Volume II: Filmography

 

LEON OF THE TABLE D'HOTE

 

October 4, 1910 (Tuesday)

Length: 1,000 feet

Character: Comedy

 

ADVERTISEMENT, The New York Dramatic Mirror, September 28, 1910:

"One of the funniest characters that ever frolicked through 1,000 feet of film. You'll wish it were 2,000 when you see him. He is sublime. His fun is as infectious as the cheap little restaurant where we find him at his true vocation of waiter, as it is in the classy summer resort where, claiming he is a count, he becomes all the rage. His adventures are too numerous to amply describe - be sure you follow them with your eye."

 

SYNOPSIS, The Moving Picture World, October 8, 1910:

"Leon is a waiter in a cheap table d'hote restaurant and makes desperate love to the fat French cashier, Rosa. Off on his vacation, Leon decides to pose as a foreign nobleman. At a seaside hotel where he stops, he becomes all the rage. One of the guests at the same hotel is a beautiful young heiress, a Violet Hope, whose designing mother at once conceives the idea of marrying her off to the supposed count. The plan does not meet with Violet's approval, she is already in love with a native born.

"One day while bathing in the surf, Violet, who is an expert swimmer, comes to the assistance of the bogus count, who has been knocked over by a breaker, and delivers him safely into the hands of the lifeguard. The count at once lays his life and fortune at Violet's feet, greatly to that young lady's disgust and her mother's delight. In the meantime Rosa becomes acquainted with the doings of her absent lover and traces him to the beach. Finding him in the water, and beyond her reach, Rosa also dons a bathing suit and after a chase through the waves, captures Leon and forces him to confess that he has been sailing under false colors. He was led back to the restaurant by the triumphant Rosa, while Violet obtains her mother's consent to wed the man of her choice."

 

REVIEW by Walton, The Moving Picture News, November 5, 1910:

"The waiter in a cheap restaurant makes furious love to the fat cashier. He departs on his vacation and poses, in a seaside hotel, as a count. The girls make a mad rush for him. He lays siege to an heiress, backed by her mother. Meanwhile the saucy cashier trails him and there is a jolly mix-up. A humorous film that is humorous."

Note: The unusual phrase, "lays siege to an heiress," in the above review, is used, with a minor change, in the following as well. Probably both were adapted from a "canned" review supplied by Thanhouser.

 

REVIEW, The Moving Picture World, October 15, 1910:

"A rather attenuated comedy dealing with a waiter who posed as a count at a resort and laid siege to an heiress. But his fat cashier lover appears and frustrates all his schemes, while the heiress weds the man of her choice. The film is too long. Comedy of this character can seldom be carried through an entire reel successfully."

 

REVIEW, The New York Dramatic Mirror, October 12, 1910:

"The Thanhouser players get considerable humor out of this comedy which is quite cleverly constructed and well acted. Leon is a waiter in a table d'hote restaurant. He bids his fat sweetheart, the restaurant cashier, good-bye and goes on his vacation, stopping at a seaside resort where he poses as a foreign count, captivates the ladies, and finds a rich mamma who wants to marry him to her daughter. The engagement gets into the papers, his fat sweetheart in town reads the news and takes the next train to the seaside hotel, where she makes short work of Leon, leading him off by the ear, to the great delight of the rich girl and her American lover. Amusing by-play is worked in, and the film pleases."

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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.