Fig Leaves (1926)
- Starring:
- George O'Brien, Olive Borden, (more)
- Director(s):
- Howard Hawks
Synopsis of Fig Leaves
Fig Leaves is historically important as the earliest extant film of director Howard Hawks. A partial parody of the Cecil B. DeMille historical spectacles, the film opens in the Garden of Eden, where Adam (George O'Brien) tries to read his morning paper (a stone tablet, a la The Flintstones) while Eve (Olive Borden) complains that she has nothing to wear. As Adam goes to work on the 9:15 dinosaur, Eve is led down the road to perdition by a friendly snake. Flash forward to 1926: Eve Smith (Borden again) complains that she has no decent clothes, whereupon her best friend Alice (the "snake" counterpart, played by Phyllis Haver) suggests that the heroine take a job as fashion model, thereby securing herself a free wardrobe. Catching his wife in a state of dishabille at a fancy dress shop, Adam Smith (O'Brien again) angrily declares that he never wants to see her again. Adam forgives Eve after witnessing a cat-fight between his wife and the troublesome Alice. Critics in 1926 were amused by the "prehistoric" contraptions in the opening scenes and enthralled by the film's Technicolor fashion-show sequence. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Complete Cast of Fig Leaves
- George O'Brien - Adam Smith
- Phyllis Haver - Alice Atkins
- William Austin - Andre's assistant
- Eulalie Jensen - Madame Griswald
- Olive Borden - Eve Smith
- André de Beranger - Josef Andre
- André Beranger
- Charles "Heinie" Conklin - Eddie McSwiggen
- Director(s):
- Howard Hawks
- Writer(s):
- Louis D. Lighton, Hope Loring
- Producer(s):
- William Fox
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