Nuts in May (film)
Nuts in May | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robin Williamson |
Produced by | Isadore Bernstein |
Starring | Stan Laurel |
Cinematography | Harry M. Fowler |
Release date |
|
Running time | 30 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | Silent film English intertitles |
Nuts in May (1917) is a silent comedy short, directed by , produced by Isadore Bernstein, and featuring Stan Laurel, billed as Stan Jefferson, in his onscreen debut.[1]
The short was filmed at Bernstein Studios, in Hollywood, California. Very little of the film survives (a little over 60 seconds).[2]
Plot[]
Stan plays a resident of "Home for the Weak-Minded", apparently a lunatic asylum. Stan's particular delusion is that he thinks he's Napoleon. Stan walks the grounds of the cuckoo-hatch sticking his right hand into his shirt and wearing a Napoleon hat. He thinks he's Napoleon, but he gives the salute of the British army.
Stan has his own personal keeper in the asylum: a taller moustached man who wears a kepi so that Stan will think he's a French officer.
Stan gets out and finds some local boys, who eagerly join him in playing soldier. Stan's kepi-wearing keeper pursues him through the film. Stan hijacks a steamroller, and Stan nearly runs down some workers in a road crew.
The surviving footage consists of Stan in various scrapes with a steamroller, ending with him in a straw boater being dragged off to the asylum.
Cast[]
- Stan Laurel (as Stan Jefferson)
- Mae Dahlberg
- Lucille Arnold
- Owen Evans
- Charles Arling
See also[]
- List of incomplete or partially lost films
- Mixed Nuts (1922), a film using footage from Nuts in May
References[]
- ^ "Progressive Silent Film List: Nuts in May". Silent Era. Retrieved 2008-02-18.
- ^ SilentEra entry
External links[]
- 1917 films
- American silent short films
- American black-and-white films
- 1917 comedy films
- American films
- English-language films
- 1917 short films
- American comedy films
- Lost American films
- Comedy short films
- 1917 lost films
- Lost comedy films
- 1910s short comedy film stubs