• Source: Beggars of Life
    • Beggars of Life is a 1928 American part-talkie sound film that was directed by William Wellman. Although the film featured sequences with audible dialogue, the majority of the film had a synchronized musical score with sound effects. The film was released on both sound-on-disc and sound-on-film formats. Currently circulating are mute prints from the sound-on-disc version. The majority of the sound discs (except for the first reel) are believed to be lost.
      The film starred Wallace Beery and Richard Arlen as hobos, and Louise Brooks as a young woman who dresses as a young man and flees the law. The latter actress recounted her memories of working on the film in her essay, “On Location with Billy Wellman,” which is included in her 1982 book, Lulu in Hollywood. The film is regarded as Brooks's best American movie.


      Music


      The film features a theme song entitled "Beggars of Life" which was composed by J. Keirn Brennan and Karl Hajos.


      Overview



      Beggars of Life was released as a sound film with a few talking sequences in September 1928. The majority of the film featured synchronized music and sound effects. The sound discs (with the exception of the first reel), which included recordings of train noises and of Beery singing a song, are now considered lost. This was Paramount's first feature with spoken dialogue and the first time Beery's voice was recorded for a film, although Beery's spoken dialogue was limited. Today, only the mute print version of Beggars of Life is known to survive.
      The film is based on Outside Looking In, a stage play by Maxwell Anderson adapted from Jim Tully’s 1924 autobiographical book, Beggars of Life. The play debuted September 7, 1925 at the Greenwich Village Theater. Among those who attended a performance was Charlie Chaplin, who was accompanied by Louise Brooks. Paramount purchased the rights to Tully's book and Anderson's play in early 1928.
      Arlen and Brooks had appeared together the previous year in Rolled Stockings, which is considered a lost film. Beery and Brooks had appeared together the previous year in Now We're in the Air, which was considered a lost film until 2016 when an incomplete copy was found in Czech Republic.
      In 2017, the best surviving copy of Beggars of Life was released on DVD and Blu-ray by Kino Lorber. Commentaries on the Kino release are by William Wellman Jr. and Thomas Gladysz.


      Cast



      Wallace Beery as Oklahoma Red
      Louise Brooks as The Girl (Nancy)
      Richard Arlen as The Boy (Jim)
      Robert (Bob) Perry as The Arkansaw Snake
      Blue Washington as Black Mose
      Roscoe Karns as Lame Hoppy
      Robert Brower as Blind Sims (uncredited)
      Frank Brownlee as the Farmer (uncredited)
      Jacques (Jack) Chapin as Ukie (uncredited)
      Andy Clark as Skelly (uncredited)
      Mike Donlin as Bill (uncredited)
      George Kotsonaros as Baldy (uncredited)
      Kewpie Morgan as Skinny (uncredited)
      Guinn "Big Boy" Williams as Baker's Cart Driver (uncredited)


      See also


      List of early sound feature films (1926–1929)
      Miss Nobody (1926)
      Wild Boys of the Road (1933)


      References




      = Sources

      =
      Brooks, Louise (1982). Lulu in Hollywood. Knopf. ISBN 0394-520718.
      Gladysz, Thomas (2017). Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film. PandorasBox Press. ISBN 978-0692879535.
      Paris, Barry (1989). Louise Brooks. Knopf. ISBN 0394-559231.


      External links


      Beggars of Life at IMDb
      Beggars of Life is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
      Beggars of Life at the TCM Movie Database
      ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› Beggars of Life at AllMovie
      The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: Beggars of Life
      Beggars of Life at SilentEra
      Beggars of Life (filmography page) at Louise Brooks Society
      Beggars of Life at Virtual History

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