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  2. Mack Sennett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mack_Sennett

    Mack Sennett (born Michael Sinnott; January 17, 1880 – November 5, 1960) was a Canadian-American producer, director, actor, and studio head who was known as the "King of Comedy" during his career. [ 1 ]

  3. Keystone Studios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Studios

    Keystone Studios was an early film studio founded in Edendale, California (which is now a part of Echo Park) on July 4, 1912 as the Keystone Pictures Studio by Mack Sennett with backing from actor-writer Adam Kessel (1866–1946) [1] and Charles O. Baumann (1874–1931), owners of the New York Motion Picture Company (founded 1909).

  4. At It Again (1912 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At_It_Again_(1912_film)

    The film was released on November 4, 1912; in a split reel with Mabel's Lovers. Silent Era reports the survival status of the film as unknown. [1] It's notable that Sennett headed two of the most influential American slapstick film studios: the Keystone Film Company (1912–1917), and Mack Sennett Comedies (1917–1933). [2]

  5. Barney Oldfield's Race for a Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barney_Oldfield's_Race_for...

    The film is preserved and was released as part of a DVD box set, titled Slapstick Encyclopedia, [1] and is frequently featured in silent film festivals. The film is notable for being one of the earliest films to include the plot of a villain tying a young damsel to the tracks of an oncoming locomotive; a holdover from the Gaslight era of ...

  6. Hollywood Cavalcade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_Cavalcade

    Hollywood Cavalcade is a 1939 American film featuring Alice Faye as a young performer making her way in the early days of Hollywood, from slapstick silent pictures through the transition from silent to sound. Famous directors and actors from the silent film era appear in the picture including Mack Sennett, Buster Keaton, Chester Conklin and Ben ...

  7. Keystone Cops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Cops

    Mack Sennett continued to use the Keystone Cops intermittently through the 1920s, but their popularity had waned by the time that sound films arrived. In 1935, director Ralph Staub staged a revival of the Sennett gang for his Warner Brothers short subject Keystone Hotel, featuring a re-creation of the Kops clutching at their hats, leaping in ...

  8. Edendale, Los Angeles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edendale,_Los_Angeles

    There, Mack Sennett was the first important producer and director of screen farce, where speed, irreverence, exaggeration, sight gags, and bam-bam-bam delivery defined comedy. "You had to understand comic motion," Sennett once told an interviewer, whereupon he pushed the interviewer into a swimming pool.

  9. Del Lord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Del_Lord

    Hal Roach launched a brief series of slapstick comedies with "The Taxi Boys" (Clyde Cook, Billy Gilbert, Billy Bevan, and other expressive comedians), and these films required outlandish visual gags and a fleet of crazy cars. Del Lord was the ideal man to direct, and he worked on these comedies exclusively for a year.