Jump to content

Beatrice Fairfax

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Beatrice Fairfax
Advertisement for Episode 9
Written byBasil Dickey (scenario)
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
Distributed by
Release date
  • August 7, 1916 (1916-08-07)
Running time
300 mins. (15 episodes)
CountryUnited States
Languages
  • Silent
  • English intertitles

Beatrice Fairfax is an American silent film serial directed and produced by Leopold Wharton and Theodore Wharton. First released on August 7, 1916, the series consists of 15 weekly episodes and features the character of "Beatrice Fairfax" (Grace Darling). The character was inspired by the popular newspaper advice column Ask Beatrice Fairfax, which had been the world's first column of its kind when launched in 1898.

The weekly film serial was a popular genre of the time, and the films' producers, the Wharton brothers, also made serials such as The Exploits of Elaine. However, Beatrice Fairfax is more accurately a series, since the episodes consist of self-contained stories rather than a linked serial narrative.

Overview

[edit]

The two protagonists were played by Grace Darling and Harry Fox, the comedian and vaudeville dancer. In the films, the Beatrice character was portrayed as a resourceful agony aunt-cum-crimefighter, working with her reporter colleague Jimmy Barton to investigate and solve the problems sent in by her troubled readers.

Cast

[edit]

Episodes

[edit]
  • Episode 1: The Missing Watchman (August 7, 1916)
  • Episode 2: The Jealous Wife (August 14, 1916)
  • Episode 3: Billy's Romance (August 21, 1916)
  • Episode 4: The Stone God (August 28, 1916)
  • Episode 5: Mimosa San (September 4, 1916)
  • Episode 6: The Forbidden Room (September 11, 1916)
  • Episode 7: A Name for a Baby (September 18, 1916)
  • Episode 8: At the Ainsley Ball (September 25, 1916)
  • Episode 9: Outside the Law (October 2, 1916)
  • Episode 10: Play Ball (October 9, 1916)
  • Episode 11: The Wages of Sin (October 16, 1916)
  • Episode 12: Curiosity (October 23, 1916)
  • Episode 13: The Ringer (October 30, 1916)
  • Episode 14: The Hidden Menace (November 6, 1916)
  • Episode 15: Wristwatches (November 13, 1916)

Production notes

[edit]

The episodes were filmed primarily in Ithaca, New York, at The Whartons Studio. Beatrice Fairfax marked the screen debut of Ziegfeld girl and future screen star Olive Thomas who appeared in Episode 10 of the series.

Status

[edit]

The Dear Beatrice Fairfax advice column was started by journalist Marie Manning on July 20, 1898, and ran in newspapers owned by William Randolph Hearst. Nitrate copies of all the episodes, except the first, survived because they were preserved in the collection of Hearst's mistress Marion Davies, which was eventually transferred to the Library of Congress. According to one source, Hearst disliked the films and planned to cast Davies as Beatrice Fairfax in a remake; he gave them to her as an example of how the new films should not be made.[1] The films were restored and recolored according to instructions written on the nitrate copies themselves.[1]

DVD release

[edit]

In 2004, Serial Squadron released the series on DVD. On September 30, 2008, Hermitage Hill Media also released the series on Region 1 DVD in the United States.

Radio adaptation

[edit]

Beatrice Fairfax was a program on NBC radio March 10-June 30, 1934, on CBS in May 1936 and on Mutual August 31, 1937 – February 25, 1938. The program "usually offered two love dramas and a gamut of 'heartthrob' problems each week."[2]

Film scores

[edit]

Ithaca based songwriter Anna Coogan wrote and performed a filmscore and operetta for episode 7 "A Name for the Baby (or) The Curse of Eve" (2018)

[edit]

Beatrice Fairfax is featured in the lyrics to But Not for Me, a popular song of 1930 by George Gershwin.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Catalano, Jim. "Back in Time: 1916 'Beatrice Fairfax' series offers glimpse of Ithaca's silent-film past". Ithaca Times. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
  2. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved 2019-10-16.
[edit]