Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1927)

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<3P& summer on the Over Night iks&Su* Service ***°* °'° between Cleveland and Detroit, Buffalo and Niagara Falls and Detroit and between Detroit or Chicago and Mackinac Island. Also daylight trips between Cleveland and Detroit during July and August. Round Trip Fares between «»n *CHICAGOand DETROIT *K>\J *Mackinac Island and $**0 Chicago or Detroit *«X *BUFFALO and CHICAGO */** One Wav Round Trip tCLEVELAND and DETROIT $3.50 * 6.00 tBUFFALO and DETROIT- *6.00 *11.00 'Berth andmeals included. tBerth and meals extra On theMackinacIslandandChicago Division there is music, dancing, with hostess in charge, bridge, afternoon tea, golf, horseshoe pitching, radio, moving pictures, and other entertainments. Passengers limited to sleeping accommodations. Radio and moving pictures also on Buffalo Division. Yachting, golf, horseback riding, fishing, etc., at Mackinac Island. Liberal stopover privileges. For Reservations or further information, address E. H. McCracken. Gen. Pass. Aht. at Detroit, Mich. They thought the beef served at camp very bad indeed. They know meat only as pork. The men go out and shoot wild hogs, but it is the women who skin them and prepare them for cooking Without Benefit of Grease -Paint (Continued from page S3) had any idea of what our real purpose was, we would have been chased out of those mountains to the sound of guns exploding in quick succession. "The first girl and boy we selected for our leads would have nothing to do with us. So we had to go over into Tennessee and there we found a mountaineer boy (Forrest James) and a mountaineer girl (Helen Mundy), who had come into a 'settlement' for learning. They agreed to go back to Carolina with us and play in the picture. And they were the only members of the entire cast who ever had any idea as to what the film would show when it was finally cut and assembled in its proper sequence." His story did come from the people, just as he knew it must. One night he and Captain Wing applied at a cabin for shelter. It was, like all the cabins, a one-room affair. "That night," said Karl Brown, "I saw how easily a married son, living with his father, might come to love his father's wife. '"Fifteen people lived in the cabin in which we were put up. There was the married son and his wife, who was older than the father's third wife. "Captain Wing and I,, knowing the intimacy of living conditions in these parts and in a sense prepared for the general disrobing, were nevertheless embarrassed when bedtime came. I have to laugh now when I remember how we removed only our outer layer of clothing and jumped into bed while the family, men and women, girls and boys, undressed leisurely before the open fire . . . pausing now and then to pick ticks out of each other's backs. "They were as unconcerned as children in a nursery. "Nevertheless, while this state of affairs may not embarrass them, it does sometimes complicate their emotional lives. Witnessing one example of this, I found in it the basic theme for my motion picture which turned out to be 'Stark Love.' " It was shortly after this experience that the company arrived at a near-by city, ready to burrow their way into the mountains and equipped for a long stay. Weeks passed before camp was established, since the paraphernalia had to be trucked in and roads had to be both cleared and blasted open. While this was being done, and while the camp tents were finally being pitched, Mr. Brown set about to buy a few cabins. It was necessary to purchase them since they had to be unroofed in order to permit them to be used for sets. In the cabin, normally, there is only the light that comes in thru the doorway. Windows in a feudal country are hardly desirable. "Our greatest difficulty lay in the fact that you cannot bribe the mountaineer," Mr. Brown said. "They have no need in the world for any large sum of money. They took pay when they worked for us because they have an intense sense of fairness and pay for work ... so much for so much, is fair enough. But it meant that if they didn't want to do a thing, you couldn't resort to bribing them with a sum of money they couldn't afford to refuse, since they are rather enviable in the fact that they can refuse any sum." All of this done, the actual shooting of scenes began. And then Mr. Brown found that literally the worst was yet to come. Working against odds more terrific than he had realized they would be . . . quelling a drunken riot over an old vinegar barrel . . . taking precaution against a mild epidemic of typhoid which threatened his entire camp . . . and trying to get the stolid natives to act ... he often must have wished that the one hundred thousand dollars was safely back in the company's safe and that he was again behind a camera. "It would have been bad enough if I could have explained the story to them and filmed 100 Every advertisement in MOTION riCTURE MAGAZINE is guaranteed.