What Price Glory? (1926 film)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
What Price Glory?
File:What Price Glory? FilmPoster.jpeg
German language release poster
Directed by Raoul Walsh
Produced by William Fox
Written by James T. O'Donohoe (scenario)
Malcolm Stuart Boylan (intertitles)
Based on What Price Glory?
by Maxwell Anderson and Laurence Stallings
Starring Victor McLaglen
Edmund Lowe
Dolores del Río
Phyllis Haver
Music by Ernö Rapée
Lew Pollack
Cinematography Barney McGill
John Marta
John Smith
Distributed by Fox Film Corporation
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • November 23, 1926 (1926-11-23)
Running time
116 mins.
Country United States
Language Silent
Box office $2 million[1]

What Price Glory is a 1926 American silent comedy-drama war film produced and distributed by Fox Film Corporation and directed by Raoul Walsh. The film is based on the 1924 play What Price Glory by Maxwell Anderson and Laurence Stallings and was remade in 1952 as What Price Glory starring James Cagney.[2][3] Malcolm Stuart Boylan, founder of the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, was title writer on the silent Fox attraction.[4]

Plot

Flagg and Quirt are veteran United States Marines sergeants whose rivalry dates back a number of years. Flagg is commissioned a Captain, he is in command of a company on the front lines of France during World War I. Sergeant Quirt is assigned to Flagg's unit as the senior non-commissioned officer. Flagg and Quirt quickly resume their rivalry, which this time takes its form over the affections of Charmaine, the daughter of the local innkeeper. However, Charmaine's desire for a husband and the reality of war give the two men a common cause.

Cast

Production

Edmund Lowe, Delores del Rio and Victor McLaglen in What Price Glory?

The film was directed by Raoul Walsh and released as a silent film by Fox Film Corporation on November 23, 1926 in the US, and had a 116-minute running time. On January 21, 1927, a short film of singer Raquel Meller was shown before this feature at the Sam H. Harris Theater in New York City. The short film, not quite synchronized, was the first public presentation of a film in the Fox Movietone sound-on-film system.[5] In January 1927, Fox re-released What Price Glory? with synchronized sound effects and music in the Movietone system.[6]

Part of its fame revolves around the fact that the characters can be seen speaking profanities which are not reflected in the intertitles, but which can be deciphered by lipreaders. The studio was reportedly inundated by calls and letters from enraged Americans, including deaf and hearing impaired people, to whom the vivid profanity between Sergeant Quirt and Captain Flagg was extremely offensive.

In the 1924 Broadway play the roles of Captain Flagg and Sgt. Quirt were played by Louis Wolheim, fresh from his triumph in Eugene O'Neill's The Hairy Ape and William "Stage" Boyd. Curiously Wolheim and the younger William Boyd would play characters similar to Quirt and Flagg in the 1928 film Two Arabian Knights.

Adaptation

McLaglen and Lowe reprised their roles from the movie in the radio program Captain Flagg and Sergeant Quirt, broadcast on the Blue Network September 28, 1941 - January 25, 1942, and on NBC February 13, 1942 - April 3, 1942.[7]

Sequels

Lowe and McLaglen played two similar Marines in the RKO Radio Pictures film Call Out the Marines (1942).

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. What Price Glory the play as produced on Broadway at the Plymouth Theatre, September 5, 1924 to September 12, 1925, 435 performances; IBDB.com database
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Edwin M. Bradley, The First Hollywood Musicals: A Critical Filmography of 171 Features, 1927 through 1932 (McFarland, 2004) p6
  6. SilentEra entry
  7. Dunning, John. (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Pp. 136-137.

External links