The Queen of Sheba (1921 film)

The Queen of Sheba (1921) is a silent drama film produced by Fox studios about the story of the ill-fated romance between Solomon, King of Israel, and the Queen of Sheba. Written and directed by J. Gordon Edwards, it starred Betty Blythe as the Queen and Fritz Leiber Sr. as King Solomon. The film is well known amongst silent film buffs for the risqué costumes worn by Blythe, as evidenced by several surviving stills taken during the production. Only a short fragment of the film survives.[1]

Queen of Sheba
Poster for the film.
Directed byJ. Gordon Edwards
Produced byWilliam Fox
Written byJ. Gordon Edwards
Virginia Tracy
StarringBetty Blythe
CinematographyJohn W. Boyle
Distributed byFox Film Corporation
Release date
  • April 10, 1921 (1921-04-10)
Running time
9 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent film
English intertitles
Betty Blythe as the Queen of Sheba

Cast

Production

The film was originally intended for Theda Bara. However Bara chose not to renew her contract and, after making the ill-fated Kathleen Mavourneen, she all but retired from film. While making Mavourneen, construction began on sets for The Queen of Sheba. Not wanting it to go to waste, William Fox chose to put Betty Blythe in the role. The film became a hit but Blythe never matched its success with her later films.

The topless scenes filmed in this movie were seen only in European release versions of the movie.

Fritz Leiber, Sr. and Betty Blythe in The Queen of Sheba

Status

The film is presumed lost.[2][3] A 1937 New Jersey vault fire destroyed most of the Fox silent film negatives and prints, and it is unlikely a copy of The Queen of Sheba exists. However, in May 2011, a 17-second fragment was found,[4] and initially mistakenly identified as from Cleopatra (1917), though comparison with stills from the movie have since led to it being identified correctly.[5]

gollark: and then do magic and it's all fine
gollark: That doesn't actually help with *arranging them onscreen*.
gollark: No.
gollark: Also, Python libraries generally seem to be imperative stuff with a thin OOP veneer which makes it slightly more irritating to use.
gollark: ```Internet Protocols and Support webbrowser — Convenient Web-browser controller cgi — Common Gateway Interface support cgitb — Traceback manager for CGI scripts wsgiref — WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation urllib — URL handling modules urllib.request — Extensible library for opening URLs urllib.response — Response classes used by urllib urllib.parse — Parse URLs into components urllib.error — Exception classes raised by urllib.request urllib.robotparser — Parser for robots.txt http — HTTP modules http.client — HTTP protocol client ftplib — FTP protocol client poplib — POP3 protocol client imaplib — IMAP4 protocol client nntplib — NNTP protocol client smtplib — SMTP protocol client smtpd — SMTP Server telnetlib — Telnet client uuid — UUID objects according to RFC 4122 socketserver — A framework for network servers http.server — HTTP servers http.cookies — HTTP state management http.cookiejar — Cookie handling for HTTP clients xmlrpc — XMLRPC server and client modules xmlrpc.client — XML-RPC client access xmlrpc.server — Basic XML-RPC servers ipaddress — IPv4/IPv6 manipulation library```Why is there, *specifically*, **in the standard library**, a traceback manager for CGI scripts?

See also

References

  1. CBS News. Lost Films: Queen of Sheba. Accesed July, 20. 2020
  2. "Progressive Silent Film List: The Queen of Sheba". silentera.com.
  3. The Queen of Sheba at TheGreatStars.com; Lost Films Wanted(Wayback Machine)..Retrieved July 21, 2018
  4. 17 second fragment from the film at the Internet Archive
  5. "So Is this for Real?". NitrateVille.com forum. See image comparison.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.