery Man". Motion Picture News. Vol. 13, no. 7. Quigley Publishing Company. p. 1020.
- ^ Denig, Lynde (February 19, 1916). "The Lottery Man". Moving Picture World. Vol. 27. Chalmers Publishing Company. p. 1141.
- This article incorporates text from these sources, which are in the public domain: The Moving Picture World; Motion Picture News