Other critics had mixed reactions. "At times annoying,"
a New York Herald-Tribune writer ventured, "but at other times it has
moments of real beauty." A reviewer for Picture Play commented that
the script and theme lacked substance, "too little...to have enlisted the
fine skill of Henry King and the talents of Vilma Banky and Ronald Colman.
They are out of their element." 37
Eastern critics in general were unimpressed. A New York Times writer
expressed the opinion that the visual impact of the storm and flood scenes
had been "stripped of excitement" by the many desert pictures coming out of
Hollywood recently. He credited King with having "a good eye for special
effects," but "his comedy, or that of the scenarist, cannot be accused of
being especially keen." He characterized the rivalry between the characters
played by Colman and Cooper as "struggling along in a rather tedious
fashion," and Miss Banky seemed to him "essentially a hothouse flower and
not the type one would expect to see living in a desert shack."
Critic Mordaunt Hall of the Times was in
agreement. In a December 5 review, she conceded that Miss Banky's "charm"
was an asset to her role, but she still found her to be unconvincing ''as a
girl who had such tremendous faith in the desert." Goldwyn's hopes of making
the film "The Covered Wagon of the desert" had not been realized
either, Miss Hall concluded, although the effort was commendable.38
On December 7, Barbara Worth opened a
four-day run at the American Theatre in Winnemucca. Before the first
showing, manager H. C. Oastler came on stage to read a telegram from Ronald
Colman and Vilma Banky. "We realize that Nevada and especially Winnemucca
assisted in making this picture a national success," the wire read, "and the
wonderful cooperation given us is deeply appreciated."
Among those in the audience that night were many
of the extras who had worked on the film and others who had rented equipment
or livestock to the company. They had nothing but praise for the picture,
and editor Bailey of the Star felt that it would show viewers
elsewhere what could be accomplished by "dreaming and fighting." He also
expressed the opinion that it would help Easterners understand the
"possibilities" of the West and lessen opposition in Congress to the further
appropriation of funds for the reclamation of desert lands.39
Film historians praise the documentary
reconstruction of history embodied in the film, rating it with the two
Western epics which preceded it. The movie is still preserved in the
archives of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and is still shown to students of the film
art.
European film writers have also accorded high
praise to the film. In France, where it became Barbara: Fille du Desert,
one critic has rated it as more significant than either The Covered Wagon
or The Iron Horse.40
Samuel Goldwyn teamed Colman and Banky in three
subsequent love stories--Night of Love and The Magic Flame,
both released in 1927, and Two Lovers, 1928. Miss Banky also made
The Awakening, without Colman, in 1928.
The sound era had arrived by that time, and
Goldwyn featured Banky in her first speaking role in This is Heaven,
which had its premiere in May of 1929. Her foreign accent made her
practically unintelligible in front of the sound camera, however, and her
performance earned her "laughs rather than heart flutters," as one writer
put it. The film was a disaster at the box office, and Goldwyn decided not
to use her again, paying her the remaining salary stipulated in her
contract--$250,000.
Miss Banky married actor Rod LaRouque that year
and made one more American film-A Lady to Love in 1930. It got some
European circulation in the German version, Die Sehnsught Jeder Frau.
In 1932, she starred in a German production, Der Rebell, her last
effort on the screen. The marriage to LaRouque lasted until his death in
1969, and she is presently living in a retirement home in Beverly Hills,
California.41 [Vilma Banky Died March 18, 1991, in
Los Angeles, CA]
Ronald Colman made an easy transition from the
silent to the sound era, his mellow, richly modulated voice and his suave,
dignified English manner making him one of filmdom's leading men. Often cast
as the idealistic hero of adventure epics, he was never typecast, performing
equally well in such diverse roles as the doctor in John Ford's
Arrowsmith and the actor in George Cukor's A Double Life, for
which performance he won an Academy Award as best actor in 1947.41
Goldwyn had signed Gary Cooper at $50 a week for
Barbara Worth but let him go afterwards. Paramount Pictures put him
under contract almost immediately, casting him as the shy lover to actress
Clara Bow. Embodying the small-town virtues of honor, simplicity, gallantry
and integrity, he came to personify the strong, silent American to millions
of movie-goers around the world in dozens of Westerns. 42
With the exception of The Virginian
(1929), with Cooper in his first starring role, and John Ford's
Stagecoach (1935), the box office success of Barbara Worth did
little to elevate the Western in the 1930s and 1940s. Script writers who
might have followed up on the epic sweep and pervasive reality of the film
instead resurrected and embellished the cowboy image of earlier times and
transformed the Western into an assembly-line product of scant substance and
even less depth.
|
| Roy Rogers ("King of
the Cowboys"), Gene Autry, John Wayne, William Boyd ("Hopalong Cassidy"),
Alfred "Lash" LaRue, Randolph Scott, and even Gary Cooper himself, became
stock figures in Hollywood's "Golden Age of the Cowboy," men who lived up to
the "Ten Commandments of the Cowboy," but seldom worked cattle.
Productions on the scale of Barbara Worth did not return to the
screen until the advent of such films as The Big Country, Ride the High
Country and Shane some three decades later. Barbara Worth
was thus relegated to the archives, appreciated today only by historians,
critics and film buffs. 43
1
| 2
| 3
| 4 |
5 |
Next
>
ABOUT THE AUTHOR [Updated 2002]
Phillip I. Earl was curator of history at the Nevada
State Historical Society in Reno until his retirement in June of 1999. He
first went to work for the society in the 1970's and had earlier served as
the institution's curator of history.
Earl's popular "This Was Nevada" history column was
published in newspapers throughout the state for nearly a quarter of a
century.
Despite his retirement, Earl maintains an enthusiastic
interest in the history of the Silver State. He contributes information and
an occasional article to the Nevada State Department of Museums, Library and
Arts which is continuing the "This Was Nevada" series.
The author, who continues to make his home in Reno,
highly recommends retirement saying it gives him more rest and time for
physical workouts and allows him to pick his own projects.
Born in Cedar City, Utah in 1937, Earl moved with his
family at age 4 to southern Nevada. He graduated from Boulder City High
School in 1955 and served in the U.S. Army 1957-1960. He returned to Las
Vegas area and attended Southern Nevada University (now the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas) for three years. He came to the University of Nevada,
Reno, in 1963 and received both a bachelor's degree in history and political
science and a master's degree in history from UNR.
This is the fifth article Phil has written for the
Humboldt Historian. Prior pieces were on the early years of aviation in
north central Nevada (summer, 1979); the woman suffrage movement in the area
(winter-spring, 1981); the Seven Troughs-Mazuma flood of 1912
(spring-summer, 1982), and an account of Clara Dunham Crowell of Lander
County, Nevada's first woman sheriff.
1
| 2
| 3
| 4 |
5 |
Next
>
###
NOTES
1. Sessions S. Wheeler, The Black Rock Desert (Caldwell, Idaho:
The Caxton Printers Ltd.,1979), pp. 19-
34, 40-48. Gloria Griffen Cline, Exploring the Great Basin (Norman,
Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma
Press, 1963). Devere Helfrich, The Applegate Trail (Klamath Falls,
Oregon: Klamath County Historical
Society, 1971). Phillip Dodd Smith, "The Sagebrush Soldiers, Nevada's
Volunteers in the Civil War",
Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, V, Nos. 3-4 (Fall-Winter, 1962), W.
45-48. Douglas MacDonald,
"Lost Hardin Silver: Enigma of the Black Rock Desert", Nevada Historical
Society Quarterly, XI, No.1 (Spring, 1972), w. 20-26. Francis Church
Lincoln, Mining Districts and Mineral Resources of Nevada
(Reno: Nevada Newsletter Publishing Company, 1923), pp. 103-104. David F.
Myrick, Railroads of
Nevada and Eastern California, Vol. I (Berkeley: Howell-North Books,
1962), W. 316-333.
2. Kevin Brownlow, The War; the West and the Wilderness (New York:
Alfred C. Knopf, 1979), pp. 245- 248,368-386. Michael T. Marsden, "The Rise
of the Western Movie: From Sagebrush to Screen," Journal of the West, XXII,
No.3 (October, 1985), W. 18-23. Arthur Knight, The Liveliest Art: A
Panoramic History of the Movies (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1957),
pp. 120-121.
3. James Robert Parish, Hollywood's Great Love Teams (New Rochelle,
N. Y.: Arlington House Publishers, 1974), W. 23-32. Los Angeles Times,
June 27, 1926.
4. Ann Lloyd and Graham Fuller, editors, The Illustrated Who's Who of the
Cinema (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company Inc., 1983),p. 240.
Los Angeles Times, June 27, July 18, October 24, 1926. Nevada State
Journal, April 18, 1926.
5. Los Angeles Times, June 11, 1926. Humboldt Star, June 7,
1926.
6. Humboldt Star; June 7, 1926. Los Angeles Times, June 11,
1926.
7. Humboldt Star; June 8, June 9, 1926.
8. ibid., June 8, June 10, 1926.
9. Los Angeles Times, June 11, June 15, 1926. San Francisco
Chronicle, July 18, 1926.
10. Los Angeles Times, June 11, June 19, 1926. Humboldt Star,
June 11, June 12, June 16, 1926. Nevada State Journal, June 12, June
19, June 23, 1926. Reno Evening Gazette, June 12, 1926.
11. Lovelock Review-Miner, June 11, June 25, 1926.
12. Humboldt Star; June 19, 1926. Nevada State Journal, June
23, 1926.
13. Los Angeles Times, June 19, 1926. Nevada State Journal,
June 19, 1926. Humboldt Star, June 19, June 21, June 25, July 1,
1926.
14. Humboldt Star, June 21, 1926.
15. Nevada State Journal, June 20, 1926. Humboldt Star, June
21, July 19,1926. Interview with Charles Reed, Lovelock, Nevada, October 24,
1964.
16. Humboldt Star, June 19, June 26, 1926. Nevada State Journal,
June 24, June 26, 1926.
17. Humboldt Star, June 23, June 25, 1926. ~
18. ibid., July 1, July 28, 1926. Nevada State Journal, June
20, July 6, 1926. Reed interview.
19. Humboldt Star, June 11, June 21, 1926. Motion Picture Magazine,
XIV (October, 1926), quoted in Brownlow, op. cit., p. 245.
20. Humboldt Star, July 7, July 8, 1926. Reno Evening Gazette,
July 8, 1926.
21. Humboldt Star, June 26, July 9, July 17, July 20, July 28, July
30, 1926.
22. Los Angeles Times, July 7, July 11,1926. Humboldt Star,
July 12, July 13,1926. Nevada State Journal, July 14, 1926.
23. Humboldt Star, July 12, July 13, July 15, July 21, July 23, 1926.
Reno Evening Gazette, July 24, 1926.
24. Los Angeles Times, July 18,1926.
25. Humboldt Star, July 15, July 19, 1926.
26. ibid., July 21, July 22, July 23, 1926.
27. ibid., July 23, 1926.
28. ibid., July 27, 1926.
29. Nevada State Journal, August 1, 1926. Humboldt Star,
August 2, 1926.
30. Humboldt Star, August 6, 1926.
31. ibid., July 24, July 26, 1926. Nevada State Journal,
September 14, 1926.
32. Los Angeles Times, August 14, August 20, 1926.
33. ibid., August 14, October 23, 1926. San Francisco Chronicle,
August 8, 1926.
34. Los Angeles Times, October 3, October 8, October 10, October 12,
1926.
35. ibid., October 12, October 15, October 16, 1926.
36. ibid.,October31, 1926.
37. John R. Parish and Michael R. Pins, The Great Western Pictures
(Metuchen, NJ.: The Scarecrow Press Inc., 1976), w. 407-408.
38. New York Times, November 29, December 5, 1926.
39. Humboldt Star; December 7, December 8, December 16, 1926.
40. Brownlow, op. cit., pp. 245, 248. Pierre Horay, Histoire du
Western (Paris: Editions Pierre Horay, 1964), W. 128-129.
41. Arthur Marx, Goldwyn: A Biography of the Man Behind the Myth (New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1976), pp. 156-157, 185-187. Lawrence J.
Epstein, Samuel Goldwyn (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1981), pp. 33-34.
Barbara McNeil and Miranda C. Herbert, editors, Performing Arts
Biography, Master Index (Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1981 ), p. 35.
Information on Vilma Banky's present whereabouts furnished to the writer by
Ms. Patricia Fenton of the Screen Actor's Guild, letter to the writer,
August 21, 1985.
42. Lloyd and Fuller, op. cit., p. 91.
43. Ephraim Katz, The Film Encyclopedia (New York: Pedigree Books,
1979), p. 257. Lloyd and Fuller, op. cit., pp. 94-95. Knight,
op.cit., pp.142-188. David Dary, Cowboy Culture: A Saga of Five
Centuries (New York: Avon Books, 1982) pp. 332-338.
1
| 2 |
3 | 4 |
5 |
Next > |