- Source: The Melancholy Dame
The Melancholy Dame is a 1929 American comedy short film by an African-American cast. Al Christie based it on the Octavus Roy Cohen comedy series called "Darktown Birmingham", published in the Saturday Evening Post. Arvid Gillstrom directed it and Evelyn Preer played the title role.
The Melacholy Dame was produced and released by Paramount Pictures and includes racial caricatures. It has been described as the first African-American talkie and features a vision of high society and comic dialogue in a Birmingham restaurant with a piano and dance show. The Los Angeles Times summarized the plot: "A cabaret owner’s wife demands that her husband fire the sexy star attraction (if he doesn’t, she warns, 'there’s going to be a quick call for an undertaker'). Little does she (or the singer’s husband) know that the singer and the club owner were once married."
Once a two-reel film, the video is now digitized for YouTube along with others from the series.
Cast
James Edward Thompson as Permanent Williams
Evelyn Preer as Jonquil Williams
Roberta Hyson as Sappho Dill
Spencer Williams (actor) as Webster Dill
Charles Olden as Florian Slappey
References
External links
The Melancholy Dame at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- John Keats
- Arvid E. Gillstrom
- The Melancholy Dame
- Wessex Tales
- Spencer Williams Jr.
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame II
- La Belle Dame sans Merci
- Melancholy (novel)
- La Belle Dame sans Mercy
- Roberta Hyson
- Edward Thompson (actor)
- Alone in the World (Bouguereau)