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The Emperor Jones (1933 film)

The Emperor Jones is a 1933 American pre-Code film adaptation of Eugene O'Neill's 1920 play of the same title, directed by iconoclast Dudley Murphy, written for the screen by playwright DuBose Heyward and starring Paul Robeson in the title role (a role he played onstage, both in the US and UK), and co-starring Dudley Digges, Frank H. Wilson, Fredi Washington and Ruby Elzy.

The Emperor Jones
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDudley Murphy
Screenplay byDuBose Heyward
Based onThe Emperor Jones
1920 play
by Eugene O'Neill
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyErnest Haller
Edited byGrant Whytock
Music by
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • September 29, 1933 (1933-09-29)
Running time
  • 80 minutes
    (Original cut)
  • 73 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$263,000[1]
The Emperor Jones

The film was made outside of the Hollywood studio system, financed with private money from neophyte wealthy producers. It was filmed at Kaufman Astoria Studios with the beach scene shot at Jones Beach Long Beach, New York.

Background edit

The film is based rather loosely on O'Neil's play, but adds an entire backstory before O'Neill's actual play begins, and includes several new characters that do not appear in it (such as Jones' girlfriend, and a friendly priest who advises him to give up his evil ways). The film does provide what may be Robeson's greatest dramatic performance in a movie.

In the film version, the opening shots are of an African ritual dance. Some critics assess the opening as representative of the "primitive" black world to which Brutus Jones will eventually revert, but some scholarly reviews reflect the relationship between the roots of the African-American church and the rhythmic chanting often seen in African religious practices. The film's director Dudley Murphy had co-directed Ballet Mécanique and other musical experimental films. Having just spent several years in Hollywood, he now craved the freedom to use musical forms as a way of translating O'Neill's stage experimentation into film. Robeson was already a musical star and would go on to study traditional African music and dance while on location in Nigeria and with scholars in London.

The film makes copious use of the word "nigger", as did O'Neill's original play. African-Americans criticized O'Neill's language at the time, so its preservation and expansion in the film present another cause for critique. In fact, in the original production in 1920, the actor playing Jones, Charles Sidney Gilpin, a leading man in the all-African-American Lafayette players, voiced his objections to O'Neill and began substituting "Negro" in the Provincetown Players premiere. He continued to do so when the show went on tour for two years.[citation needed]

O'Neill had based the character, down to some specific traits and use of language, on an African-American friend from the New England waterfront,[2] and felt that the use of the word was dramatically justified. Gilpin and O'Neill could not reconcile, and O'Neill gave the part to the much younger and unknown Robeson for the 1924 New York revival and then its London premiere, both of which launched Robeson as the first African-American leading man of American and British theater.

Plot edit

At a Baptist prayer meeting, the preacher leads a prayer for Brutus Jones, who has just been hired as a Pullman porter. Jones proudly shows off his uniform to his girlfriend Dolly before joining the congregation for a spiritual. But Jones is quickly corrupted by the lures of the big city, taking up with fast women and gamblers. One boisterous crap game leads to a fight in which he inadvertently stabs Jeff, the man who had introduced him to the fast life and from whom he had stolen the affections of the beautiful Undine.

Jones is imprisoned and sent to do hard labor on a chain gang. Jones escapes after striking a white guard who was torturing and beating another prisoner. Making his way home, he briefly receives the assistance of his girlfriend Dolly before taking a job stoking coal on a steamer headed for the Caribbean. One day, he catches sight of a remote island and jumps ship, swimming to the island.

The island is under the crude rule of a top-hatted black despot who receives merchandise from Smithers, the colonial merchant who is the sole white person on the island. Jones rises to become Smithers' partner and eventually "Emperor." He dethrones his predecessor with a trick that allows him to survive what appears to be a fusillade of bullets, creating the myth that he can only be slain by a silver bullet. Jones's rule over the island involves increasing taxes on the poor natives and pocketing the proceeds.

Jones, hunted by natives in revolt, flees through the jungle and slowly disintegrates psychologically. Hysterical, he runs into the path of his pursuers.

Cast edit

Production edit

The Emperor Jones was planned for ten days of location shooting in Haiti, but budget restrictions required shooting the film in the Astoria studios, underutilized following to the abandonment of the industry for the West Coast. Murphy was restricted to a trip to Haiti to bring back extras, musicians and dancers. As a newly self-imposed exile of the Hollywood studio system, Murphy had insisted on New York instead of Los Angeles to be free of Hollywood control. As the co-director of Ballet Mécanique—though Fernand Léger would become far more famous for the experimental film—Murphy had explored avant-garde film from its earliest days in Paris, and he wanted that creative freedom that New York symbolized to him. He also prized access to the New York-based African-American community's highly trained theatrical talent. Robeson had only one location requirement: no filming south of the Mason–Dixon line.

The producers, director and screenwriter were required to present the screenplay to Eugene O'Neill before filming could commence. They were apprehensive because they had added material by making new scenes from the stage monologues, but O'Neill gave the screenplay his blessing, saying that the group had "written a fine three-act play."[3] O'Neill received $30,000 for the rights, which he badly needed for an expensive summer home that he had just purchased. Paul Robeson earned $5,000 a week, comparable to stars' salaries in Hollywood. The budget was roughly $200,000.

Dudley Murphy and screenwriter DuBose Heyward had both been experimenting in using imagery held together by the film's music, rather than by dialogue or narrative. In the case of The Emperor Jones, Murphy was trying to do both, not always successfully. Robeson would later complain that Murphy was condescending toward him and that he was rushed through important scenes. Murphy had no theater background and some reports indicated that William C. deMille was recruited to complete the jungle scenes.[citation needed]

Emperor Jones also suffered at the hands of the Hays Office, whose Production Code was in place and had been since 1930, if only haphazardly enforced until the arrival of censor Joseph Breen the following year.

Black-on-white violence was strictly forbidden, so a scene in which Jones kills a sadistic white prison guard had to be removed, leaving a gap in the action. Scenes depicting Haitian women smoking and one showing a white trader lighting a cigarette for the Emperor were also cut. A steamy scene between Robeson and Fredi Washington as a prostitute had to be reshot when the Hays Office decreed that she was too light-skinned and might be mistaken for a white woman. Washington wore dark makeup when the scene was reshot. The scenes depicting the hallucinations in the jungle of the slave ship and the auction were removed, undercutting the film's "dramatic resonance and doing a serious injustice to Eugene O'Neill's play," as Murphy's biographer wrote in 2005.[4]

Reception edit

The film was a box-office disappointment for United Artists.[5]

The black-and-white film was tinted blue for the jungle scenes, though the tint disappeared from most prints as it was seen as a relic of the silent-film era.

In 2002, the Library of Congress restored The Emperor Jones using archive footage. This version was able to restore the cut scenes of black-on-white violence, in addition to several minor changes. Unfortunately, no existing film of the two cut dream sequences was found, and this edition remains incomplete.[6]

Awards edit

In 1999, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress, and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.[citation needed] setting the stage for its restoration.

DVD release edit

Because United Artists failed to renew the copyright to the film in time, the film is in the public domain[7] and can be purchased at many online outlets. A newly remastered version (with commentary and extras) was released on DVD by The Criterion Collection in 2006.

References edit

  1. ^ "THE LASKY PRODUCTIONS". Western Mail. Perth. November 2, 1933. p. 32. Retrieved August 5, 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ Arthur R. and Barbara Gelb, O'Neill – Life with Monte Cristo, New York, (2000) p. 349-50.
  3. ^ Susan Delson, Dudley Murphy, Hollywood Wild Card (2005), Kindle edition, p. 1835.
  4. ^ Delson, Dudley Murphy (2005), Kindle edition, p. 2003.
  5. ^ D. W. (November 25, 1934). "TAKING A LOOK AT THE RECORD". New York Times. ProQuest 101193306.
  6. ^ Hornaday, Ann (August 31, 2002). "Worthy or Not, 'The Emperor' Is Restored". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 30, 2019.
  7. ^ Slide, Anthony (2013). Nitrate Won't Wait: A History of Film Preservation in the United States. McFarland. ISBN 9781476604572.[page needed]

Sources edit

  • Mordaunt Hall (September 20, 1933). "Emperor Jones (1933): Paul Robeson in the Pictorial Conception of Eugene O'Neill's Play, The Emperor Jones". The New York Times. Retrieved February 16, 2009.

External links edit

emperor, jones, 1933, film, other, uses, emperor, jones, disambiguation, emperor, jones, 1933, american, code, film, adaptation, eugene, neill, 1920, play, same, title, directed, iconoclast, dudley, murphy, written, screen, playwright, dubose, heyward, starrin. For other uses see The Emperor Jones disambiguation The Emperor Jones is a 1933 American pre Code film adaptation of Eugene O Neill s 1920 play of the same title directed by iconoclast Dudley Murphy written for the screen by playwright DuBose Heyward and starring Paul Robeson in the title role a role he played onstage both in the US and UK and co starring Dudley Digges Frank H Wilson Fredi Washington and Ruby Elzy The Emperor JonesTheatrical release posterDirected byDudley MurphyScreenplay byDuBose HeywardBased onThe Emperor Jones1920 playby Eugene O NeillProduced byGifford Cochran John KrimskyStarringPaul Robeson Dudley Digges Frank H Wilson Fredi Washington Ruby ElzyCinematographyErnest HallerEdited byGrant WhytockMusic byRosamond Johnson Frank ToursDistributed byUnited ArtistsRelease dateSeptember 29 1933 1933 09 29 Running time80 minutes Original cut 73 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 263 000 1 source source source source source source source The Emperor JonesThe film was made outside of the Hollywood studio system financed with private money from neophyte wealthy producers It was filmed at Kaufman Astoria Studios with the beach scene shot at Jones Beach Long Beach New York Contents 1 Background 2 Plot 3 Cast 4 Production 5 Reception 6 Awards 7 DVD release 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackground editThe film is based rather loosely on O Neil s play but adds an entire backstory before O Neill s actual play begins and includes several new characters that do not appear in it such as Jones girlfriend and a friendly priest who advises him to give up his evil ways The film does provide what may be Robeson s greatest dramatic performance in a movie In the film version the opening shots are of an African ritual dance Some critics assess the opening as representative of the primitive black world to which Brutus Jones will eventually revert but some scholarly reviews reflect the relationship between the roots of the African American church and the rhythmic chanting often seen in African religious practices The film s director Dudley Murphy had co directed Ballet Mecanique and other musical experimental films Having just spent several years in Hollywood he now craved the freedom to use musical forms as a way of translating O Neill s stage experimentation into film Robeson was already a musical star and would go on to study traditional African music and dance while on location in Nigeria and with scholars in London The film makes copious use of the word nigger as did O Neill s original play African Americans criticized O Neill s language at the time so its preservation and expansion in the film present another cause for critique In fact in the original production in 1920 the actor playing Jones Charles Sidney Gilpin a leading man in the all African American Lafayette players voiced his objections to O Neill and began substituting Negro in the Provincetown Players premiere He continued to do so when the show went on tour for two years citation needed O Neill had based the character down to some specific traits and use of language on an African American friend from the New England waterfront 2 and felt that the use of the word was dramatically justified Gilpin and O Neill could not reconcile and O Neill gave the part to the much younger and unknown Robeson for the 1924 New York revival and then its London premiere both of which launched Robeson as the first African American leading man of American and British theater Plot editAt a Baptist prayer meeting the preacher leads a prayer for Brutus Jones who has just been hired as a Pullman porter Jones proudly shows off his uniform to his girlfriend Dolly before joining the congregation for a spiritual But Jones is quickly corrupted by the lures of the big city taking up with fast women and gamblers One boisterous crap game leads to a fight in which he inadvertently stabs Jeff the man who had introduced him to the fast life and from whom he had stolen the affections of the beautiful Undine Jones is imprisoned and sent to do hard labor on a chain gang Jones escapes after striking a white guard who was torturing and beating another prisoner Making his way home he briefly receives the assistance of his girlfriend Dolly before taking a job stoking coal on a steamer headed for the Caribbean One day he catches sight of a remote island and jumps ship swimming to the island The island is under the crude rule of a top hatted black despot who receives merchandise from Smithers the colonial merchant who is the sole white person on the island Jones rises to become Smithers partner and eventually Emperor He dethrones his predecessor with a trick that allows him to survive what appears to be a fusillade of bullets creating the myth that he can only be slain by a silver bullet Jones s rule over the island involves increasing taxes on the poor natives and pocketing the proceeds Jones hunted by natives in revolt flees through the jungle and slowly disintegrates psychologically Hysterical he runs into the path of his pursuers Cast editPaul Robeson Brutus Jones Dudley Digges Smithers Frank H Wilson Jeff Fredi Washington Undine Ruby Elzy Dolly George Haymid Stamper Lem Jackie Moms Mabley Marcella Blueboy O Connor Treasurer Brandon Evans Carrington Rex Ingram Court CrierProduction editThe Emperor Jones was planned for ten days of location shooting in Haiti but budget restrictions required shooting the film in the Astoria studios underutilized following to the abandonment of the industry for the West Coast Murphy was restricted to a trip to Haiti to bring back extras musicians and dancers As a newly self imposed exile of the Hollywood studio system Murphy had insisted on New York instead of Los Angeles to be free of Hollywood control As the co director of Ballet Mecanique though Fernand Leger would become far more famous for the experimental film Murphy had explored avant garde film from its earliest days in Paris and he wanted that creative freedom that New York symbolized to him He also prized access to the New York based African American community s highly trained theatrical talent Robeson had only one location requirement no filming south of the Mason Dixon line The producers director and screenwriter were required to present the screenplay to Eugene O Neill before filming could commence They were apprehensive because they had added material by making new scenes from the stage monologues but O Neill gave the screenplay his blessing saying that the group had written a fine three act play 3 O Neill received 30 000 for the rights which he badly needed for an expensive summer home that he had just purchased Paul Robeson earned 5 000 a week comparable to stars salaries in Hollywood The budget was roughly 200 000 Dudley Murphy and screenwriter DuBose Heyward had both been experimenting in using imagery held together by the film s music rather than by dialogue or narrative In the case of The Emperor Jones Murphy was trying to do both not always successfully Robeson would later complain that Murphy was condescending toward him and that he was rushed through important scenes Murphy had no theater background and some reports indicated that William C deMille was recruited to complete the jungle scenes citation needed Emperor Jones also suffered at the hands of the Hays Office whose Production Code was in place and had been since 1930 if only haphazardly enforced until the arrival of censor Joseph Breen the following year Black on white violence was strictly forbidden so a scene in which Jones kills a sadistic white prison guard had to be removed leaving a gap in the action Scenes depicting Haitian women smoking and one showing a white trader lighting a cigarette for the Emperor were also cut A steamy scene between Robeson and Fredi Washington as a prostitute had to be reshot when the Hays Office decreed that she was too light skinned and might be mistaken for a white woman Washington wore dark makeup when the scene was reshot The scenes depicting the hallucinations in the jungle of the slave ship and the auction were removed undercutting the film s dramatic resonance and doing a serious injustice to Eugene O Neill s play as Murphy s biographer wrote in 2005 4 Reception editThe film was a box office disappointment for United Artists 5 The black and white film was tinted blue for the jungle scenes though the tint disappeared from most prints as it was seen as a relic of the silent film era In 2002 the Library of Congress restored The Emperor Jones using archive footage This version was able to restore the cut scenes of black on white violence in addition to several minor changes Unfortunately no existing film of the two cut dream sequences was found and this edition remains incomplete 6 Awards editIn 1999 the film was deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry citation needed setting the stage for its restoration DVD release editBecause United Artists failed to renew the copyright to the film in time the film is in the public domain 7 and can be purchased at many online outlets A newly remastered version with commentary and extras was released on DVD by The Criterion Collection in 2006 References edit THE LASKY PRODUCTIONS Western Mail Perth November 2 1933 p 32 Retrieved August 5 2012 via National Library of Australia Arthur R and Barbara Gelb O Neill Life with Monte Cristo New York 2000 p 349 50 Susan Delson Dudley Murphy Hollywood Wild Card 2005 Kindle edition p 1835 Delson Dudley Murphy 2005 Kindle edition p 2003 D W November 25 1934 TAKING A LOOK AT THE RECORD New York Times ProQuest 101193306 Hornaday Ann August 31 2002 Worthy or Not The Emperor Is Restored The Washington Post Retrieved January 30 2019 Slide Anthony 2013 Nitrate Won t Wait A History of Film Preservation in the United States McFarland ISBN 9781476604572 page needed Sources editMordaunt Hall September 20 1933 Emperor Jones 1933 Paul Robeson in the Pictorial Conception of Eugene O Neill s Play The Emperor Jones The New York Times Retrieved February 16 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Emperor Jones 1933 film The Emperor Jones at IMDb The Emperor Jones at AllMovie The Emperor Jones at the TCM Movie Database The Emperor Jones at the American Film Institute Catalog The Emperor Jones on YouTube The Emperor Jones is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive Master of Disguise Paul Robeson and The Emperor Jones an essay by Hilton Als at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Emperor Jones 1933 film amp oldid 1188394876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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