William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Discussion of the actors, directors and film-makers who 'made it all happen'
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JackFavell
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William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

William S. Hart, along with John Ford, was one of the first movie makers to try to make the west real for his audiences. In his movies, he sought to recreate the things about the old west that he loved, and to capture the realities of western life. He tried to create an authentic cowboy hero.

Recently, I saw Hart's film Hell's Hinges, and was simply knocked out by this great movie. I could not believe Hart's vision, this bleak story, was made in 1916. In some ways, it is extremely modern. The ending is one of the best I've seen in any western. No punches are pulled, and the bad-cowboy-turned-hero still has a dark side, even after being redeemed by the love of a good woman. The lonely ending, with the couple leaving to start afresh, leaves the imagination open to wonder what will happen to this couple, who only have one another to cling to.

You can see Hell's Hinges here:

http://www.filmpreservation.org/preserv ... inges-1916

It is also available for sale at the same site.

I have lots of photos of Hart, because I find him rather fascinating. His face is rugged, tired, and almost horsey, and yet, I find him quite handsome. He has an economy of expression at his best moments, and he does actually smile and have fun in his movies, something that I somehow overlooked in my first cursory forays into Hart's moving pictures.

Anyway, here are some photos, articles and various sundries about Hart. I hope you enjoy them as I do.

Hart, on stage at right, as Massala, in Ben-Hur:

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Massala was Hart's triumphant stage role. He played opposite William Farnum (pictured above), who would also eventually come to Hollywood and make a name for himself as a movie star. Hart's reviews in Ben-Hur were universally good. But Hart was captivated by the idea of making movies, authentic westerns, from the minute he laid eyes on a western"flicker" while on tour in Cleveland, Ohio.
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

Here is an article I found, most of which is from Hart's book, My Life East and West:

Birth of the Hollywood Cowboy, 1911

William S. Hart was Hollywood's first cowboy star. His portrayal of the western hero as strong, silent, rough around the edges - but true to an internal code of honor - influenced his successors from John Wayne to Clint Eastwood.

The initial image of the cowboy in American popular culture was not a positive one. Dime novels and publications such as the Police Gazette of the 1880s often portrayed him as a rowdy and unscrupulous drunkard, prone to shooting up the cattle towns he encountered as he guided his cows from the range to the railhead.

This perspective changed under the influence of Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show, artists such as Frederic Remington and Charles Russell as well as books such as The Virginian (1902) that painted a more romantic portrait of the cowboy as a lonesome hero.

The first narrative film - The Great Train Robbery produced in 1903 by Edwin S. Porter - was a western. Although shot entirely on the East Coast, it contained the essential elements that made the Western a staple of the Hollywood film industry for the next 100 years. Ten minutes in length, it was action-packed with a train robbery, a chase and a final shootout. It was an enormous success and the most profitable film of its time.

William S. Hart was born in New York in 1865 and traveled West with his family as a child. He made his way back east as a young man intent on becoming an actor and eventually won acclaim for his portrayal of Messala in the stage version of Ben Hur.

Although successful as a stage actor, Hart was feeling unchallenged. A chance viewing of a movie western energized the stage actor's determination to make films.

"I saw a Western picture. It was awful!"

We join Hart's story in 1911 as he sees his first western movie that sparks his determination to make cowboy films:

"While playing in Cleveland, I attended a picture show. I saw a Western picture. It was awful! I talked with the manager of the theater and he told me it was one of the best Westerns he had ever had. None of the impossibilities or libels on the West meant anything to him - it was drawing the crowds. The fact that the sheriff was dressed and characterized as a sort of cross between a Wisconsin wood-chopper and a Gloucester fisherman was' unknown to him. I did not seek to enlighten him. I was seeking information. In fact, I was so sure that I had made a big discovery that I was frightened that someone would read my mind and find it out.

Here were reproductions of the Old West being seriously presented to the public - in almost a burlesque manner - and they were successful. It made me tremble to' think of it. I was an actor and I knew the West...The opportunity that I had been waiting for years to come was knocking at my door.

...Rise or fall, sink or swim, I had to bend every endeavor to get a chance to make Western motion pictures. Usually when I was stirred by ambition I became afraid. But surely this could not be the valor of ignorance. I had been waiting for years for the right thing, and now the right thing had come! I was a part of the West - it was my boyhood home - it was in my blood. I had a thorough training as an actor. I was considered the outstanding portrayer of Western roles everywhere on the American stage.

The remainder of the season I visited all picture shows wherever possible. During the summer at Westport and on trips to New York, I did the same. I talked to my actor friends in The Lambs Club who were working everyday playing Western parts in pictures being made over in Jersey. I was secretive. I told them nothing of my great plans. When it came time for 'The Trail of the Lonesome Pine' to open again, my reluctance to take an engagement before trying my pet scheme caused me to raise my salary to $175 a week. While waiting for their answer, I met an actor who was going to California to work in Western pictures.

'The Trail of the Lonesome Pine' was going to California. I was frightened! They might refuse to give me the part on account of the raise in salary. I was on the point of writing them that I would go for any salary, when they wrote me O.K.

The finger of Fate was pointing in the right direction. Fortunately, we came West immediately after opening. At San Francisco I learned that all the principal studios were in Los Angeles; that the principal companies making Westerns were the Universal Picture Corporation in Hollywood, and the New York Motion Picture Company working in conjunction with the 101 Ranch a Wild West show .

When we reached Los Angeles, while a friend was registering for me, I went into a telephone booth, called up the New York Motion Picture Company and asked for Joe Miller. A man who said his name was Brooks answered, and said that Mr. Miller was not there, but that he represented him.

I then said, 'I am an actor and I want to see about making some Western pictures.'

He replied: 'Mr. Miller only owns the stock and the cowboy end of the company. If you want to see about acting, call up Thomas H. Ince - he is manager of the picture company.'

I did so.

The next day Tom called and took me out to see the camp. I was enraptured and told him so. The very primitiveness of the whole life out there, the cowboys and the Indians, staggered me. I loved it. They had everything to make Western pictures. The West was right there!

I told Tom of my hopes, of my plans. I told him everything.

'Bill,' he said, 'it's a damn shame, but you're too late! The country has been flooded with Western pictures. They are the cheapest pictures to make and every company out here has made them. You simply cannot sell a Western picture at any price. They are a drug on the market.'

And to prove his statement, he showed me all the sets they were photographing on. The scenes were all laid in Ireland. 'But, Tom,' I cried, 'this means everything on earth to me. It is the one big opportunity of my life. Why all these cowboys? Why all these Indians?'

'Bill,' he said, 'it's a contract. The owners of this company have a contract with the 101 Show that has another year to run.' 'Fine,' I said. 'Let me make some Western pictures and use these people.'

'Bill,' he said, 'I know you; I know, if there was any possible chance, that you could put it over, but it just can't be done. I made a picture when I came out here, a Western picture, Custer's Last Fight, and I had all these Indians and cowboys. It was a fine picture, but it didn't sell.'

I didn't have any more to say. We walked all round the camp. When we were leaving, I talked in Sioux to some of the Indians, and Tom was so astonished. He walked back and said to a young Indian: 'What did he say?'

The Indian just smiled and would not answer, until I told him in Sioux to do so, and then he replied, truthfully, that I had said that I was going away from here, but that I wanted to stay here.

I was late leaving (they had to hold the curtain at the theater for me), but just as Tom was putting me in his car he said: "Bill, if you want to come out next spring and take a chance, I'll give you seventy-five dollars a week to cover your expenses and direct you in a picture myself."

'Tom,' I replied, "I'll be here just as soon as we close. . . ."
- an old friend of Hart's

References:
This eyewitness account appears in Hart, William, S. My Life East and West (1968); Taylor, Lonn and Ingrid Maar, The American Cowboy (1983).
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MissGoddess
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by MissGoddess »

I'm looking forward to the pictures and to learning more about William S. Hart,
a fascinating figure from early film. Great idea for a thread, Jackie.

Ooh, these Eastern actors and their love affair with the west. Someone, a writer, once said the
East "made" the West or words to that effect, referring to the mythos of the west being created
by Eastern writers and artists. From togas to ten gallon hats, ha!
"There's only one thing that can kill the movies, and that's education."
-- Will Rogers
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

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Ha ha! I love our Eastern "cowboys" - John Ford (Maine), Harry Carey (The Bronx), and William S. Hart (upstate New York). They could appreciate, absorb, and love the west in a way that those who grew up there maybe never could..... and although I am sure they all three romanticized the west just a bit, we are so lucky that they did. They left us this wonderful legacy of the west in film.


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movieman1957
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by movieman1957 »

"Hell's Hinges" was a real surprise. From the way it starts out you don't really see that ending coming. Better than the more recent "Tumbleweeds" it was quite a revelation for a western from that time.

Thanks to Paula I've added her Hart suggestion to my queue.
Chris

"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

I agree - I wouldn't have started this thread if it hadn't been for Paula. :D

I've got the Toll Gate here somewhere on dvd... I used to have it on super 8 reels for my projector when I was a kid. It was the first William S. Hart film I ever saw, and I was entranced by him. But I really don't remember any specifics, so it's time to watch it with fresh eyes.
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movieman1957
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by movieman1957 »

Super 8? Cool.

Never heard of "The Toll Gate" but am happy to have a new Hart movie to watch. He was someone I heard of a long time ago and knew something of his reputation but it took years before there was a chance to see any of his work. So far, so good.
Chris

"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

The first Super 8 movies I got were Laurel and Hardy's Big Business, Wrong Again, Double Whoopee, and Two Tars. I also got Keaton's One Week, and The General; and then a couple of Chaplin's - The Immigrant and The Floorwalker. And I must have gotten something serious, like a D.W. Griffith or Mary Pickford, but I don't remember. I know my sister got Broken Blossoms and Orphans of the Storm.

The Toll Gate was my own purchase, maybe a year or so later. But my tastes were always a little different from my family's.... They probably still would never see the beauty of a western.
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movieman1957
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by movieman1957 »

If we had grown up together I would have been at your house a lot.
Chris

"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
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pvitari
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by pvitari »

The Toll Gate is one of Hart's best. In fact, the reason I finally switched from laser disc to DVD (remember laser discs?) was when David Shepard announced that he was releasing The Toll Gate on DVD only -- no laser disc! That was a shocker back in... let's see...1999!

That and the additional announcement that a new, widescreen version of Somewhere in Time (one of my favorite ever swoony romance movies) was coming out only on DVD made me finally break down and get my first DVD player.

It's been a long time since I last watched The Toll Gate but I remember how much I loved it. It's quintessential Hart -- the bad man reformed by the love of a good woman. The sentiment is Victorian but I'm a sucker for redemption stories. ;)

Info about William Hart's ranch (well worth a visit -- his house is beautiful):

http://www.hartmuseum.org/
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

Paula, I think it's great that Two Gun Bill got you into dvds! And I remember going with my sister to see Somewhere in Time, and also Time after Time, in the movie theater. They are two of my favorite modern romantic time travel movies.

I remember saving up my allowance literally for years in order to buy more films from Blackhawk. I knew I wanted something different from anyone else in my family, so I went through their catalog from cover to cover about 100 times before making my decision to buy The Toll Gate. I decided from my reading at the library about silent films that William S. Hart was very intriguing. It was a super expensive film, because is was a feature, which meant more than one reel. The bigger the box it came in, the more money shelled out. I am trying to remember how much it was, I am guessing it was between 50 and 100 dollars - that was a lot of allowances! But I never ever regretted getting it... and I still love Two Gun Bill.

movieman - I would have dearly LOVED to have someone at that age who would come over and watch movie with me. None of my friends ever showed the least interest in movie nights even with Chaplin and Keaton and L&H. Movie watching for me was a pretty solitary experience.

I do still miss the sound of sprockets of film going through the projector. It's a lovely sound.
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by charliechaplinfan »

What a good idea for a thread, we've never honoured him before. I've seen Hell's Hinges and was very impressed. Look forward to hearing more about him.
Failure is unimportant. It takes courage to make a fool of yourself - Charlie Chaplin
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

Thank you, CCF.... I have quite a lot of photos and such gathered up, so I thought I would share.

Image

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movieman1957
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

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A Paramount-Artcrapt Picture (?)
Chris

"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
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JackFavell
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Re: William S. Hart - The Authentic Hero

Post by JackFavell »

Hmmm. I always thought it was Artcraft. :D :D
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