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Buster Keaton Considered one of the groundbreaking comedians of the early film era, Joseph Frank Keaton IV was born October 4, 1895, in Piqua, Kansas.

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Presentation on theme: "Buster Keaton Considered one of the groundbreaking comedians of the early film era, Joseph Frank Keaton IV was born October 4, 1895, in Piqua, Kansas."— Presentation transcript:

1 Buster Keaton Considered one of the groundbreaking comedians of the early film era, Joseph Frank Keaton IV was born October 4, 1895, in Piqua, Kansas. On February 1, 1966, Keaton died in his sleep from complications of lung cancer at his home in Woodland Hills, California.

2 Early Years His parents, Joe and Myra, were both veteran vaudevillian actors, and Keaton himself first began performing at the age of 3 when he was incorporated into their act. As legend has it, he earned the name of "Buster" when he was 18 months old, after falling down a flight of stairs. Magician Harry Houdini scooped up the child and turning to the boy's parents quipped, "That was a real buster!"

3 Early Years Keaton quickly grew used to being knocked around a bit. Working with his parents in an act that prided itself on being as rough as it was funny, Keaton was frequently tossed around by his father. During these performances Keaton would learn to display the deadpan look that would later become a hallmark of his comedy. "It was the roughest knockout act that was ever in the history of the theater," he later said of the performances he did with his parents.

4 The Filmmaker Even in his first film, a 1917 two-reeler called The Butcher Boy starring Roscoe ("Fatty") Arbuckle, Keaton was extreme slapstick, with the young actor being subjected to a range of abuses, from being submerged in molasses to getting bit by a dog. Still, film called to Keaton, and for the next two years he continued to work closely with Arbuckle for $40 a week.

5 The Filmmaker In 1920 Keaton struck out on his own as a filmmaker, first with a series of two-reelers that included the now- classic One Week (1920), The Playhouse(1921) and Cops (1922). In 1923 Keaton started making full- length features such as The Three Ages (1923) and Sherlock, Jr. (1924).

6 The Filmmaker The General (1927)*, which starred Keaton as a train engineer in the Civil War. Keaton was the full force behind the film, writing and directing it. But while the movie initially proved to be a commercial disappointment, it was later hailed as a pioneering piece of filmmaking.

7 The General* The film's fictionalized plot was based on Lieut. William Pittenger's Daring and Suffering: A History of the Great Railway Adventure (aka The Great Locomotive Chase), a true Civil War story of the daring raid/seizure by a group of about two-dozen Union spies (led by civilian spy James J. Andrews) of a Confederate train near Atlanta (at Marietta, Georgia) in April of 1862. They attempted to ride "The General" back into the Union, meanwhile wrecking communications, tracks, and bridges along the return way to Union-occupied Chattanooga (about 140 miles away). Within just 10 miles of safety at the border, the Union group was captured and Andrews and seven of his Raiders were later hanged as spies in Atlanta in June, 1862. Congress created the Medal of Honor in 1861-62 and posthumously awarded it to some of the Raiders (James Andrews, leader of the raiders, was not in the military and therefore not eligible). Edgar Allan Poe's Annabelle Lee was also introduced. Orsen Wells said The General was one of the greatest movies ever made.

8 The Filmmaker Woven into his films, of course, was Keaton's trademark comedy, brilliant timing and patented facial expressions. In his early two- reelers the laugh-making included a mastery of the slapstick pie. His work also featured Keaton's penchant for doing his own stunts, and he became somewhat of a Hollywood legend not just for his falls but for his lack of injuries. At the height of his career, in the mid 1920s, Keaton experienced some of the same celebrity as another silent-film star, Charlie Chaplin. His salary reached $3,500 a week, and he eventually built a $300,000 home in Beverly Hills.

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10 Career Undone In 1928 Buster Keaton made the move that he would later call the mistake of his life. With the advent of talkies, Keaton signed on with MGM, where he proceeded to make a string of new sound comedies that fared decently at the box office but lacked the kind of Keaton punch. Keaton had surrendered portions of creative control over his films to his bosses. His marriage to actress Natalie Talmadge, with whom he had two sons, fell apart, and he became plagued with issues related to alcoholism and depression. In 1934, with his MGM contract now terminated, Keaton filed for bankruptcy. His listed assets totaled just $12,000. One year later he divorced his second wife, Mae Scriven.

11 Career Rebound In 1940 Keaton's life began to make a turn for the better. He was married for a third time, to a 21-year-old dancer named Eleanor Morris, who many credited with bring him stability. The two would remain together until Keaton's death in 1966. American audiences became reacquainted with Keaton after he played himself in Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard (1950) and then in Chaplin's Limelight (1952).

12 Career Rebound In 1956 he was paid $50,000 by Paramount for the film rights to The Buster Keaton Story, which follows the performer's life (albeit inaccurately) from his vaudeville days through his work in Hollywood. During this time film fans also rediscovered Keaton's work from the silent-film era. In 1962, Keaton, who'd retained full rights to his older films, reissued The General and watched with awe as it drew praise from fans and critics from all over Europe.

13 Career Rebound In October 1965 the Keaton comeback reached its height after he was invited to the Venice Film Festival, where he showed his latest project, Film, a 22-minute silent movie based on a Samuel Beckett screenplay that Keaton had made in New York the year before. When his presentation concluded, Keaton received a five-minute standing ovation from the audience. "This is the first time I've been invited to a film festival," a teary-eyed Keaton proclaimed. "But I hope it won't be the last."

14 Career Rebound A survivor to the end, the hardworking Keaton was toward the end of his life making more than $100,000 a year just from doing commercials. In all, Keaton, who was honored in 1959 with a special Academy Award, claimed he had more work than he could handle.

15 Jackie Chan “his greatest inspiration” for his form of physical comedy.

16 Fun Facts Nickname “The Great Stone Face” His studio contract forbade him to laugh in public in order to reproduce his movie persona in real life. He was passionate about trains! During the filming of Sherlock Jr., he broke his neck when falling on the train tracks. He only discovered that he had broken his neck years later during a routine examination.

17 Benny and Joon 1993 Johnny Depp stars in:


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