Billy Bevan Movies
Effervescent little Billy Bevan commenced his stage career in his native Australia, after briefly attending the University of Sydney. A veteran of the famous Pollard Opera Company, Bevan came to the U.S. in 1917, where he found work as a supporting comic at L-KO studios. He was promoted to stardom in 1920 when he joined up with Mack Sennett's "fun factory." Adopting a bushy moustache and an air of quizzical determination, Bevan became one of Sennett's top stars, appearing opposite such stalwart laughmakers as Andy Clyde, Vernon Dent and Madelyn Hurlock in such belly-laugh bonanzas as Ice Cold Cocos (1925), Circus Today (1926) and Wandering Willies (1926). While many of Bevan's comedies are hampered by too-mechanical gags and awkward camera tricks, he was funny and endearing enough to earn laughs without the benefit of Sennett gimmickry. He was particularly effective in a series of "tired businessman" two-reelers, in which the laughs came from the situations and the characterizations rather than slapstick pure and simple. Bevan continued to work sporadically for Sennett into the talkie era, but was busier as a supporting actor in feature films like Cavalcade (1933), The Lost Patrol (1934) and Dracula's Daughter (1936). He was frequently cast in bit parts as London "bobbies," messenger boys and bartenders; one of his more rewarding talkie roles was the uncle of plumbing trainee Jennifer Jones (!) in Ernst Lubitsch's Cluny Brown (1946). Among Billy Bevan's final screen assignments was the part of Will Scarlet in 1950's Rogues of Sherwood Forest. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide"Flying Ace," "Crystal Ball," "The Champ" and "Inheritance" are the featured comedy pieces in this collection. ~ All Movie Guide
Marie Prevost and George O'Hara are two newlyweds who go before a judge seeking a divorce in this slapstick comedy. His Honor (Charles Murray) sees photographic evidence from the wife with the husband's arms around another woman. He claims he was only helping the woman over the fence and he is being blackmailed by the unknown photographer. The judge recalls his experiences in a series of comical flashbacks before he makes his ruling on the couple's future. Billy Bevan masquerades as an attorney with Kalla Pasha and Eddie Gribbon his assistants. In one of his recollections, the judge finds himself in a lion's den in one of the trick-photography scenes. Ford Sterling is the haberdasher Milton Robin, with Phyllis Haver in the role of his wife and Fanny Kelly as the judge's wife. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Charlie Murray, Ford Sterling, (more)







