Theda Bara: Film History Series

Orval Hixon, “Theda Bara”, 1921, Publicity Photo

Born at Cincinnati, Ohio in July of 1885, Theda Bara, née Theodosia Burr Goodman, was an American silent film and stage actress who, known for Photographer Unknown, "Theda Bara as Carmen", 1915, "Carmen", Written and Directed by Raoul Walsh, Cinematography Georges Benoit and George Schneiderman, Fox Studio her femme fatale roles, became one of the more popular actresses of the silent era. One of the early stars of the newly founded Fox Studios, Bara became its biggest star and one of cinema’s early sex symbols.

One of three children born to prosperous Jewish tailor Bernard Goodman and Swiss-born Pauline Louise Françoise de Coppett, Theda Bara moved with her family in 1890 to Avondale, a suburb of Cincinnati with a large Jewish community. Upon graduating high school, Bare dyed her blonde hair black and began to pursue her teenage dream of a career in theater. After two years at the University of Cincinnati, she started acting in local theater productions in 1905.

Bara relocated to New York City and made her Broadway debut in playwright Ferenc Molnár’s 1908 “The Devil”, acting under the name Theodosia de Coppett. The play opened in August of 1908 at the Garden Theatre and finished its run at the New Victory Theatre in June of 1909. Beginning in 1911, Bara became part of a theatrical touring company for three years. She sought work at various casting offices after her return to New York City in 1914 and was chosen for a role in director Frank Powell’s 1914 silent film “The Stain” for Pathé Exchange. Acting under the name Theodosia Goodman, Bara played the role of a gangster’s female companion.

Having become known for her ability to take direction, Theda Bara was given her first lead role as the predatory woman (“vampire”) in Powell’s next film, the 1915 “A Fool There Was”, for the newly formed Fox Studios. This role was a major breakthrough for Bara as she was nearing thirty-years old, at a time when lead roles were always given to younger women. To increase the allure of star and movie, Fox Studios gave its lead actress the name Theda Bara (an anagram for Arab Death) for the film’s press releases. She was described as the Egyptian daughter of an artist and Arabian princess, and was endowed with mystical powers.

Bara, now contracted with Fox Studios, was living with her parents in New York City and traveling to Fort Lee, New Jersey where Fox Studios’s film industry was based. Her second film role with the studio was the character Celia Friedlander in director Herbert Brenon’s 1915 silent film “Kreutzer Sonata” based on a play of the same name written by Jacob Gordon. Bara, now a rising star, made six more films in 1915, the last of which was the lead role in director Raoul Walsh’s “Carmen”. The next year was even busier; theater audiences attended eight new Theda Bara films, all of which made substantial profit for Fox Studios. 

In 1917, Theda Bara traveled with Fox Studios to California where, finding the climate more hospitable for filmmaking, it had built new West Coast production facilities in Hollywood. She starred in director J. Gordon Edwards’s 1917 silent historical drama “Cleopatra”. With its huge sets, over two thousand horses and fifteen thousand extras, the film, although costly to produce, became a mega-hit for Bara and the studio. Soon after, Bara appeared in the lead role of Lisza Tapenka for Edwards’s 1917 silent drama “The Rose of Blood”. In 1918, Bara received the opportunity to be both screenwriter and lead actor for director Edwards’s silent romance film “The Soul of Buddha”. 

Bara appeared in seven films in 1919, the last of which was the role of social-climbing stenographer Olga Dolan in Edmund Lawrence’s silent drama “Lure of Ambition”. At the end of 1919, Bara’s contract with Fox Studios terminated and her film career faded from the phenomenon it had once been. Seeking a return to the theater, she  appeared on Broadway as Ruth Gordon in George V. Hobart and John Willard’s 1920 four-act play “The Blue Flame” at the Shubert Theatre. Reviewers criticized the play and its plot as well as Bara’s acting. Her recognition as a film star, however, drew large crowds and the play was a commercial success, breaking attendance records at some venues during its forty-eight show run.. 

In 1921, Theda Bara married British-born film director Charles Brabin and retired from acting. She made a brief comeback in what would be her last film, directors Stan Laurel and Richard Wallace’s 1926 short silent comedy “Madame Mystery” for the Hal Roach Studio. After finishing the film, Bara, now forty-one, permanently retired from film acting. Although she continued though the 1930s to try stage acting, there was little success. In 1936, Bara did a radio broadcast version of the “The Thin Man”, alongside William Powell and Myrna Loy for the Lux Radio Theatre. 

After a lengthy stay at California Lutheran Hospital, Theda Bara died of abdominal cancer in April of 1955 at the age of sixty-nine at Los Angeles, California. Her body was cremated and inurned, under the name Theda Bara Brabin, in the Great Mausoleum at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, Glendale, California.

Notes: A 1937 fire at the Fox Studio nitrate-film storage vaults in New Jersey destroyed most of the studio’s silent films produced before 1932. Theda Bara made forty-three silent films between 1914 and 1926. Of these, complete prints of only six still exist. Two films are partially lost and thirty-five are completely lost. Those nitrate films that were housed in Bara’s own personal archive were discovered in 1940 to have disintegrated when she took some reels out to show a friend.

The Golden Globes website has a short article written by actress Meher Tatna entitled “Forgotten Hollywood: Theda Bara, Queen of the Vamps” at: https://goldenglobes.com/articles/gotten-hollywood-theda-bara-queen-vamps/

The Readex Report has an excellent article by Vanda Krefft, Biography Fellow at the City University of New York, on William Fox, the founder of Twentieth Century Fox, that discusses Theda Bara’s early relationship with Fox Studios: https://www.readex.com/readex-report/issues/volume-5-issue-1/searching-forgotten-movie-mogul-william-fox-founder-twentieth 

Once Upon A Screen, a classic film and tv blog, has an article on William Fox which discusses Theda Bara’s time with Fox Studios: https://aurorasginjoint.com/2015/06/26/the-mightiest-of-all-william-fox-sets-up-shop-in-fort-lee-a-hundred-years-ago/

Top Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Theda Bara as Carmen”, 1915, “Carmen”, Written and Directed by Raoul Walsh, Cinematography Georges Benoit and George Schneiderman, Fox Studio 

Second Insert Image: Photographer Unkown, “Theda Bara as Salome”, 1918, Film Publicity Photo, Director J. Gordon Edwards, Cinematography John W. Boyle, Fox Film Corporation

Third Insert Image: Underwood & Underwood Studios, “Theda Bara”, 1918, “The She-Devil”, Publicity Photo, Director J. Gordon Edwards, Cinematography John W. Boyle and Harry Gerstad, Fox Film Corporation

Bottom Insert Image: Jack Freulich, “Theda Bara as Rosa”, 1915, “Sin”, Director Herbert Brenon, Cinematography Phil Rosen, Fox Film Corporation

Laurel and Hardy: Film History Series

Laurel and Hardy, Computer Graphics, Film Gifs

The humor of Laurel and Hardy was highly visual with slapstick used for emphasis. They often had physical arguments with each other (in character), which were quite complex and involved cartoon violence, and their characters preclude them from making any real progress in the simplest endeavors. Much of their comedy involves milking a joke, where a simple idea provides a basis from which to build multiple gags without following a defined narrative.

Stan Laurel was of average height and weight, but appeared small and slight next to Oliver Hardy, who was 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) tall and weighed about 280 lb (127 kg) in his prime. They used some details to enhance this natural contrast. Laurel kept his hair short on the sides and back, growing it long on top to create a natural “fright wig”. At times of shock, he would simultaneously cry while pulling up his hair. In contrast, Hardy’s thinning hair was pasted on his forehead in spit curls and he sported a toothbrush mustache.

To achieve a flat-footed walk, Laurel removed the heels from his shoes. Both wore bowler hats, with Laurel’s being narrower than Hardy’s, and with a flattened brim. The characters’ normal attire called for wing collar shirts, with Hardy wearing a neck tie which he would twiddle and Laurel a bow tie. Hardy’s sports jacket was a tad small and done up with one straining button, whereas Laurel’s double breasted jacket was loose fitting.

A great comedy team; to me, they were the best. The movie, The Music Box, 1932, which had them trying to deliver a piano to a house by pushing it up hundreds of concrete steps is indelibly etched in my mind. A comedic Sisyphean classic.