Doubling for Romeo
- Synopsis
- Feature film. A burlesque. Sam Cody is a clumsy cowboy who, because he is a diffident lover, loses his girlfriend, Lulu, to another man. Sam goes to a film studio to learn how to make love as they do in the movies. He works as a stunt double, first as a villain and then as a lover and fails as both. When he returns home Lulu says she will not have him until he can woo her like Romeo. He falls asleep while reading Romeo and Juliet and dreams of himself as Romeo with his girlfriend as Juliet. In the dream characters in the frame story fade in individually and are transformed into the characters of the play. Includes a burlesque of the balcony scene, a quarrel with Tybalt, A Capulet feast from which Romeo escapes, Douglas Fairbanks style, by swinging on a rope (Fairbanks is Lulu’s hero)- all accompanied by jokes and quips in the intertitles.
- Country
- United States
- Medium
- Film
- Technical information
- Black-and-white / Silent
- Year of release
- 1921
- Recording date
- 23 Oct 1921
- Duration
- 66 mins; 6,000 feet
Credits
- Director
- Clarence Badger
- Producer
- Samuel Goldwyn
- Cinematographer
- Marcel Le Picard
- Screenplay
- Bernard McConville
- Production Design
- Cedric Gibbons
- Art Direction
- Cedric Gibbons
- Cast
Additional Details
- Production type
- Fiction Films
- Historical period
- Renaissance Italy
- Plays
- Romeo and Juliet
- Keywords
- Shakespeare, William (1564-1616); burlesgues
Notes
- Stills
- Ball reproduces a still of Rogers and Breamer on the balcony from the collection at the Wisconsin Center for Theatre Research..
- Reviews
- Ball, Robert Hamilton. Shakespeare on Silent Film: A Strange Eventful History. London: George Allen and Unwin, 1968 (p. 267-8).
Production Company
- Name
Goldwyn Pictures
Archive
- Name
Museum of Modern Art
- fsc@moma.org
- Web
- http://www.moma.org External site opens in new window
- Phone
- 9212) 708-9613
- Address
- Celeste Bartos International Film Study Center
11 West 53 Street
New York, New York 10019-5497
How to cite this record
Shakespeare, "Doubling for Romeo". https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/shakespeare/search/index.php/title/av68723 (Accessed 26 Nov 2024)