Saturday, October 02, 2021

The Purple Mask (a compilation of Episodes 12: The Vault of Mystery, 13: The Leap and 16: A Prisoner of Love)


Grace Cunard & Francis Ford: The Purple Mask (US 1916 starring Grace Cunard as The Purple Mask.

Grace Cunard & Francis Ford: The Purple Mask (US 1916 starring Francis Ford as Detective Phil Kelly and Grace Cunard as The Purple Mask. Source: IMDb.

Grace Cunard & Francis Ford: The Purple Mask (US 1916–1917) starring Grace Cunard as The Purple Mask. Photo: AMPAS – Margaret Herrick Library, Los Angeles

THE PURPLE MASK (US 1916–1917) regia/dir: Grace Cunard, Francis Ford. scen: Grace Cunard.
    cast: Grace Cunard (Patricia [Patsy] Montez, the Purple Mask), Francis Ford (Detective Phil Kelly), Pete Gerald (Pete Bartlett, il suo assistente/Kelly’s assistant), Jerry Ash (Bull Sanderson, un altro assistente/another assistant), Jean Hathaway (Eleanor Van Nuys, Patricia’s Aunt), John Duffy (Silk Donahue), John Featherstone (Stephen Dupont), Mario Bianchi [Monty Banks] (Jacques, the butler), Duke Worne (Duke Hestor).
    prod: Universal Film Manufacturing Company. uscita/rel: 1916–1917 (orig. 16 ep.); 18.3.1917 (12. “The Vault of Mystery”); 25.3.1917 (13. “The Leap”); 15.4.1917 (16. “A Prisoner of Love”). copia/copy: DCP, 52′ (ep. 12, 19’26”; ep. 13, 10’40”; ep. 16, 21’53”) (da/from 35 mm); did./titles: ENG.
    fonte/source: Library of Congress National Center for Audio-Visual Conservation, Packard Campus, Culpeper, VA (Dawson City Collection).
    Le Giornate del Cinema Muto (GCM) at Pordenone. Corona emergency security: half programming, half capacity, COVID certificate required, temperature measured, hand hygiene, face masks, distancing.
    Grand piano: Philip Carli.
    Viewed at Teatro Verdi with e-subtitles in Italian, 2 Oct 2021.

Jennifer M. Bean (GCM 2021): "Known to her fans as “The Master Pen,” Grace Cunard (Harriet Milfred Jeffries, 1893‒1967) wrote and performed in over 80 films in the 1910s, including four of Universal’s most popular adventure serials. The daughter of a grocery clerk in Columbus, Ohio, she left school after completing the eighth grade to act in local stage productions. In a May 1915 item for Motion Picture Magazine, “How I Became a Photoplayer,” Cunard explained that her film career began “in the spirit of fun” in 1908, when she applied to the Biograph Company in New York after a friend “dared” her to try acting in motion pictures for a day. Apocryphal or not, this story of Cunard’s first appearance before the camera shares traits with the roles she repeatedly created for herself: an intrepid, often mischievous, but decidedly plucky female-adventurer, with a signature laugh."

"Of the many women writers whose work defines early U.S. filmmaking, Cunard is one of the few who also performed in the scripts she created. And she is the only female of the period who wrote scenarios for serial films, including Lucille Love, The Girl of Mystery (1914), The Broken Coin (1915), The Adventures of Peg o’ the Ring (1916), and The Purple Mask (1917). By the mid-1910s, publicity stressed her capacity to “write everything” in which she appeared, a job that allegedly began spontaneously in 1912 when she and director Francis Ford could not find a satisfactory scenario and she “sat up all night” to write one herself. Together, Cunard and Ford left the Bison company and joined Universal in 1913, playing opposite one another in a prolific array of mystery, adventure, and crime-caper films that Cunard most often wrote and Ford most often directed. On occasion, Cunard also served as co-director or director, as was the case for nearly half of the episodes of The Purple Mask."

"Developed under the working title Lady Raffles Returns, the serial launched on 31 December 1916, with Moving Picture Weekly (16.12.1916) calling it “The best kind of Christmas present.” Cunard conceived it to showcase one of her favorite characters: a clever thief with a reckless charm who lives a dual identity, often as a member of upper-class society. First introduced as “Meg” in The Black Masks (1913) and as “Grace” in The Twins’ Double (1914), Cunard dubbed her notorious female crook “My Lady Raffles” in a series of shorts released throughout 1914, including The Mysterious Leopard Lady, The Mystery of the White Car, The Mysterious Hand, The Mysterious Rose, and The Return of the Twins’ Double. In each of these films Lady Raffles (Cunard) outwits the detective Phil Kelly (Ford), while Cunard demonstrates her talent for reinventing and repurposing well-known male characters of the era, in this case Raffles, the British gentleman thief and master of disguise created in 1898 by E. W. Hornung."

"In The Purple Mask, Ford’s role as detective Phil Kelly remains nearly identical to the earlier cycle of “Lady Raffles” films. But Cunard’s character is known in polite society as Patricia (Patsy) Montez, a young woman living with her aunt in Paris when the story begins. Near the end of the opening episode, she joins a band of working-class Apaches and becomes their leader, committing crimes exclusively for the purpose of aiding the less fortunate, often women or girls, and of redistributing wealth in a pseudo-socialist manner. Sporting a purple cape, a domino mask, and a jaunty cap, Patsy leaves a note signed “P.M.” at each scene to ensure that innocents are not wrongly accused of the crimes. By organizing her female thief as the film’s visual and narrative center, Cunard invites viewers to cheer for the charming criminal while sharing her (often extraordinary) point of view: eavesdropping on revolutionists from a thin, high window ledge; watching her gang battle with Ford from a perch two stories above; manipulating the trapdoor button, rotating staircase, or sliding fireplace in the New York home designed as her headquarters."

"Although incomplete, the serial’s extant reels reveal Cunard’s gift for constructing marvelous worlds through her playful but always carefully structured plots. Each episode introduces the motivation for the next, and subplots often extend across several installments. When fleeing from Phillip Johnson’s mansion after breaking into his “submarine vault” in Episode 13, for instance, the Purple Mask learns of a conspiracy to bomb Manhattan’s public buildings. Her efforts to halt the revolutionists as well as the “river pirates” in alliance with them create an interlocking set of actions sustained across the serial’s final three episodes. This plot twist also provides Phil Kelly with leverage to convince the Secret Service to “let Patsy go” in the concluding episode. She thus becomes a “Prisoner of Love” (as the episode’s title not so subtly hints) rather than a prisoner of the state. Our screening includes portions of Episodes 12, 13, and 16, in which all the action is set in New York.
" – Jennifer M. Bean

AA: Grace Cunard and Francis Ford created the first serials for Universal Pictures in 1914–1917, starting with Lucille Love, Girl of Mystery. The Purple Mask was the last serial they made together.

Film history and film credits are being revised today from the female viewpoint. Grace Cunard has always been celebrated as a great action star, but now is the time to recognize her also as director, screenwriter and editor.

These serials were collaborations with Francis Ford. The close professional relationship of Ford and Cunard also turned personal, but they were never married to each other. It seems that Francis Ford treated Grace Cunard as an equal and defended her from the interventions of Thomas Ince leading to their move to Universal Studios.

The portions of episodes 12: The Vault of Mystery, 13: The Leap and 16: A Prisoner of Love convey a sense of action, adventure and excitement, with Grace Cunard as the female bandit and Francis Ford as detective Phil Kelly. Although they are antagonists, their mutual attraction is irresistible.

The phenomenon of the action serial had started in 1908 when Victorin Jasset directed his first Nick Carter movies for Éclair. Among Jasset's characters was also the first female bandit of the serials, Rosaria, interpreted by Josette Andriot.

The twist in The Purple Mask is that the bandit is a revolutionary leader for justice.

There are topical currents in The Purple Mask.

The masks, obviously. In the opening screening of Le Giornate del Cinema Muto both the characters on the screen and the audience don masks.

Terrorism.

The longevity and vitality of the action series phenomenon. This week the latest James Bond movie, No Time Die, had its worldwide premiere, in direct lineage from Victorin Jasset, Grace Cunard and Francis Ford.

The DCP is from a battered and fragmented source with water or nitrate damage marks, yet watchable, conveying the joy of action and the joy of cinema. In a film historical screening, the battle scars of the source material become special effects.

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