Sweet Daddies

1926 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sweet Daddies is a 1926 American silent comedy crime film directed by Alfred Santell and starring George Sidney, Charles Murray, and Vera Gordon.[1] The film foregrounds positive relationships between Jewish and Irish American characters, despite the presence of some stereotypes.[2][1]

Directed byAlfred Santell
Written byW.C. Clifford
George Marion Jr.
Produced byM.C. Levee
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Sweet Daddies
Poster
Directed byAlfred Santell
Written byW.C. Clifford
George Marion Jr.
Produced byM.C. Levee
StarringGeorge Sidney
Charles Murray
Vera Gordon
CinematographyArthur Edeson
Edited byFrank Lawrence
Production
company
First National Pictures
Distributed byFirst National Pictures
Release date
  • June 13, 1926 (1926-06-13)
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
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The plot revolves around comedic mishaps in the bootleg liquor business.[3] The romance between the daughter of the Jewish Finkelstein family and the son of the Irish O’Brien family ends happily.[4]

Cast

Reception

The New York Times film critic described it thus:

One really can't quite grasp what this picture is all about, as there are sudden interruptions, for the sake of comedy, which crop up according to the whims of the director and scenarist. The fun is good-natured, but just about as probable as the dropping of a leather pouch on a schooner's deck from an airplane a couple of thousand feet in the air, which incidentally happens in this tepid affair.[3]

Impact

Sidney and Murray, who portrayed the fathers of the two families, would go on to work together in many films that, focusing on Jewish and Irish relations, were often described as “ethnic comedies.”[6][7]

Jobyna Robson (Mariam Finkelstein) would go on to be regarded as a great silent film comedian.[8] Arthur Edeson became a major cinematographer.[9]

References

Bibliography

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