Ladies and Gentlemen, Hal Roach Presents His Rascals
Roach comedian Charlie Chase, under his real name of Charles Parrott, supervised some of the earliest Our Gang shorts, but Robert McGowan eventually became the guiding director behind the series. The silent Our Gang films featured a marvelously talented group. Freckle-faced Mickey Daniels was the leader, and fat Joe Cobb, scruffy Jackie Condon, pretty Mary Kornman and smiling "Sunshine" Sammy Morrison rounded out the eclectic group. The silent shorts are not so well known to most casual fans, but they were perfect examples of the wit, warmth and pure fun that was the hallmark of Hal Roach films. These silent Our Gang films were very popular in their day. The silent films also introduced the eternal symbol of the series, Pete the Pup, the white pit bull with the distinctive ring around his eye. Petey was not actually one dog, but a series of dogs, each with its own distinctive look. Since Petey could be replaced every few years, he became one of Our Gang's longest lasting cast members, staying on through 1938. In 1929, Hal Roach Studios switched to the new sound technology, but it took a little while for Our Gang to adapt. The first Our Gang talkies were often awkward and slow. But after about a dozen films, the series found its footing again and maintained a remarkable consistency that no other Roach series (such as Laurel and Hardy, or the Charley Chase shorts) could match. From Pups is Pups (1931) through Hide and Shriek (1938 - the last Hal Roach short), there are dozens of classics, an equal amount of great films, a large group of thoroughly enjoyable romps, and only a small handful of genuine misfires. The early Our Gang sound films from 1931 to 1933 are uniformly heartwarming and funny, and based on real situations to which audiences of the Great Depression could easily relate. They featured the Gang stuck in a world with mean step-mothers, irritable
The copyright of the article Ladies and Gentlemen, Hal Roach Presents His Rascals in Black-and-White Movies is owned by John Vincent Brennan. Permission to republish Ladies and Gentlemen, Hal Roach Presents His Rascals in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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