The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup

The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup is a 1918 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It was the fourth in his series about the rural family, the Hayseeds, and centers on Dad Hayseed entering his horse in the Melbourne Cup.

The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup
Contemporary advertisement
Directed byBeaumont Smith
Produced byBeaumont Smith
Written byBeaumont Smith
StarringTal Ordell
Fred MacDonald
CinematographyA. O. Segerberg
Production
company
Beaumont Smith Productions
Distributed byBeaumont Smith
Kookaburra Films
Release date
28 January 1918[1]
Running time
4,000 feet
CountryAustralia
LanguageSilent

It is considered a lost film.

Synopsis

Dad Hayseed buys a horse for £20 called Cornstalk and it starts winning so many local races he decides to enter it in the Melbourne Cup. He is accompanied by his son Jim (the trainer), cousin Harold (jockey) and Mum Hayseed. Jim falls in love with an actress, and Mum has a nightmare about washing steps of Parliament House. On the race day, Mum boils a billy at Flemington and Cornstalk wins the race despite the efforts of a crooked bookmaker.

Cast

Production

Each of the first four Hayseeds movies had been filmed in a different state to maximise box-office appeal. This one was shot in Melbourne Victoria in November 1917.[2] It included footage from the real 1917 Melbourne Cup Carnival, as well as Parliament House, Flinders Street Station, Collins Street, Bourke Street, and the stables belonging to famous horse trainer James Scobie.[3][4]

It was followed by Townies and Hayseeds.

gollark: Wiring error. I wired it to another inserter instead of the chest.
gollark: This base doesn't even have blue science. It's a lot of materials.
gollark: I accidentally miswired this and produced hundreds of unneeded splitters.
gollark: Oops.
gollark: Factorio tip: trees must die, so use grenades.

References

  1. Ross Cooper,"Filmography: Beaumont Smith", Cinema Papers, March–April 1976 p333
  2. Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 74.
  3. James Scobie at Australian Dictionary of Biography
  4. "ENTERTAINMENTS." The Brisbane Courier 26 Apr 1918: 11


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