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Fields, and Cary Grant. Every name listed was under contract to "Paramount Pictures". Which meant an actor, or actress, had to do whatever role the Executives wanted them to play without objection.
That is the opposite of her own room, or is it really vice-versa as Carroll wrote it? Above, a rare color enhanced photo, the picture is in black and white, with Richard "Skeets" Gallagher as the "Rabbit". Below, Ned Sparks as the "Caterpillar". The motion picture was a box office flop for "Paramount Pictures". One of the reasons given was that the audience came to see their favorite stars, but could not figure out who was who under the make-ups.
Another factor was the studio kept the finished feature to only minutes. The Mankiewicz and Menzie screenplay was attempting to do most of both novels. While keeping Lewis Carroll's prose in place. A tall mountain to climb! The screenplay for the animated Walt Disney feature was two-minutes shorter and concentrated only on the first novel.
In , Producer and Director Tim Burton released his, "Alice in Wonderland", at minutes and just touched upon the second novel. However, in , his produced second feature, "Alice Through the Looking Glass", completed Burton's version of Lewis Carroll at a running time of minutes. Another Box Office factor faced by "Paramount Studios" was that the motion picture was banned in China causing a major loss of Box Office. Their censors claimed the motion picture came under the country's category of "Superstitious and Strangeness" films.
A final look at Charlotte Henry as "Alice". Charlotte Henry followed "Alice in Wonderland" with two forgotten motion pictures. The first was:. This screenplay by Leonard Praskins was based upon a play by Katharine Clugston.
It is considered a "Dark Comedy", or what we still call today, a "Black Comedy". He calls his family and certain others to his mansion to discuss his will. Throughout the story he torments different family members including his own son "Judd", played by Ralph Meeks. To "Judd's" relief, "Cabot Barr" now dies from the shock of hearing what his son wanted to do. The entire family of fortune hunters, not including "Marjorie", are assembled to watch a short movie that "Cabot" put together.
He appears on film and begins by telling everyone that he has cut-off "Judd" from receiving anything and proceeds to tell everyone what they're getting, or not getting. Then, as the assembled group realizes that the majority of "Cabot Barr's" fortune is still unmentioned.
He informs his viewers that it's all going to "Marjorie". As everyone is trying to digest what "Cabot" has just stated. He goes on to request two things from, "Allan Blaine", played by Frank Alberton, seen in the following still. First, "Allan" is to stop dodging the issue and marry "Marjorie". Second, "Allan Blaine", is to legally change his name to "Allan Barr" and carry on, for "Cabot", as the new head of the family. When the film within the film reveals the terms of the new Will of "Cabot Barr".
They approached Walt Disney, whose films they were distributing and helping to finance. Years after the movie's release , both Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy had wished the picture had been shot in Technicolor, but it was also considered too expensive by "MGM". That were only inserting Technicolor sequences at the ends of some black and white cartoons and short subjects, but had never done a full-length color feature film.
As a result of all of this, the feature was filmed in a Sepiatone and would later be Colorized. There were two Directors on the feature. Gus Meins directed a series of comedy shorts between and As a director he began in on short subjects. There were four writers, two credited and two uncredited, on the feature.
Frank Butler worked on both shorts and screenplays for Laurel and Hardy. Nick Grinde was a "B" feature writer that no one remembers, or his motion pictures. Yet, during the 's the first half of the 's, these were the one's enjoyed on Saturday matinees. Stan Laurel worked upon the screenplay without credit. Anna Alice Chapin, who had passed away in , was mentioned, but uncredited for writing the libretto for the , stage production.
She would also receive the same mention for the Walt Disney, , version. Although the posters gave Stan and Ollie first and second billings. In actuality they were sixth and seventh billed on the official cast listing. Karns had only four credits and the three that proceeded this motion picture were musical shorts. Charlotte Henry portrayed "Bo-Peep" and as in the nursery rhyme does tend sheep.
Felix Knight portrayed "Tom-Tom". Knight was primarily a legitimate stage operetta singer, but he appeared between , and , with New York City's "Metropolitan Opera Company.
As a movie singer, he appeared in six musical shorts. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", entitled, "Dr.
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