Baby Burlesks

Baby Burlesks is the collective series title of eight thematically unrelated one-reeler Pre-Code films produced by Jack Hays and directed by Charles Lamont for Educational Pictures in 1931, 1932 and 1933. The eight films are satires on major motion pictures, film stars, celebrities, and current events. Cast members are preschoolers clad in adult costumes on the top and diapers fastened with large safety pins on the bottom.[1]

Baby Burlesks
Shirley Temple in Glad Rags to Riches (1933)
Directed byCharles Lamont
Ray Nazarro
Produced byJack Hays
Written byJack Hays
Charles Lamont
StarringShirley Temple
Georgie Billings
Danny Boone, Jr
Eugene Butler
Marilyn Granas
Philip Hurlic
Gloria Anne Mack
Arthur J. Maskery
Jimmie Milliken
Dorian Samson
Georgie Smith
Music byAlfonso Corelli
CinematographySidney Wagner
Dwight Warren
Edited byWilliam Austin
Howard Dillinger
Arthur Ellis
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Educational Film Exchanges, Inc.
Fox Film
Release date
  • April 11, 1931 (1931-04-11)
-
  • November 6, 1933 (1933-11-06)
Running time
10-11 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Many of the children employed in the series were recruited from Meglin's Dance School in Hollywood,[2] and, when not rehearsing or shooting, were sent out by the studio as advertising models for a variety of products (including breakfast cereals and cigars) in order to underwrite the costs of film production.[3]

The series is notable for featuring three-year-old Shirley Temple in her first screen appearances. In her 1988 autobiography, the actress describes the Baby Burlesks as "a cynical exploitation of our childish innocence".[4] She also said the films were "the best things I ever did".[5]

Filmography

Shirley Temple in Glad Rags to Riches

All eight films in the Baby Burlesks series were produced by Jack Hays and directed by Charles Lamont, except the first, Runt Page, which was directed by Ray Nazarro. Rehearsals took place over a week or two for each film, with no pay, and then were shot quickly in two days.[6] As a star, Temple, received $10 a day.[7] In 2009, all eight films were available on videocassette and DVD.

  • Runt Page, directed by Ray Nazarro, was released on April 11, 1931, and distributed by Universal Pictures. The 10-minute film is a spoof of the play The Front Page with Temple playing Lulu Parsnips, a take-off on Louella Parsons, and Georgie Smith playing Raymond Bunion, a take-off on Damon Runyon. The film is notable for being Temple's first film appearance. In her autobiography, Shirley Temple Black wrote that Runt Page was a "dismal failure in the marketplace, [and] its sale...abandoned".[8] Unlike the other films, the young actors' voices are dubbed by adults.
  • War Babies was released September 11, 1932, and distributed by Educational Film Exchanges. The 11-minute film is a spoof of the World War I film What Price Glory? and was originally titled What Price Gloria? The film is set in Buttermilk Pete's Cafe which serves as a sort of bordello where children dance, perform music, and play with milk. As a prostitute named Charmaine, Temple spoofs Dolores del Río and speaks her first on-screen words, "Mais oui, mon cher".[9] Georgie Smith and Eugene Butler play doughboys. Others in the cast are Dorian Samson, Georgie Billings, and Philip Hurlic.
  • Pie Covered Wagon was released on October 30, 1931, and distributed by Fox Film Corporation. Its screenplay was written by producer Jack Hays. The 10-minute film is a spoof of the popular 1923 silent Western film The Covered Wagon, starring Lois Wilson and J. Warren Kerrigan. In Pie Covered Wagon, Temple is tied to a stake by Indians and pelted with clods of dirt until rescued by Georgie Smith. Others in the cast are Eugene Butler as Gene, Philip Hurlic as Dynamite, Arthur J. Maskery as an Indian Chief, Jimmie Milliken as Baby, and Dorian Samson as Kalimo.
  • Glad Rags to Riches was released on February 5, 1933, and was distributed by Educational Film Exchanges. The 11-minute film stars Temple as Le Belle Diaperina, a Gay Nineties chanteuse at the Lullaby Lobster Palace who must decide whether to marry a rich nightclub owner or a country boy. The film features her first on-screen tap dance and song, "She's Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage".[10] Others in the cast are Eugene Butler as the Nightclub Owner, Lawrence Harris as a Policeman, Marilyn Granas as the Maid, Georgie Smith as Elmer, Nell's boyfriend, and Dorian Samson as security guard.
  • Kid in Hollywood was released March 14, 1933, and distributed by Fox Film. The 10-minute film stars Temple as a former beauty queen reduced to scrubbing soundstage floors until discovered by director Frightwig von Stumblebum, a satire of Eric von Stroheim, and made a star as Morelegs Sweetrick, a play on Marlene Dietrich. It is considered the best of the series.[11]
  • The Kid's Last Fight was released on April 23, 1933, and distributed by Fox Film. The 11-minute film is a satire on Jack Dempsey and the boxing world. Georgie Smith plays boxer Diaper Dampsey whose girlfriend (Temple) is kidnapped by gangsters before a big fight. Others in the cast are Lawrence Harris as Pop Skull McGee, Arthur J. Maskery as Dampsey's Manager, Sidney Kibrick as a kidnapper, Philip Hurlic as Dampsey's corner man, and Marilyn Granas as Lulu Parsnips.
  • Polly Tix in Washington was written by the film's director, Charles Lamont, released on June 4, 1933, and distributed by Fox Film. The 11-minute film stars Temple as Polly Tix, Dorian Samson as Telly Tix, Polly's faithful brother, Butler and Smith as politicians, Gloria Ann Mack as The Little Sister, and Philip Hurlic as Dynamite. Shirley Temple describes the plot in her autobiography: "I was a strumpet on the payroll of the Nipple Trust and Anti-Castor Oil Lobby. Mine was the task of seducing a newly arrived bumpkin senator".[12]
  • Kid 'in' Africa was released on October 6, 1933, and distributed by Fox Film. The 10-minute film stars Temple as Madam Cradlebait, a missionary and captive of jungle savages rescued from the cooking pot by a Tarzan-like character called Diaperzan (Danny Boone, Jr.), who arrives on the back of an elephant. The script required Temple to take a ride in an ostrich-drawn cart but the frightened bird bolted and Temple came close to being killed.[13] A group of black children playing savages were directed to run and fall en masse when shot by arrows from the good guys. Unbeknownst to the children, a piano wire was strung shin-high in their path and they fell into a yowling heap, some with bleeding shins.[14] The film was the most tasteless in the series, and, with its release, the series was discontinued.[15] The film strangely includes an advertisement for Ex-Lax, a sign for which appears on a post in front of the Hotel "Squaldorf".[16]

See also

References

  1. Black, p. 15; Windeler p. 111
  2. Black, p. 13
  3. Black, p. 15
  4. Black, p. 16
  5. Windeler, p. 111
  6. Black, p. 15
  7. Black, p. 15; Windeler, p. 111
  8. Black, p. 16
  9. Windeler, p. 111
  10. Windeler, p. 111
  11. Windeler, p. 111
  12. Black, p. 24
  13. Edwards, p. 39
  14. Black, p. 26
  15. Edwards, p. 38
  16. Shirley Temple Classics DVD, Audiovision Canada, 2008.

Works cited

  • Black, Shirley Temple (1988), Child Star: an Autobiography, New York: Warner Books, Inc., ISBN 0-446-35792-8
  • Edwards, Anne (1988), Shirley Temple: American Princess, New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc.
  • Windeler, Robert (1992) [1978], The Films of Shirley Temple, New York: Carol Publishing Group, pp. 17, 111–129, ISBN 0-8065-0725-X
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