When Comedy Was Highlight Of The Show: An Eastern Westerner (1920)
Harold Lloyd was up to $750 per week by this
time. Did that make him a highest paid comedian next to, maybe Chaplin or
Arbuckle? Possibly Mabel Normandearned more as well. There were young contract players in the early 60's getting less from
major companies, so I'd say $750 in 1920 was serious money. An Eastern
Westerner was released as a two-reel "special," label at the time for
a short sold like a feature, or at least the program's lead attraction. There
are many ads from the late teens putting two-reel comedies top and centerover dramatic stuff offered in five and
six parts. Comedies with Harold Lloydhad become many people's reason for
attending a show. Extensive trade support would reflect booming popularity for
Hal Roach's Number One fun-maker. An Eastern Westerner is structured not unlike
longer shows Lloyd would soon make, being similar in concept to Doug Fairbanks'
Wild and Wooly from 1917. Every comedian in town had by now done a western
spoof, but none so adroitly as Harold here. An Eastern Westerner is fast and
funny with a romance (Mildred Davis), that last eluding rival comics with less
femme appeal than Harold Lloyd fast developed (and judging by distaff fan
following to this day, he's still got).
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