Back Stage (1919 film)

Back Stage
Charles A. Post (with gun)
Directed byRoscoe Arbuckle
Written byJean Havez
Produced byJoseph M. Schenck
StarringRoscoe Arbuckle
Buster Keaton
Al St. John
CinematographyElgin Lessley
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • September 7, 1919 (1919-09-07)
[1]
Running time
26 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent film
English intertitles

Back Stage is a 1919 American two-reel silent comedy film directed by and starring Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle and featuring Buster Keaton and Al St. John.

In this film, Keaton, Arbuckle, Al St. John, and others work back stage as stagehands in a playhouse trying to help out and, in some cases, stay away from the eccentric performers. When the performers rebel and refuse to do the show, the stagehands, along with Arbuckle's love interest (the assistant of one of the rebelling performers) perform in their stead—including Keaton doing butterflies and no-handed cartwheels in drag.

Several Arbuckle shorts use sight gags that other comedians elaborated on in other films. In Back Stage, Arbuckle uses the falling wall sequence, where a piece of set falls on him but a window in the set piece allows him to escape being crushed. Keaton used this gag in his first short One Week (1920) and, most famously, in his 1928 film Steamboat Bill, Jr.

  1. ^ Knopf, Robert (2 August 1999). The Theater and Cinema of Buster Keaton. Princeton University Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-691-00442-6. Retrieved 21 October 2010.