Casey at the Bat (1916 film)

Last updated
Casey at the Bat
Casey at the Bat still.jpg
Casey (DeWolf Hopper) in batting practice before the big game against Frogtown
Directed by Lloyd Ingraham
Written by William E. Wing (scenario)
Based on"Casey at the Bat"
by Ernest Thayer, 1888
Starring DeWolf Hopper
Production
companies
Distributed byTriangle Film Corporation
Release date
  • July 2, 1916 (1916-07-02)
Running time
5 reels (55-65 minutes) [1]
CountryUnited States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

Casey at the Bat is a lost 1916 American silent sports drama film produced by Fine Arts Studios in Hollywood, directed by Lloyd Ingraham, and starring DeWolf Hopper with principal support from Marguerite Marsh, Frank Bennett, and Kate Toncray. The photoplay's scenario, written by William E. Wing, was based on Ernest Thayer's 1888 baseball poem of the same title.

Contents

The Library of Congress includes the film among the National Film Preservation Board's list of "7,200 Lost U.S. Silent Feature Films" produced between 1912 and 1929. [1] [2]

Plot

As he is characterized in Ernest Thayer's poem, Casey (DeWolf Hopper) in this film was a "mighty" baseball player, the star and leading hitter of the town of Mudville's team. The motion picture's storyline, however, as described in 1916 reviews and news items, expanded considerably on Casey's personal life outside of baseball. He is portrayed living at the house of his sister (Kate Toncray) and brother-in-law (Bert Hadley) and working as a clerk and "errand boy" at Hicks' General Store in Mudville. Although he is a baseball hero in his community, Casey away from the playing field has few friends or admirers due to his clumsy, coarse behavior. Only a "half-witted" man (Frank Hughes) and the town's little children like the giant-sized athlete. Among the latter is Casey's six-year-old niece (Mae Giraci) to whom he is deeply devoted.

Despite his unattractive appearance and social ineptness, Casey is infatuated with a pretty, young woman in town, Angevine Blodgett (Marguerite Marsh). She is the daughter of the local judge, is cordial to Casey whenever she sees him at the general store or elsewhere in public, but she is in love with Bert Collins (Frank Bennett), a handsome "college man" she hopes to marry. Collins is also a skillful pitcher on the baseball team of Mudville's bitter sports rival, Frogtown.

Central to the film's story is a three-game series of baseball contests between Mudville and Frogtown. Mudville wins the first game thanks to Casey's hitting and fielding, but Frogtown wins the next one because Casey is unable to play due to burning his hands while preventing a fire at a community dance. By the time Mudville hosts the decisive third game against Frogtown, Casey is sufficiently healed to play. Unfortunately, his niece is seriously injured that same day when she falls out of a tree. Refusing to leave her bedside as she is being treated by the town doctor (Hal Wilson), Casey misses the start of the game. Later he hears townfolk calling for him, so he finally decides he must play and instructs his friend to stay with the girl. When Casey arrives at the ballpark, the game is in the bottom half of the ninth inning and Mudville has two men on base, trails by two runs, and is only one out from losing the series. Casey now steps into the batter's box, and the crowd's excitement grows, for the partisan spectators are confident the game will now be won by their home-run hero. Casey allows Frogtown's pitcher to throw two strikes against him, but just as the third pitch is being thrown, the slugger suddenly sees his friend arrive in the ballpark. Thinking he has come to the game with bad news about his niece, a distracted Casey swings and misses the pitch, striking out. After the game Casey is relieved to learn that the girl is better and will recover. Mudville's residents, angry about the loss, blame and shun their former hero. Humiliated and dejected, Casey returns to his sister's house, bundles up his few possessions, and then walks out of town along the railroad tracks, leaving Mudville forever.

Film still of Casey (Hopper) talking to Angevine (Marguerite Marsh) in Hicks' General Store in Mudville DeWolf Hopper and Marguerite Marsh in "Casey at the Bat", 1916.jpeg
Film still of Casey (Hopper) talking to Angevine (Marguerite Marsh) in Hicks' General Store in Mudville

Cast

Production

In the spring of 1916, during pre-production, news reports indicated that Lloyd Ingraham was not Triangle Film Corporation's initial choice to direct the five-reeler. The Los Angeles Times in its April 16 issue—less than two weeks before filming began—announces that DeWolf Hopper was already busy "practicing sincere baseball every morning" and that Edward "Eddie" Dillon would be "directing both the baseball [practice] and the picture." [4] A change in the film's leadership was made soon after the Los Angeles newspaper's announcement, for the trade journal Motion Picture News soon reported that the production "is now in the hands of Director Lloyd Ingraham". [5]

Casting title character

Still of an injured Casey, who looked "like a giant" in his Mudville uniform, watching his team lose Game 2 to Frogtown Film still of Casey (DeWolf Hopper) in his Mudville uniform, 1916.jpeg
Still of an injured Casey, who looked "like a giant" in his Mudville uniform, watching his team lose Game 2 to Frogtown

Casting DeWolf Hopper in the title role proved publicly to be a popular choice, one predicted to be "a very excellent subject" given Hopper's lengthy association with the fictional baseball player. [7] For many years the towering 6-foot-5-inch actor, singer and comedy star of vaudeville and musical theater had become inextricably linked to Thayer's poem, which by 1916 he had recited on many occasions on stage and at special events across the country. [8] [9] Triangle Film Corporation in 1915 had contracted Hopper for one year for $102,000 to play the lead in several screen projects planned by the company. [10] One of those projects, despite the actor's advanced age, included Casey at the Bat. While Hopper was a knowledgeable and "most enthusiastic baseball fan", he was over 58 years old by the time production began, an age far past the normal retirement age of professional and even amateur baseball players. [11] Excellent makeup used on the star in filming apparently succeeded in making the actor appear appreciably younger in screen tests. Early in production, Grace Kingsley of the Los Angeles Times reported, "Hopper's makeup as Casey is said to be attracting a great deal of attention and admiration at the Fine Arts studio." [4]

Filming and staging baseball games

The production was filmed in approximately three weeks, between the final days of April 1916 and May 20. [12] The scenes of the three baseball games portrayed in the film were shot outside the city of Los Angeles, at the nearby community of Lankershim, which in 1927 would be renamed North Hollywood. [13] Director Ingraham hired a "former professional baseball player" to rehearse the cast there in batting and fielding and to assist in directing the actual filming of gameplay. [14] In newspaper interviews about the production, DeWolf Hopper described the baseball location's setup: "We rented a little ball park out in Lankershim and the local folks turned out in force to fill the grandstand and bleachers." [15] According to him, "The teams were made up partly from Lankershim players, partly from Fine Arts players, and they were good teams." [15]

Release and promotion

In New York City on July 2, 1916—the day of the film's official release—the publicity bureau of Triangle Arts arranged at a Broadway theater a special screening of Casey at the Bat for teams of the city's baseball league. [16] Prior to the projection of his new film in New York, DeWolf Hopper in California recited Thayer's poem to the ball players by telephone, using a long-distant connection from a private dining room located at the Alexandria Hotel in Los Angeles. [8] [16] In his introductory remarks, Hopper "declared" that the occasion marked his 1,647th public performance of "Casey at the Bat". [8] [17] Staff of Picture-Play Magazine later reported that after hearing the actor's recitation, the audience marveled at the clarity of the telephone connection, at how they "were able to understand every syllable" of Hopper's melodramatic delivery. [8]

In advertisements and news items promoting the film, the publicity lure used by Triangle Film Corporation to attract theatergoers was to assure them that the picture explained the ending of Thayer's poem. In Hartford, Connecticut, for example, the local newspaper's announcement of the film's screening was typical of the promotion: "For the first time the world learns why Casey struck out in the final game between Mudville and Frogtown. [18] Motion Picture News was one of several trade publications that even in May, before the film's release, circulated the same lure, "The punch of this story for the screen, which was prepared by William E. Wing, reveals the cause of missing the flying sphere, which is indeed a great sacrifice." [12]

Reception

The film received generally mixed reviews during the weeks after its release. Oscar Cooper, writing for Motion Picture News, praised the scenarist's and director's success "in putting a lot of excellent small-town stuff on the screen, as well as in working up the three baseball games in a really dramatic way." [19] The entertainment weekly The New York Clipper was another publication that complimented Wing's adaptation of Thayer's original work, noting that he had "elaborated quite successfully on the poem, and turned out a good screen story". [20] In the July 8, 1916 issue of The Chicago Daily Tribune, reviewer Kitty Kelly agrees to some extent with The New York Clipper's assessment. "It is no great feat of phototelling, she writes, "but it is vastly interesting because it has so much humanity in it, with never a bit of hectic emotionalism so dominant in a large percentage of celluloid production." [21]

The New York-based trade paper Variety , however, was a harsh critic of the release. The widely read publication found the plot, structure, and execution of the production wholly deficient in quality. In its June 23 edition, Variety not only finds fault with DeWolf Hopper's performance and with his physical appearance on screen, but it also insists that Wing's script and the film's presentation as a drama were ill-conceived:

...this Triangle-Fine Arts feature is just another example of a good idea gone wrong. "Casey at the Bat" has been a standby of Mr. Hopper's in recitative form for many years. It should have made a corking subject for a comedy picture, but William Everett Wing, who adapted the scenario, saw fit to make a cheap mushy heart thriller of the story and the result was that the tale, coupled with Mr. Hopper, who failed utterly to look the part, and who acted it extremely badly, did not turn out at all in the manner that one assumed it would from the title. As a feature film "Casey at the Bat" will fall short of expectations, although the title will attract money. [3]

"Lost" film status

This 1916 adaptation was one of a least a half dozen films released between 1899 and 1927 that were inspired by Thayer's poem. No full prints or partial reels of the Triangle Film Corporation's production are preserved in the Library of Congress, the UCLA Film Archives, in the collection of moving images at the Museum of Modern Art, the George Eastman Museum, or in European film repositories. [22] In its 2019 list of lost feature films released in the United States between 1912 and 1929, the Library of Congress includes the 1916 release of Casey at the Bat. [2] Stills from the production, in addition to those depicted on this page, do survive as illustrations in reviews and news items in 1916 trade publications and provide a visual record of the general content of some scenes in the film. [23]

See also

References and notes

  1. 1 2 "American Silent Feature Film: Database From the report 'The Survival of American Silent Feature Films: 1912-1929'", searchable database that includes nearly 11,000 titles. Library of Congress. Library of Congress. Retrieved March 25, 2020.
  2. 1 2 "7,200 Lost U.S. Silent Feature Films (1912-29) National Film Preservation Board", running updated list (current October 2019), "Casey at the Bat (1916), Lloyd Ingraham", film number 897, p. 120. National Film Preservation Board, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Retrieved March 25, 2020.
  3. 1 2 "Casey At The Bat", Variety (New York, N.Y.), June 23, 1916, p. 20. Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved March 20, 2020.
  4. 1 2 Kingsley, Grace (1916). "STUDIO/Close-ups./Before The Camera...", Los Angeles Times (Sunday edition), April 16, 1916, part III, p. 19. ProQuest Historical Newspapers (Ann Arbor, Michigan), database access through The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library.
  5. "'The Bruiser' in Assembling Department", Motion Pictures News, April 29, 1916, pp. 2516-2517. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 25, 2020.
  6. "'Dope Fiend' First Starring Medium For Fay Tincher", Motion Picture News, May 6, 1916, p. 2696. Internet Archive. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  7. "Immortal 'Casey At The Bat,' With De Wolf Hopper, Is Fine Arts Plan", Motion Picture News, April 15, 1916, p. 2198. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  8. 1 2 3 4 "Screen Gossip", Picture-Play Magazine , p. 276. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  9. Walsh, John Evangelist. The Night Casey was Born: The True Story Behind The Great American Ballad "Casey At The Bat". New York: The Overlook Press, 2007, p. 26. DeWolf Hopper's role in popularizing Thayer's poem is covered indepth in this book.
  10. "News and Gossip at the Theaters", Chicago Daily Tribune, May 21, 1916, G2. ProQuest.
  11. Motography (Chicago), May 13, 1916, p. 1100, col. 1. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  12. 1 2 "Five Fine Arts Nearly Ready", Motion Picture News (New York, N.Y.), May 20, 1916, p.3054. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  13. Bearchell, Charles, and Larry D. Fried. The San Fernando Valley Then and Now. Northridge, California: Windsor Publications, 1988, p. 124. ISBN   0-89781-285-9.
  14. Motion Picture News, May 6, 1916, p. 2696. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
  15. 1 2 "Amusements/'Casey at the Bat' At Arizona Today", Arizona Republican , August 29, 1916, p. 8. ProQuest.
  16. 1 2 "'Casey At The Bat' Over 'Phone From Los Angeles To New York", Motion Picture News, July 15, 1916, p. 272. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  17. The reported number of Hopper's recitations of Thayer's poem varied widely in newspapers and film-industry journals, with some stating—even Hopper himself—that he performed it 8,000 times by 1916. The very specific figure of 1,647 times that Hopper cites before delivering his performance over the telephone at the July 2, 1916 event is likely the more accurate accounting up to that date.
  18. "Strand Theater", The Hartford Courant (Hartford, Connecticut), July 18, 1916, p. 6. ProQuest.
  19. Cooper, Oscar (1916). "'Casey At The Bat'", review, Motion Picture News, July 1, 1916, p. 4086. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 28, 2020.
  20. "'Casey at the Bat'", review, The New York Clipper, July 8, 1916, p. 37. Internet Archive. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  21. "De Wolf in 'Casey at the Bat'", The Chicago Daily Tribune, July 8, 1916, p. 11. ProQuest.
  22. European Film Gateway, a centralized on-line access and referral point to the holdings of film archives throughout the European Union. Retrieved March 25, 2020.
  23. No copy in the Library of Congress film archives, "American Silent Feature Film: Database From the report 'The Survival of American Silent Feature Films: 1912-1929'", searchable database that includes nearly 11,000 titles in both complete and partial states. Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Retrieved March 25, 2020.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Casey at the Bat</span> 1888 baseball poem by Ernest Thayer

"Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic, Sung in the Year 1888" is a mock-heroic poem written in 1888 by Ernest Thayer. It was first published anonymously in The San Francisco Examiner on June 3, 1888, under the pen name "Phin", based on Thayer's college nickname, "Phinney". Featuring a dramatic narrative about a baseball game, the poem was later popularized by DeWolf Hopper in many vaudeville performances. It has become one of the best-known poems in American literature.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ernest Thayer</span> American poet

Ernest Lawrence Thayer was an American writer and poet who wrote the poem "Casey", which is "the single most famous baseball poem ever written" according to the Baseball Almanac, and "the nation’s best-known piece of comic verse—a ballad that began a native legend as colorful and permanent as that of Johnny Appleseed or Paul Bunyan."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stockton Ports</span> Minor league baseball team

The Stockton Ports are a Minor League Baseball team of the California League and the Single-A affiliate of the Oakland Athletics. They are located in Stockton, California, and are named for the city's seaport. The team plays its home games at Banner Island Ballpark which opened in 2005 and seats over 5,000 people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lorna Thayer</span> American actress (1919–2005)

Lorna Thayer was an American character actress, best known as Jack Nicholson's foil in the famous "chicken salad sandwich scene" in Five Easy Pieces.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">DeWolf Hopper</span> American actor, singer, comedian, and theatrical producer

William DeWolf Hopper was an American actor, singer, comedian, and theatrical producer. A star of vaudeville and musical theater, he became best known for performing the popular baseball poem "Casey at the Bat".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grace Cunard</span> American actress

Grace Cunard was an American actress, screenwriter and film director. During the silent era, she starred in over 100 films, wrote or co-wrote at least 44 of those productions, and directed no fewer than eight of them. In addition, she edited many of her films, including some of the shorts, serials, and features she developed in collaboration with Francis Ford. Her younger sister, Mina Cunard, was also a film actress.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marguerite Clark</span> American actress (1883–1940)

Helen Marguerite Clark was an American stage and silent film actress. As a movie actress, at one time Clark was second only to Mary Pickford in popularity. With a few exceptions and some fragments, most of Clark's films are considered lost.

<i>Casey at the Bat</i> (1927 film) 1927 film by Monte Brice

Casey at the Bat is a 1927 American silent film, directed by Monte Brice, written by Ernest Thayer and based on the 1888 baseball poem of the same name. The picture stars Wallace Beery, Ford Sterling, ZaSu Pitts and Sterling Holloway in his film debut. Surviving period advertisements indicate Eddie Sutherland may have been slated as director before Brice. A copy was preserved at the Library of Congress.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dan Casey (baseball)</span> American baseball player (1862–1943)

Daniel Maurice Casey was an American professional baseball player whose career spanned from 1884 to 1894 and 1899. He played in Major League Baseball, principally as a pitcher, over parts of seven seasons for four major league clubs. He saw his most extensive playing time with the Philadelphia Quakers, appearing in 142 games for that team from 1886 to 1889. He also appeared in 46 games for the Syracuse Stars in 1890.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">J. Searle Dawley</span> American director

James Searle Dawley was an American film director, producer, screenwriter, stage actor, and playwright. Between 1907 and the mid-1920s, while working for Edison, Rex Motion Picture Company, Famous Players, Fox, and other studios, he directed more than 300 short films and 56 features, which include many of the early releases of stars such as Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Pearl White, Marguerite Clark, Harold Lloyd, and John Barrymore. He also wrote scenarios for many of his productions, including one for his 1910 horror film Frankenstein, the earliest known screen adaptation of Mary Shelley's 1818 novel. While film direction and screenwriting comprised the bulk of Dawley's career, he also had earlier working experience in theater, performing on stage for more than a decade and managing every aspect of stagecraft. Dawley wrote at least 18 plays as well for repertory companies and for several Broadway productions.

The Centaur Film Company was an American motion picture production company founded in 1907 in Bayonne, New Jersey, by William and David Horsley. It was the first independent motion picture production company in the United States. In 1909 the company added a West Coast production unit, the Nestor Film Company, which established the first permanent film studio in Hollywood, California, in 1911. The company was absorbed by the Universal Film Manufacturing Company in 1912.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Providencia Ranch</span> Early film location for Universal and Paramount, now Forest Lawn Cemetery

Providencia Ranch, part of Providencia Land and Water Development Company property named for the Rancho Providencia Mexican land grant, was a property in California, US. It was used as a filming location for the American Civil War battle scenes in The Birth of a Nation (1915) and other silent motion pictures. The valley was also the site for two Universal Studios west coast operations in 1914.

<i>The Charge of the Light Brigade</i> (1912 film) 1912 American film

The Charge of the Light Brigade is a 1912 American silent historical drama film directed by J. Searle Dawley. Produced by Edison Studios, the film portrays the disastrous yet inspiring military attack in October 1854 by British light cavalry against Russian artillery positions in the Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War. Director Dawley also wrote the scenario for this production, adapting it in part from the famous 1854 narrative poem about the charge by British poet laureate Alfred, Lord Tennyson, who completed his poem just six weeks after the actual event. The film's action scenes and landscape footage were shot between late August and early September 1912, while Dawley and his company of players and crew were on location in Cheyenne, Wyoming. In order to produce a sizable and believable recreation of the charge, the director needed a very large number of horsemen. Fortunately for Dawley, the commander of United States Army cavalry at Fort D. A. Russell at Cheyenne agreed to provide "about 800" troopers and "their trained mounts" to the Edison project.

<i>His Picture in the Papers</i> 1916 film by Erich von Stroheim, Emmett J. Flynn, John Emerson

His Picture in the Papers is a 1916 American silent comedy film written and directed by John Emerson. Anita Loos also wrote the film's scenario. The film stars Douglas Fairbanks and Loretta Blake and features Erich von Stroheim in a minor role.

<i>The Good Bad-Man</i> 1916 film

The Good Bad-Man is a 1916 American silent Western film directed by Allan Dwan. The film was written by Douglas Fairbanks, and produced by Fairbanks and the Fine Arts Film Company. It stars Fairbanks and Bessie Love.

<i>Stranded</i> (1916 drama film) 1916 silent film by Lloyd Ingraham

Stranded is a 1916 American silent drama film produced by Fine Arts Film Company and distributed by Triangle Film Corporation. The film stars DeWolf Hopper with newcomer Bessie Love in a supporting role. The film is considered lost.

<i>Sunshine Dad</i> 1916 film by Edward Dillon

Sunshine Dad is a 1916 American silent comedy film produced by Fine Arts Film Company and distributed by Triangle Film Corporation. It was directed by Edward Dillon, written by Tod Browning and 'Chet' Withey and starred stage comedian DeWolf Hopper. Hopper's year old son, William Hopper, appears in the film as a baby.

<i>Shoes</i> (1916 film) 1916 film by Lois Weber

Shoes is a 1916 silent drama film directed by Lois Weber and starring Mary MacLaren. It was distributed by the Universal Film Manufacturing Company and produced by Bluebird Photoplays, a subsidiary of Universal based in New York City and with access to Universal's studio facilities in Fort Lee, New Jersey as well as in California. Shoes was added to the National Film Registry in 2014.

<i>Not My Sister</i> 1916 film directed by Charles Giblyn

Not My Sister is a 1916 silent film drama directed by Charles Giblyn and starring Bessie Barriscale and William Desmond. It was produced by Thomas H. Ince for Kay-Bee Pictures and distributed by Triangle Film Corporation in Culver City, California.

<i>The Witch</i> (1916 film) 1916 American film

The Witch is a lost 1916 American silent drama film directed by Frank Powell, produced by Fox Film Corporation, and starring Nance O'Neil, Alfred Hickman, and Frank Russell. Based on the 1903 play La Sorcière by French dramatist Victorien Sardou, this adaptation portrayed the challenges facing a young woman living in a territory in Mexico wracked by military and social unrest. It was filmed at Fox's studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where a Mexican village was constructed on the company's backlot and used as the principal set for outdoor scenes.