Silent Era Information*Progressive Silent Film List*Lost Films*People*Theatres
Taylorology*Articles*Home Video*Books*Search
 
Pandora's Box BD
 
Silent Era Home Page  >  PSFL  >  Actor’s Fund Field Day (1910)
 
Progressive Silent Film List
A growing source of silent era film information.
This listing is from The Progressive Silent Film List by Carl Bennett.
Copyright © 1999-2025 by Carl Bennett and the Silent Era Company.
All Rights Reserved.
About This Listing

Report Omissions or Errors
in This Listing

 

Actor’s Fund Field Day
(1910) United States of America
B&W : Split-reel / 387 feet
Directed by (unknown)

Cast: George Bickel [himself], Emma Carus [herself], George M. Cohan [himself], James J. Corbett [himself], Marie Dressler [herself], Lew Fields [himself], Eddie Foy [himself], Irene Franklin [herself], Joe Humphries [himself], Louis Mann [himself], Terry McGovern [himself], Victor Moore [himself], Annie Oakley [herself], Billie Reeves [himself], Tim Sullivan [himself], Harry Watson Jr. [himself], Marshall P. Wilder [himself], Bert Williams [himself]

The Vitagraph Company of America production; distributed by The General Film Company, Incorporated. / Released 11 October 1910; in a split-reel with Brother Man (1910). / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format. / The event was shot on 19 August 1910.

Documentary.

Synopsis: [The Moving Picture World, 15 October 1910, page ?] It’s more fun than a barrel of monkeys. Regular village “cut-ups” are those actor chaps and actresses. They don’t keep still a minute when they get loose on the village green at the Polo Grounds. The band begins to play and the procession starts from Madison Square in “buzz wagons” and keeps moving until they get to the grounds where every actress, actor and actorman in town passes in review before the grandstand of political and social celebrities there assembled. Here they come now: Eddie Foy, Bert Williams, Marie Dressler, Lew Fields, Marshall P. Wilder. George M. Cohan, Victor Moore. Jim Corbett, Tim Sullivan, Joe Humphreys, Emma Carus, Louis Mann, Terry McGovern, Annie Oakley, Irene Franklin and, well, just watch them as they pass by and you can pick them all out. This show takes in every show in Manhattan and the suburbs. There goes the wild men of Borneo in a Salome war dance. The phonie band is a close second. You can’t hear them play any music because they don’t. Annie Oakley gives an exhibition of fancy shooting and she does it. Burt Williams and Billy Reeves in a sparring exhibition would make an owl laugh, and the “greased pig chase,” just before the pie-eating contest; one was as funny as the other, and then yon couldn’t stop laughing. The chorus girls played the actormen, and they played them good and plenty, and there were many high balls caught on the fly by the girls in bloomers. Well, to tell you the truth, there were so many things pulled off I couldn’t describe them all. Just get a look at this picture and you will get acquainted with the “profesh” and their doings.

Reviews: [The Moving Picture World, 22 October 1910, page ?] A travesty upon the actors and actresses known to every theatergoer in the country. And the stunts they do and the funny things they offer will keep an audience laughing from the beginning to the end. It is lively, true to the life, and reproduces so many strange and unexpected features that your audience will want to see it again.

Survival status: Print exists.

Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].

Listing updated: 8 July 2025.

References: Website-AFI; Website-IMDb.

Home video: DVD.

 
Silent Era Home Page  >  PSFL  >  Actor’s Fund Field Day (1910)
 
Become a Patron of Silent Era

LINKS IN THIS COLUMN
MAY TAKE YOU TO
EXTERNAL WEBSITES

Made in New Jersey BD

Little American BD

Pokes & Jabbs BD

Kid Boots BD

Wonder Dogs BD

Ramona BD

Law of the Plains BD

Borderline BD

King of Kings BD

Four Horsemen BD