Monsieur Beaucaire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For information about the 1919 operetta of the same name (based on the same novel), see Monsieur Beaucaire.


Monsieur Beaucaire
Directed by Sidney Olcott
Produced by Sidney Olcott
Written by Forrest Halsey
Booth Tarkington (novel & play)
Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland (play)
Starring Rudolph Valentino
Bebe Daniels
Lois Wilson
Music by In theatre
Cinematography Harry Fischbeck
Editing by Patricia Rooney
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) August 11, 1924 (USA)
Running time 106 min.
Country Flag of United States United States
Language silent film
English intertitles
IMDb profile

Monsieur Beaucaire is a 1924 silent film drama based on the Booth Tarkington novel. Filmed at Paramount Studios in New York City, it was produced and directed by Sidney Olcott and starred Rudolph Valentino.

Contents

The Duke of Chartres is in love with Princess Henriette, but she seemingly wants nothing to do with him. Eventually he grows tired of her insults and flees to England when Louis XV insists that the two marry. He goes undercover as Monsieur Beaucaire, the barber of the French Ambassador, and finds that he enjoys the freedom of a commoner’s life. After catching the Duke of Winterset cheating at cards, he forces him to introduce him as a nobleman to Lady Mary, with whom he has become infatuated. When Lady Mary is led to believe that the Duke of Chartres is merely a barber she loses interest in him. She eventually learns that he is a nobleman after all and tries to win him back, but the Duke of Chartres opts to return to France and Princess Henriette who now returns his affection.

"Monsieur Beaucaire" was part of a series of box office and critical disappointments that plagued Valentino mid career. (Although the film did fairly well in big cities, it flopped in smaller locales.) Many viewers and critics, perhaps expecting the more virile Valentino of his earlier films, felt that his onscreen persona with its heavy makeup, frilled attire and arch mannerisms (particularly in the first half) was overly feminized in "Monsieur Beaucaire": a somewhat unfair accusation considering that much of the film satirizes the excesses of the court of Louis XV. Much of the blame for the film's alleged shortcomings was assigned to Valentino's wife Natacha Rambova who was felt by many of Valentino's colleagues to have had an undue influence on the costumes, set and direction of the film. The Stan Laurel parody Monsieur Don't Care (1924) reflected the general public attitude towards Monsieur Beaucaire.

Monsieur Beaucaire was loosely remade in 1946; this version, also called Monsieur Beaucaire was directed by George Marshall and starred Bob Hope and Joan Caulfield.

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