Monday, January 08, 2024

 

Obscurity of the Day: Pauline McPeril

 
















In the 1960s there was a fad for silent movies. Unfortunately the fad had nothing to do with an appreciation of them, but rather was all about making fun of them. I distinctly remember as a kid  an afternoon show on one of the non-network channels that ran silent films, mostly comedies. They would never run entire films, but rather just show snippets, lots of chase scenes and high drama moments, played at breakneck speed. There was always a voiceover that said snarky things about what was going on.

This ridicule of silent movies also found its way into sitcoms. On Gilligan's Island, The Beverly Hillbillies, and the like, they'd cut to rinky dink piano music and a chase scene played at double speed, all as an *ahem* homage to those great silent comedies. 

During this odd fad, a sort of sub-fad was for the silents that featured women in danger. The classic situation being where the girl gets kidnapped by an enemy of her hero boyfriend and the fiend straps her onto a log-cutting saw or ties her onto railroad tracks. There really were films like this -- the most famous of which was The Perils of Pauline -- and they were being made fun of even back then in the comics; Hairbreadth Harry and Desperate Desmond being two examples. 

I venture to guess that more screaming Mimis got tied to railroad tracks in the 1960s on TV sitcoms, variety shows and Saturday morning cartoons than ever occurred in the silents. But no matter, that finally gets us to Pauline McPeril, today's obscurity. Hoping to cash in on this sub-fad was a team of two A-listers, writer Mell Lazarus (of Miss Peach) and artist Jack Rickard (one of the leading lights in the usual gang of idiots at Mad magazine). Lazarus either chose or was asked to use a pseudonym on the strip; he went by "Fulton."

Pauline McPeril was a contemporary-set mod action-comedy that offers the breakneck pacing, overblown situations and constant danger made famous by the old silent serials. It debuted on April 11 1966* as a Sunday and daily feature through the auspices of  Publishers Syndicate. 

Rickard was a big catch, coming as he did with a built-in audience of Mad-crazed teens who would eagerly follow him anywhere. And Lazarus, though we might disdain the derivative subject matter, offered up a superbly fast-paced screwball story that plays the genre for all its worth. Yes, it's overblown, silly and half-baked, but that's the whole idea!

Why, then, did the strip fail so completely that it didn't even manage to make it to its first year anniversary (the daily cancelled in mid-story on February 11 1967** and Sunday ended, also in mid-story on March 5***)? My theory is that newspaper editors looked at this strip and they recognized that this sort of thing was a mere fad, and that they'd be looking for a new feature in a few years once the fad wore out its welcome. Forget the built-in audience craving this, the editors probably felt, they'll tire of it in a year or two and then I'm out there beating the bushes for its replacement. Evidently it didn't occur to them that a team of seasoned pros like Rickard and Lazarus would likely be smart enough to adapt the strip to changing times. On the other hand, Lazarus said in later years that he didn't have a clue how to write continuity, and that's why the strip didn't work out. I have to disagree with that; I think he did a fine job within the restrictions of the genre.

In the final reckoning we really can't blame newspaper editors for being too lazy to take a chance on Pauline McPeril --  that's just their normal behavior. You don't blame a lion for killing a poor defenseless antelope -- they're just doing what is in their nature. The blame lays with the creators and the syndicate who didn't figure out that this particular strip was not going to hit the jackpot. The dream team was squandered on this derivative stuff when they could have come up with an original concept that had legs. Too bad!

* Source: Tampa Tribune

** Source: Jeffrey Lindenblatt based on South Bend Tribune and others.

*** Source: Newark Evening News.

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The Perils of Penelope Pitstop cartoon series springs to mind.
 
Warning: I ramble.

Beginning in the late 50s silent comedy became trendy with a famous LIFE article by James Agee and a successful series of compilation films by Robert Youngson ("The Golden Age of Comedy", "When Comedy Was King", "Days of Thrills and Laughter", etc.). There was a half-hour syndicated show that added hokey music and somewhat earnest narration to Chaplin two-reelers, and another syndicated item called "The Funny Manns" where a modern host would narrate clips as tales of his forebears. Jay Ward's "Fractured Flickers" would carve up comedies and dramas every which way, adding new dialogue and a laugh track ("Hunchback of Notre Dame" became "Dinky Duncan, Boy Cheerleader"). There were also more reverent showcases, with TV shows like "Silents Please" and a growing number of museum and college revivals. Chaplin and Harold Lloyd both oversaw repackagings of the films they owned, and Buster Keaton was recognized as a superstar at film festivals. By the 60s the fad had faded a little, but people were more generally aware of silent films and the cliches.

I daresay the real impetus for "Pauline McPeril" was the television show "Batman", which combined 30s-40s movie serials and dowdy 1950s-early 60s DC comic stories (still heavily reprinted in the 80-page reprints). But in contrast to Stan Lee's parody soap strip "Vera Valiant", where the main joke was always the mock seriousness, "Pauline" prioritized outright comedy. That alone should have extended its shelf life beyond what it got.

Possibly related: There was an unsold TV pilot packaged as a theatrical film in 1967, "The Perils of Pauline". Though the premise is slightly different -- Perky blond Pauline and George grow up together in an orphanage, and out in the world Pauline keeps encountering perils that keep her from marrying George -- it's set in the present and goes for the same gag-driven humor. Might there have been a few lawyer letters between the syndicate and Universal over resemblances?
 
Hello all-
That Agee article in LIFE was in September 1949. His choices for the three most important silent comedians were Chaplin, Keaton and Harry Langdon. I'm pretty sure few would have agreed with the last name, (What about Harold Lloyd?) and Harry got a posthumous career boost. But even by that time, though silent film production was dead twenty years, the older films were still part of the firmament, as there were millions of hobby film collectors and film libraries where 16mm prints of the still-funny films circulated. Most were already public domain, so they became free fodder for early television.
Though Robert Youngson made a big impression with his compilations, the silent comedians were still a staple of TV. "Howdy Doody" showed lots of them (with the Titles stripped out) and the very same prints were recycled as "The Funny Manns" series. (introduced and narrated by Cliff Norton.)
Of course Funny Manns, and likewise "Laff-a-Bits", "The Chuckleheads", "Mad Movies" etc. are a pretty poor way to be introduced to silent comedy, I guess the worst was "Fractured Flickers", which just trashed the films, including running footage backwards, including pieces of other films, and even de-tracked talkie clips.
My late brother Cole, familiar to long time readers of this blog, was a truly devoted man about preserving, showing and studying this very subject. His series of programmes at the Museum of modern Art in New York brought to light many forgotten great and not so great titles, culled from various sources, and I believe, influenced and inspired many who now share this passion. Or as Cole often said, "Those who are similarly afflicted."
 
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