Henry Lehrman Movies

Although Henry Lehrman is little remembered today, he was as much of a comedy film pioneer as his associate Mack Sennett. During his time working for Sennett's Keystone studios, Lehrman helped mold an enduring, albeit crude, brand of slapstick that made the transition into the sound era, even if Lehrman's career had already faltered by then. Like many of his contemporaries, Lehrman frequently seemed to change the story of his early life. Facts about his beginnings in Vienna, Austria, and even the year of his birth are sketchy. Obituaries state he was born on March 30, 1886, but judging from his early press, it may have been 1883. Lehrman claimed he was educated at Vienna's Commercial University and served as a Lieutenant in the Austrian army, both questionable assertions. He came to the United States sometime between 1905 and 1908, and most likely worked as a trolley conductor. When he arrived at the Biograph studios in search of a job, he told director D.W. Griffith that he was an agent for the prestigious Pathe Freres. Griffith saw through the pose and christened him with the snide nickname "Pathe" Lehrman. But he also gave the gutsy Austrian work as an extra. Lehrman made more of an impression on Mack Sennett who was also employed at Biograph at the time. When Sennett left the company in 1912 to form Keystone he brought Lehrman with him as his staff director. The biggest comedy names of the 1910s -- Mabel Normand, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle and Ford Sterling among them -- were directed in dozens upon dozens of films by Lehrman. He also directed film great Charles Chaplin in his first few featured roles at Keystone including Making a Living and Kid Auto Races at Venice.
Lehrman, however, didn't win many friends at Keystone. He earned yet another nickname, "Suicide," because of the dangerous stunts he would goad his actors into performing. Arbuckle refused to work with him after a while and the animosity between the two men would explode a few years later. In 1914, Lehrman and Sterling both left Keystone for Universal, to found Sterling Comedies. The director was there only a few months before forming his own production company L-KO, short for Lehrman Knock-Outs. He spent the next several years filming competently-made shorts and in 1917 he joined Fox where he was in charge of their Sunshine Comedy division. While they never equaled his work at Sennett's and didn't endure like Hal Roach's comedies, Lehrman's films were well-made and quite funny. Beginning in 1921, he began directing features for various studios, which he continued doing throughout most of the 1920s. Comedy producer Jack White learned about the business from Lehrman and he passed this knowledge along to his brother Jules White who later became head of Columbia's shorts department. Thus, the comedies of the Three Stooges owe something to Lehrman's influence. In September 1921, Lehrman's fiancée, starlet Virginia Rappe, died under mysterious circumstances after attending a San Francisco Labor Day party held by Roscoe Arbuckle. Although he had no proof Lehrman blamed Arbuckle for Rappe's death and vilified him in the press. However, less than nine months later Lehrman wed another actress, Jocelyn Leigh. This, and one other marriage, both ended in divorce. After the 1920s, Lehrman's career went downhill. He worked at Fox throughout the 1930s and early '40s in various capacities, mostly as a writer and gagman. But his personal life was a mess and he declared bankruptcy in 1941. Lehrman died in 1946, of either a heart attack or a stroke (both were reported as his cause of death). He is buried next to his erstwhile fiancée, Virginia Rappe. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
1935  
 
Taking refuge from a rainstorm in a deserted farmhouse, young married couple Joe and Loretta Martin (Edward Norris and Rochelle Hudson) soon discover to their horror that the house is being used as a hideout for a gang of kidnappers. Gang leader Tobey (Cesar Romero), a comparatively reasonable sort, elects not to kill the couple because they have an ailing baby with them. But Tobey's psychotic henchman Pitch (Bruce Cabot) is not quite so sentimental, and awaits the opportunity to knock off all three "intruders." When the G-Men, tipped off by the serial numbers on some ransom money, manage to track down the crooks, Tobey is killed, leaving Loretta and her baby at the mercy of Pitch -- at least until she picks up a machine gun and mows him down! As brutal as it was possible to get under the newly strengthened Production Code, Show Them No Mercy (inspired by the real-life Weyerhauser kidnapping case) is an excellent entry in the "FBI cycle" of the mid-1930s. The film was remade in a western setting as Rawhide (1951). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Rochelle HudsonCesar Romero, (more)
1934  
 
A remake of the silent film Her Sister From Paris, Moulin Rouge stars Constance Bennett in a dual role as twin French entertainers. One is married to a songwriter (Franchot Tone), who doesn't want his wife to return to the stage. In order to hide the fact that she's gotten a job in a musical, the married sister poses as her unmarried twin, while the twin pretends to be the married one (You following this?) The husband attends the musical and falls madly in love with the leading lady--never suspecting that she's his own wife. The married woman continues the ruse as a test of her husband's fidelity...and on and on it goes. Moulin Rouge was withdrawn from circulation in the early 1950s to avoid confusion with the more famous Toulouse Lautrec biopic of the same name. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Constance BennettFranchot Tone, (more)
1934  
 
This second and final "Bulldog Drummond" film to star Ronald Colman, finds the famed sleuth in the midst of a sinister plan orchestrated by Warner Oland. Damsel in distress Loretta Young reports that her wealthy and influential uncle is missing, but all those concerned insist that the uncle never existed, and that Young is out of her mind. Drummond suspects that she's telling the truth, and that the uncle's disappearance is tied into political intrigue of some sort or other. Before the rousing climax, Drummond, the heroine, and Drummond's pal Algy (Charles Butterworth) are repeatedly kidnapped, imprisoned, and threatened with certain death. Counterpointing the film's plot twists (a bit too convoluted to relate in full here) is a comic subplot involving the continually interrupted honeymoon of Algy and his frustrated bride (Una Merkel). Unfortunately, Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back is currently unavailable on television or on videocassette. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ronald ColmanLoretta Young, (more)
1929  
 
In this drama, an unemployed young woman who must support her younger brother pays a visit to a gambler who wants her body. However, he is murdered during her visit, and she is charged with the crime. But, the real killer is unmasked and dies in an accident, and her old flame shows up to romance her once again. ~ Steve Huey, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Mary AstorCharles Morton, (more)
1928  
 
Why Sailors Go Wrong was directed by Henry "Pathe" Lehrmann, whose comedy technique hadn't changed much since his days with the Keystone studios. Sammy Cohen and Ted McNamara play a pair of silly sailors, the best friends of hero Nick Stuart. In love with wealthy Sally Phipps, Stuart has been forbidden any contract with the girl by her domineering father. Daddy ships Phipps off in the family yacht, with Cohen and McNamara at the controls, while Stuart sneaks on board. The yacht is shipwrecked on a desert island, chock-full of hungry cannibals. Stuart rescues Phipps from the natives, proving himself a worthy potential husband, while Cohen and McNamara contend with a mischievous monkey. The film's "high point" finds the two comedy-relief gobs feeding an alligator castor oil so that the huge reptile will cough up their life savings. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Sally PhippsSammy Cohen, (more)
1928  
 
Chicken a la King was based on Mr. Romeo, a play by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. When his brother-in-law Oscar Barrows (Arthur Stone) announces his plans to marry chorus girl Maisie DeVoe (Nancy Carroll), priggish Horace Trundle (Ford Sterling) is aghast. How can Oscar throw his life away on a girl who is obviously nothing more than a golddigger? Heading backstage to reprimand Maisie, Horace suddenly discovers that he enjoys being surrounded by pulchritudinous females. This inspires Horace's long-suffering wife Effie (Carol Holloway) to land a chorus-girl job herself, just to teach her wandering hubby a lesson. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Nancy CarrollGeorge Meeker, (more)
1928  
 
Sammy Cohen, Fox Studios' resident Jewish comic, heads the cast of Homesick. This one is all about a cross-country bicycle race, with Sammy Schnable (Cohen) competing against his old pal Ambrose (Harry Sweet). Whoever wins the race will also win the hand of eligible bachelorette Babe (Marjorie Beebe). The ethnicity inherent in Homesick extends to the other bike riders, including stereotypical Italian Henry Armetta and ersatz Polish-American Pat Harmon. Co-star Harry Sweet later became head of the short subjects department at RKO Radio, a position he held until his death in a 1933 plane crash. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Sammy Cohen
1927  
 
Personable Owen Moore starred in this romantic comedy from Warner Bros. featuring Dolores Costello. About to marry his uncle's pretty ward, Herbert Willis (Moore) finds his bride-to-be, Doris (Kathryn Perry), completely taken in by dashing newcomer Hugh Fraser (John Miljan). Herbert, meanwhile, meets and falls in love with Molly Devoe (Costello), and a double wedding seems a strong possibility. Unfortunately, Hugh and Molly are strongly attracted to each other and elope on the night of the planned event. In an effort to save an increasingly muddled situation, Sir Reginald Knight (Claude Gillingwater) persuades his nephew Herbert to wed Doris, and the youngsters actually live happily ever after. Surprisingly, this rather sophisticated concoction was directed by Henry Lehrman, nicknamed "Pathé," a veteran farceur mainly remembered for slapstick comedies. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John MiljanKatherine Perry, (more)
1927  
 
This sequel to the 1927 George Jessel vehicle Private Izzy Murphy finds Jessel reprising the role of Lower East Side entrepreneur Izzy Goldberg. That's right, "Goldberg" -- Izzy doesn't adopt the name of "Murphy" until he abandons the perfume business to pose as an underworld thug. It's all for the sake of heroine Marie (Audrey Ferris), the daughter of French perfume manufacturer Jules de Gondelaurier. Marie and her father have been kidnapped by Orchid Joe (John Miljan), a flower-loving lunatic who despises all perfume merchants. Any resemblance between Sailor Izzy Murphy and real life was purely coincidental. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
George JesselWarner Oland, (more)
1927  
 
Henry Lehrman and Percy Pembroke, two graduates of the 2-reel comedy mills, shared directorial responsibilities for Columbia's For Ladies Only. Jacqueline Logan stars as one of several female office workers who spend their lunch hour ogling their male employers. Office manager Jack Mower catches the girls in mid-ogle and fires them all. Soon, however, Mower discovers that the office cannot survive without its female employee pool. Striking while the iron is hot, Logan organizes the other girls and issues a list of demands to Mower, whereupon they're all hired back on their own terms. Once the smoke is cleared, however, Logan admits that she's in love with Mower and is willing to let him be master of their own household. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John BowersJacqueline Logan, (more)
1926  
 
Stalwart movie hero Kenneth Harlan has the situation well in hand during most of The Fighting Edge. Disguised as half-breed, government agent Juan de Dios O'Rourke, Harlan sneaks across the Mexican border to rescue fellow agent Joyce (W.A. Carroll), who's in the clutches of smugglers. Together with Joyce's daughter Phoebe (Patsy Ruth Miller), O'Rourke hatches a foolproof escape plan. Things get dicey when O'Rourke and Phoebe must figure out a way to escape the smugglers themselves. Directing Fighting Edge was Henry "Pathe" Lehrmann, a veteran of the Keystone comedy mills. The film was based on a novel by William MacLeod Raine. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1924  
 
Henry "Pathe" Lehrman, the busy but mediocre director of many a 2-reel comedy, was entrusted with the Richard Talmadge vehicle On Time. As usual, stunt-man Talmadge plays a dashing young adventurer, pitted against a veritable legion of villains. This time, he must rescue Billie Dove from the clutches of a Chinese Tong leader. Leaping and bounding up staircases, down fire escapes and off buildings, Talmadge enables the audience to ignore the film's utter lack of a plotline. Only its relatively stellar supporting cast differentiates this Richard Talmadge epic from the star's many other cookie-cutter quickies. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Stuart HolmesRichard Talmadge, (more)
1922  
 
This comedy was a satire on serious melodrama, and ex-Mack Sennett director Henry Lehrman gave it as many thrills as it had laughs. Less successfully, it featured titles by several newspaper columnists, who proved they were wittier on paper than they were on screen. Owen Moore (who, aside from being Mary Pickford's first husband, was an accomplished farceur) plays Richard Boyd, a wealthy idler so cool that he never loses his top hat throughout the film. It even stays on his head when his fiancee, Pauline Blake (Pauline Garon), insists that he go to work or she will leave him. The Boyd Company, which he inherited, has an option on a fleet of ships, and he decides to pick it up. But Young, an Oriental merchant prince (Togo Yamamoto) wants the fleet himself, and he orders his confederates to shanghai Boyd until the option runs out. Since Pauline refuses to leave Boyd's side, she's kidnapped too. The ship wrecks and Pauline winds up hidden away in Young's expansive villa. Boyd chases Young's motor boat with a hydroplane, and with the help of some sailors, rescues Pauline. Boyd makes the option and wins his girl's devotion. One embarrassing aspect of this film -- at least to modern eyes -- is the blackface performance Tom Wilson as Boyd's valet, Sam. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Owen MoorePauline Garon, (more)
1917  
 
Comedy director Henry Lehrman left the Keystone studios to form his own production company, L-KO. Sometimes his slapstick films were pretty funny, but often they were crude and hard to follow. This picture is definitely one of his lesser efforts. Dan, the Irish Terror (Dan Russell) and Battling Bull (Dick Smith) are both members of the Stock Yards Athletic Club. They also are rivals for the hand of Hot Dog Hattie (Gladys Roach) who, as might be expected, runs a hot dog stand. Dan challenges Bull to a fight. In spite of his best efforts (most of them involving some form of cheating), Dan gets knocked out. But he manages to sneak away with the gate receipts and run off with Hattie, who shoves her hot dog booth down the steep street and over a bank. They board a train headed out West, and all Bull finds is a lone hot dog. But Hattie is not happy with Dan, and when Bull shows up in the guise of a tramp, she is thrilled. Bull challenges Dan to another fight. Hattie, disguised as a cow-puncher, pours glue in Dan's corner and offers Bull some "dope" (probably meaning cocaine) when he's near collapse. Dan loses and Hattie is happy with Bull. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1917  
 
Roaring Lions and Wedding Bells was the inaugural entry in the "Sunshine Comedies," a long-running series of two-reelers produced by William Fox. Roly-poly Lloyd Hamilton, one of the most creative comedians of the silent era, played Ham Berger, a raw-meat fancier who falls in love with Mildred Lee, the daughter of a devout vegetarian. Alas, the girl prefers the company of Ham's hated rival, Frank Furter (Jimmy Adams). The rest of the film is about as subtle as the character names, with a menagerie of circus animals breaking loose in the girl's house, and Ham and Frank scurrying about to avoid being eaten or trampled upon. Roaring Lions and Wedding Bells was directed by former Keystone mainstay Henry "Pathe" Lehrman. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1916  
 
While the humor in this ethnic comedy seems nasty and cynical today, filmgoers of the 1910s apparently found it hilarious. It was made by Henry Lehrman's L-Ko productions, the company he formed after leaving the Keystone studios. Lehrman's comic sense was very much of its era, which is probably one of the reasons his work hasn't endured. When the Goldfingers inherit a fortune, their daughter Rosie (Louise Orth) finds herself surrounded by suitors. The best prospect seems to be Dr. O'Briensky but he is usurped by Jewish prize fighter A. Cross Leech (Lehrman). This does not thrill Rosie's family and they enlist the help of another fighter, Irish Mike McGinnis (Dan Russell). McGinnis sends Leech packing, but he falls for Rosie himself and refuses to leave. Even the cops are afraid of the Irishman. When Leech returns the next morning, the Goldfingers are thrilled to see him and offer him cash to get rid of McGinnis. The two men agree to fight it out in the ring, but the big battle is interrupted by the presence of an odd little guy (who is obviously ripping off Charles Chaplin). His behavior throws the proceedings into complete and utter mayhem and neither of the men win Rosie's hand. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1916  
 
In this two-reeler, comedy director Henry Lehrman creates a chase that is almost up to par with his alma mater, the Keystone Studios, but he spoils it with a grim end. Gaby (Gertie Selby) has two suitors -- Bill (Bill Armstrong and Phil Phil Dunham). She favors Phil since he owns a real car, while Bill has only a motorcycle. But Phil's car breaks down, and Bill makes it worse by shooting out the tires. Then he steals Gaby away, but loses her when she falls into an excavation pit. Phil finds her and rushes her off to get married. Bill quickly buys himself a touring car but it's too late -he catches the couple as they're leaving the minister's home. So he offers them a ride in his new car and once they accept he informs them that it'll be their last trip, ever. The wild ride takes the threesome all over the country, with cops in hot pursuit, until finally Bill drives off a pier and they all drown. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1916  
 
After leaving producer Mack Sennett, comedy director Henry Lehrman formed his own studio. The gags to this three-reeler don't make up for its unfunny plot to -- Lehrman would have been better off staying with Sennett's. John D. Rock, Sr. (Dick Smith) gets fed up with his lazy, do-nothing son, John, Jr. (Raymond Griffith) and sends him out to work on a gang at his train yard. There, he meets Nell (Alice Howell), the sweetheart of the foreman. A romance springs up between John Jr. and Nell, and the angry foreman decides to do away with her. He kidnaps Nell and ties her to some train tracks. But John Jr. finds out about the scheme, gets a racing car and rushes to save her. Meanwhile, the train, driven by the foreman, is blown to bits -- this last shot was done with the obvious help of miniatures. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1915  
 
Released by Universal, this three-reel comedy was produced by LKO, a Keystone-like operation managed by director Henry Lehrman. The star was Billie Ritchie, one of the many Charlie Chaplin wannabes of the period (Ritchie and Chaplin were both graduates of Fred Karno's British music hall troupe). Most of the story takes place in a fancy hotel, where the inebriated Ritchie tries to make time with every girl who crosses his path. Much of the humor was vulgar and risque -- but then, the same charge could have been levelled against Chaplin's pictures of the period. The climactic gag finds Ritchie holding several policemen at bay with a high-pressure water hose. The star and director later repeated this bit of business, with variations, in the subsequent two-reeler The Fatal Note. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1914  
 
Charlie Chaplin's 18th film for Keystone was likely co-written and co-directed by co-star Mabel Normand. It was shot entirely on location at an automobile racetrack during a racing event. Mabel plays a hot dog vendor who sneaks in to the track by bribing the cop who guards the gate. As soon as she sets up shop she's accosted by various male customers who give her a hard time by refusing to pay, or returning a hot dog when she has no change. Chaplin isn't dressed in his usual Tramp outfit, but as a race track tout in a frock coat with a flower in his lapel. He is clearly broke -- he sneaks into the stadium by beating up a cop and crashing past a ticket taker and, finding one of Mabel's hot dogs on the ground, first tries to light it from the stub of his cigar, and then eats it hungrily. Charlie rescues Mabel from a particularly aggressive customer but then steals her tray and tries to sell the hot dogs himself. The other racetrack fans give him a hard time as well, jostling him about and knocking off his hat. Meanwhile, Mabel has fetched a cop who the agile Chaplin bests in a fight. Defeated, Mabel bursts into tears and Charlie, touched by her emotions, decides he feels sorry for her and walks off with her arm in arm, presumably to protect her from further harassment. ~ Phil Posner, All Movie Guide

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1914  
 
This typical Keystone slapstick comedy was Charlie Chaplin's first appearance on film. An Englishman (Chaplin) cons a newspaper reporter (Henry Lehrman) out of some money. The Englishman flirts with a young woman who later turns out to be the reporter's girlfriend, and the reporter and the Englishman fight. Later, the Englishman talks his way into a job at the same newspaper where the reporter works. When the reporter takes some photos of an automobile accident as it happens, the reporter and the Keystone Kops help the driver, and the Englishman steals the photos. He rushes them back to the paper, and they are immediately put in the latest edition. The newspaperman catches up with him, and they begin fighting in the street, and the film ends as a streetcar cowcatcher sweeps them up. Chaplin is barely recognizable in this film, sporting a monocle, a top hat, and a walrus moustache. While this costume had been used in his stage appearances, he quickly realized that it was not appropriate for a film comedian. He would devise his famous costume of the tramp in his next film Mabel's Strange Predicament. Chaplin was unhappy when he saw the finished film because many of the gags that he had performed had been cut out by Lehrman, the director. However, this is typical of Mack Sennett's Keystone comedies, where there is a lot of running around and fighting, and not a lot of funny gags. ~ Bruce Calvert, All Movie Guide

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