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» » Jack's Joke (1913)

Short summary

In an upper class home, two gentlemen discuss meeting the young lady who lives there. The shorter of the two, "Jack," plays a prank on his friend by telling him she's hard of hearing and he must shout to make himself heard. Jack meets the girl separately and tells her the same thing about his pal. When the two meet, they bellow at each other. After the story has run its course, the actors bow to the audience.

This is probably the earliest extant straight comedy film, so maybe of all the comic character actors of Hollywood's golden age, Arthur Houseman turns out to be the first talkie comedian.

This film, and several other Kinetophone titles restored by the Library of Congress made it's modern debut at Capitolfest, Rome, New York on 14 August 2016.

With the rediscovery of several Kinetephone films, it should establish that of all the great performers to follow, lesser comedian/character actor Arthur Houseman was the first talkie film comedian, a claim I'm sure it never occurred to anyone to make before.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: GODMAX
    Vaudeville in its heyday offered not only variety performers such as singers, jugglers, magicians, etc., but also one-act plays. These could be dramatic tear-jerkers or comic sketches, but one thing they all needed to be was simple. That is, they required a basic situation, easy to grasp quickly, with a sharp payoff. This fascinating short "Jack's Joke," made as an experimental sound short way back in 1913, is a prime example of the sort of playlet one might see in a vaudeville house at the time.

    Edward Boulden plays Jack, an inveterate practical joker. When he bumps into his college chum Ned, who is visiting New York and lonely, he brings him to the home of his sweetheart Bess, then decides to play a prank on them both. Jack tells each one separately that the other is deaf, then leaves them alone together. Ned and Bess take turns shouting at one another, until finally Bess' Aunt Jane enters, and all is revealed. But Ned and Bess turn the tables on Jack by going off together to see a show, leaving him alone. "Stung!" he exclaims, as he sinks down into a chair.

    Although the prank itself-like many practical jokes-is in dubious taste, this premise works well as a comic notion, and is ideal for the primitive recording equipment used by the Edison Studio to make this short. The players give us an interesting sample of what stage acting of the era looked like. Special casting note: Ned is played by Arthur Housman, familiar to film buffs from his many appearances in short comedies and features of the '30s, almost always as a comic souse. Here he's amazingly youthful, sober and clear-eyed.

    A new edition of this short, restored by the Library of Congress along with several other Edison Kinetophone films of the period, is available on DVD from Undercrank Productions, in association with Greenbriar Picture Shows.

    Incidentally, the skit offers an ironic remark at one point, when Bess (still under the impression Ned is deaf) expresses surprise that he likes to go to stage shows: "I should think you would enjoy motion pictures." Why? Because they're silent!
  • comment
    • Author: Azago
    Edward Boulden complains that he knows no one in New York. Arthur Housman offers to introduce him to Nellie Grant -- but first tells each privately that the other is deaf.

    Edison produced several short talking pictures, which he called Kinetophones, in 1913, but they never caught on. Largely forgotten, they languished for a century, but eight of them have recently been issued on DVD by Undercrank Productions in Cooperation with the Library of Congress and Greenbriar Picture Show.

    All five of the actors in this movie were regulars at the Edison Studio. Housman would have a long career in the movies, specializing in comic drunks in the 1930s. This appearance marks him as the first comic in the talking pictures!

    Like many of the short comedies of the era, it's a simple practical joke. Even so, it's amusing for its age, its historic importance and the fact that everyone talks very loudly even in the sequences when people are not trying be hear by people they think are deaf -- the sound equipment was not yet that good.
  • Cast overview:
    Edward Boulden Edward Boulden - Jack Jones, a bachelor
    Arthur Housman Arthur Housman - Ned Brown, His Chum
    Cora Williams Cora Williams - Maggie the Maid
    Alice Washburn Alice Washburn - Aunt Jane
    Nellie Grant Nellie Grant - Bess, Jack's Sweetheart (as Nellie Grant Mitchell)
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