Volume I: Narrative History

 

Chapter 2 (1909 Into the Film Industry): It Wasn't Easy

During the start-up period Thanhouser's inexperience in the motion picture field led to some problems, as Edwin Thanhouser recalled years later Note

One day it had been necessary to make a picture of an automobile plunging through a brick wall. This was a new problem, and neither Thanhouser nor James Cruze Note knew exactly how to handle it. Finally, Cruze informed Thanhouser he'd just pile up some bricks and drive through them. This he did. "Why he didn't kill himself, I'll never know," stated Thanhouser. "Using simulated or rubber bricks, we discovered, was the proper procedure."

Speaking of problems reminded Mr. Thanhouser that his company was the first to burn down a real house. They bought one that was about to be moved, put lace curtains in it, and fixed it up to look like a very presentable residence. Then they set fire to it and made some excellent pictures....

Lamps were a source of endless worry Note Delays, delays, and more delays occurred until things seemed impossible. Machinery to perforate the films added yet another problem to his ever-increasing responsibilities. In addition, threatened lawsuits appeared with alarming frequency. Note One could scarcely say that Thanhouser had a dull moment....

Thanhouser recognized the importance of a written scenario. Despite the fact that the other producers "made annotations on their cuffs, if they had any," he used a legitimate scenario "with all the trimmings" for his first production. The scenario was written by Lloyd Lonergan, a newspaper man, and Mrs. Thanhouser. Mrs. Thanhouser, he explained, had written several plays and had been in close contact with the theatre. She won fame during her childhood for her roles in Little Lord Fauntleroy and Bootles' Baby. "It was a rather lamentable affair," he continued. "It included everything from murder through robbery and a love story. Its title was The Mad Hermit, and it had enough material for 15 plots." Note

A group of approximately 20 people, including a cameraman Note from the Edison Company and a director Note taken from one of Thanhouser's theatrical companies, made The Mad Hermit. It took about two weeks' time.... Even then the audience was demanding realistic productions. In one of the scenes in the picture it was necessary to throw a baby from its carriage into the arms of a member of the cast. "We used a dummy," Thanhouser said, "and the audience reacted violently to the crude deception."

Many times the sources for the plots were fires, such as when the railroad ties were ablaze Note - "That made a good picture" - and peculiar automobile accidents. In each case, however, a scenario was always developed around the particular incident, before additional shooting was done.

Since there was no established market for pictures at this time, Thanhouser and his associates compiled a list of names of those people whom they thought might be interested in buying their pictures. Prints at this time were sold outright to an exchange man who in turn sold them to the theatres....

The second venture...was titled The Actor's Children. Note The next and most successful of those made until then was Jane Eyre. From the first its appeal seemed to be established, and Thanhouser received more orders for it than he could fill.

 

Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.