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QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER (1922) Lon Chaney, John Bowers & Barbara La Marr LOST SILENT

$ 145.19

Availability: 97 in stock
  • Item Number: RKW-QUINCY-LC2
  • Director: Clarence Badger
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Studio: Metro Pictures Corporation
  • Item: Vintage original 11x14 US lobby card
  • Year of Release: 1922
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Film Title: Quincy Adams Sawyer
  • Modified Item: No
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Condition: Unrestored in fine+ condition
  • Year: Pre-1940
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Country: United States
  • Actors: Lon Chaney, Barbara La Marr, John Bowers

    Description

    Vintage original 11 x 14 in. (28 x 35 cm.) US lobby card
    from the lost rural-themed silent film comedy/drama,
    QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER
    , released in 1922 by First National and
    directed by Clarence Badger
    . Based upon the novel, "Quincy Adams Sawyer and Mason's Corner Folks" by Bernard McConville and Charles Felton Pidgin, Quincy Adams Sawyer (John Bowers) is a young attorney who one day meets a girl in the park and is immediately smitten with her. The cast includes Blanche Sweet, Lon Chaney, Barbara La Marr, Elmo Lincoln, Louise Fazenda, Joseph J. Dowling, Claire McDowell, Edward Connelly, June Elvidge, Victor Potel, Gale Henry, Hank Mann, and Kate Lester.
    The image depicts an interior scene of
    crooked lawyer Obadiah Strout (
    Lon Chaney
    ) clenching his firsts in anger as he watches handsome young
    Quincy Adams Sawyer (
    John Bowers
    ) talk with beautiful brunette Lindy Putnam (
    Barbara La Marr
    ) inside of Strout's office.
    The lobby cards from this film depicts various characters as the border art
    and this one features Bowers and La Marr. It is unrestored in fine+ condition with a clean 1 in. vertical tear on the top border near the right corner that was reinforced with a piece of archival tape on the verso; one or two pinholes in or near each corner; and one pinhole in the center of both inner patterned borders.
    Quincy Adams Sawyer
    was re-released in 1927, after LaMarr's death, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and is
    now considered a lost film
    . Film magazine
    Moving Picture World
    was uninspired by the film's story, but called it an entertaining film.
    The New York Times
    thought the film was 'superficial' and stated that not even Lon Chaney's acting could save it, while
    Variety
    praised 'the fearful hokum purveyed in the story' and was especially positive about Chaney and Elmo Lincoln. Barbara La Marr received favorable reviews from the critics as well, and the film was a success at the box office.
    A wonderful cast of silent film greats joined Chaney for this comedy/drama based on a popular novel of the time. Chaney plays crooked lawyer Obadiah Strout, who has stolen bearer bonds. He puts all kinds of obstacles and crazy characters in the way of Quincy Adams Sawyer (John Bowers), who is attempting to solve the disappearance. Chaney proved himself greatly adept at playing both the menacing evil character and the comedy of the story.
    Today, the film is not well remembered, but the participants are: Bowers would come to be remembered for his drowning suicide, which became part of the script for
    A Star is Born
    ; Elmo Lincoln was film’s first "Tarzan"; and La Marr, sadly, for her young death a few years later, and of course Chaney for his great body of work.