- Mack Sennett
Infobox actor
name = Mack Sennett
birthname = Michael Sinnott
birthdate = birth date|1880|1|17|mf=y
birthplace =Richmond, Quebec ,Canada
deathdate = death date and age|1960|11|5|1880|1|17
deathplace =Woodland Hills, California
yearsactive = 1908 - 1949
occupation = producer, actor, director, screenwriter, presenter, composer, cinematographer
academyawards = Best Short Subject, Novelty
1932 "Wrestling Swordfish "
Academy Honorary Award
1938 Lifetime AchievementMack Sennett (
January 17 ,1880 –November 5 ,1960 ) was anAcademy Award -winning director and was known as the innovator ofslapstick comedy in film. During his lifetime he was known at times as the "King of Comedy."Early life
Born Michael Sinnott in Richmond, in the province of
Quebec ,Canada Sennett was a son ofIrish Catholic immigrant farmers; his father was a blacksmith in the smallEastern Townships village. At age 17 his family moved toConnecticut .The family lived for a time in the
Massachusetts town of Northampton, where, according to his autobiography, Sennett first got the idea to go on stage after seeing a vaudeville show. He claimed that the most respected lawyer in town, sometime Northampton mayor and later president of the United StatesCalvin Coolidge , and Sennett's mother tried to talk him out of his theatrical ambitions.In
New York City , Sennett became asinger ,dancer ,clown ,actor (mostly playing low comedy parts, usually oafish rural types),set designer and director for Biograph.Keystone Studios
With financial backing from Adam Kessel and Charles O. Bauman of the New York Motion Picture Company, in 1912 Sennett founded
Keystone Studios in Edendale, California, (which is now a part of Echo Park). The original main building, the first totally enclosed film stage and studio in history, is still there. Many important actors started their careers with Sennett, includingMabel Normand ,Charlie Chaplin ,Raymond Griffith ,Gloria Swanson ,Ford Sterling ,Andy Clyde ,The Keystone Kops ,Bing Crosby , andW. C. Fields .Sennett's
slapstick comedies were noted for their wild car chases andcustard pie warfare. His first comedienne wasMabel Normand , who became a major star (and with whom he embarked on a tumultuous personal relationship). His films featured a bevy of girls known as the "Sennett Bathing Beauties" which includedJuanita Hansen andPhyllis Haver . Sennett also developed the "Kid Comedies", a forerunner of the "Our Gang " films and in a short time his name became synonymous with screen comedy. In 1915 Keystone Studios became an autonomous production unit of the ambitious Triangle Pictures Corporation, as Sennett joined forces with movie bigwigsD. W. Griffith andThomas Ince .In 1917 Sennett gave up the Keystone trademark and organized his own company, Mack Sennett Comedies Corporation. (Sennett's corporate bosses retained the Keystone trademark and produced a cheap series of comedy shorts that were "Keystones" in name only: they were unsuccessful, and Sennett had no connection with them.) Sennett went on to produce more ambitious comedy short films and a few feature-length films. During the 1920s his short subjects were in much demand, with stars like Billy Bevan,
Andy Clyde , Harry Gribbon,Vernon Dent ,Alice Day , Ralph Graves, Charlie Murray, andHarry Langdon . He produced several features with his brightest stars, such asBen Turpin andMabel Normand .Many of Sennett's films of the early 1920s were inherited by
Warner Brothers when Warners merged with the original distributor, First National. Warner added music and commentary to several of these shorts, but eventually destroyed the original elements for storage space. As a result many Sennett films, especially those from his most productive and creative period, no longer exist.Move to Pathé
In the mid-1920s Sennett moved over to
Pathé distribution. Pathé had a huge market share but made bad corporate decisions, such as attempting to sell too many comedies at once (including those of Sennett's main competitor,Hal Roach ). In 1927 Paramount andMGM , Hollywood's two top studios, noting the profits being made by companies likePathé andEducational , both re-entered the production and distribution of short subjects after several years. Roach signed with MGM but Sennett found himself and Pathé in hard times because the hundreds of exhibitors who had previously rented their shorts had switched to the new MGM or Paramount products.Experiments, awards, and bankruptcy
Sennett made a reasonably smooth transition to sound films, releasing them through Earle Hammons's
Educational Pictures . Sennett occasionally experimented with color and was the first to get a talkie short subject on the market, in 1928. In 1932 he was nominated for theAcademy Award for Live Action Short Film in the comedy division for producing "The Loud Mouth" (with Matt McHugh, in the sports-heckler role later taken inColumbia Pictures remakes byCharley Chase andShemp Howard ), and he won in the novelty division for his film "Wrestling Swordfish".Sennett often clung to outmoded techniques, making his early-1930s films seem dated and quaint. This doomed his attempt to re-enter the feature film market with "Hypnotized" (starring
blackface comediansMoran and Mack , "The Two Black Crows"). However, Sennett enjoyed great success with short comedies starringBing Crosby ; these films were probably instrumental in Sennett's product being picked up by a major studio,Paramount Pictures .W. C. Fields conceived and starred in four famous Sennett-Paramount comedies.Sennett's studio did not survive the
Great Depression ; the Sennett-Paramount partnership lasted only one year, and Sennett was forced into bankruptcy in November 1933. His last work, in 1935, was as a producer-director forEducational Pictures ; he directedBuster Keaton in "The Timid Young Man " andJoan Davis in "Way Up Thar". He went into semi-retirement at the age of 55, having produced more than 1,000 silent films and several dozentalkies during a 25-year career. His studio property was purchased byMascot Pictures (later part ofRepublic Pictures ), and many of his former staffers found work atColumbia Pictures .In March 1938, Sennett was presented with an honorary
Academy Award .Later projects
Rumors abounded that Sennett would be returning to film production (a 1938 publicity release indicated that he would be working with
Stan Laurel ofLaurel and Hardy ), but apart from Sennett reissuing a couple of hisBing Crosby two-reelers to theaters, nothing happened. Sennett did appear in front of the camera, however, in "Hollywood Cavalcade" (1939), itself a thinly disguised version of the Mack Sennett-Mabel Normand romance. In 1949 he provided film footage for, and appeared in, the first full-length comedy compilation, "Down Memory Lane" (1949), which was written and narrated bySteve Allen . Sennett was profiled in the television series "This is Your Life " in 1956, and made a cameo appearance (for $1,000) in "Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops " (1955). He contributed to the radio program "Biography in Sound", broadcastFebruary 28 ,1956 .Death
He died on November 5, 1960 in
Woodland Hills, California at the age of 80 and was interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery inCulver City, California .Tributes
For his contribution to the motion picture industry Sennett was given a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6712 Hollywood Blvd. Also in 2004, he was inducted into [http://www.canadaswalkoffame.com/inductees/04_mack_sennett.xml.htm Canada's Walk of Fame] .Fictional portrayals
Sennett was portrayed by
Dan Aykroyd in the 1992 film "Chaplin". He was also portrayed byRobert Preston in the 1974 Broadway musical "Mack & Mabel", byJerry Herman andMichael Stewart , about his long-term, on-again/off-again romance withMabel Normand (who was portrayed in the Broadway production byBernadette Peters and in the film byMarisa Tomei ).The Keystone legacy
Today the name of Mack Sennett is still highly recognizable (even to those who have no contact with his films) and the term "
Keystone Cops " has become part of the language, describing incompetent buffoons with supposed authority. Some historians even credit Sennett's films with having been responsible for municipal police forces across North America altering their uniforms to include military style officers' caps since by the 1920s tall, English-style hats had become so indelibly associated with slapstick comedy.Henry Mancini 's score for the 1963 film, "The Pink Panther", the original entry in the series, contains a segment called "Shades of Sennett". It is played on a silent film era style "honky tonk " piano, and accompanies a climactic scene in which the incompetent police detectiveInspector Clouseau is involved in a multi-vehicle chase with the antagonists.In 1974, Michael Stewart and
Jerry Herman wrote the musical "Mack & Mabel ", chronicling the romance between Sennett and Mabel Normand.Peter Lovesey 's 1983 novel "Keystone" is awhodunnit set in the Keystone Studios and involving (among others), Mack Sennett, Mabel Normand, Roscoe Arbuckle and the Keystone Cops.The [http://www.genesius.org Genesius Guild] , a
Rock Island, Illinois classical theatre troup, uses a Sennett-style chase to end the performance of the season-endingAristophanes Greek comedy every year.ee also
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Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood External links
*imdb name|id=0784407|name=Mack Sennett
Persondata
NAME= Sennett, Mack
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Sinnott, Michael
SHORT DESCRIPTION= producer, actor, director, screenwriter, presenter, composer, cinematographer
DATE OF BIRTH= 1880-1-17
PLACE OF BIRTH=Richmond, Quebec ,Canada
DATE OF DEATH= 1960-11-5
PLACE OF DEATH=Woodland Hills, California
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