Silent era and first talkies In 1915, Fields starred in two short comedies,
Pool Sharks and ''
His Lordship's Dilemma'', filmed at the French company
Gaumont's American studio in
Flushing, New York. His stage commitments prevented him from doing more movie work until 1924, when he played a supporting role in
Janice Meredith, a Revolutionary War romance starring
Marion Davies. He reprised his
Poppy role in a silent-film adaptation, retitled
Sally of the Sawdust (1925), directed by
D. W. Griffith for
Paramount Pictures. On the basis of his work in that film and Griffith's subsequent production
That Royle Girl, Paramount offered Fields a contract to star in his own series of feature-length comedies. His next starring role was in ''
It's the Old Army Game'' (1926), which featured his friend
Louise Brooks, who later starred in
G. W. Pabst's ''
Pandora's Box'' (1929) in Germany. Fields's 1926 film, which included a silent version of the porch sequence that would later be expanded in the sound film ''
It's a Gift (1934), had only middling success at the box office. The following three films Fields made at Astoria, however—So's Your Old Man (1926, remade as You're Telling Me! in 1934), The Potters (1927), and Running Wild (1927—were successes on an increasing scale and gained Fields a growing following as a silent comedian. Running Wild
was the most successful of these, with a final cost of $179,000 and bringing in domestic rentals of $328,000 and another $92,000 from overseas. Rivalry between Paramount studio executives B. P. Schulberg on the West Coast and William Le Baron on the East Coast led to the closure of the New York studio and the centralization of Paramount production in Hollywood. Running Wild'' was the last silent film Paramount made at Astoria. When the filming was completed on April 28, the remaining handful of personnel left on the lot were let go with two weeks' severance pay, and the studio went idle. Fields went immediately to Hollywood, where Schulberg teamed him with
Chester Conklin for two features and loaned him and Conklin out for an
Al Christie-produced remake of ''
Tillie's Punctured Romance for Paramount release. All of these were commercial failures and are now lost; when producer Charles R. Rogers bought the rights to the Tillie'' property in 1932, he inherited the negative of the Fields version and the film went out of circulation permanently. Fields wore a scruffy clip-on mustache in all of his silent films. According to film historian
William K. Everson, he perversely insisted on wearing the conspicuously fake-looking mustache because he knew it was disliked by audiences.
Debut in talking pictures In late 1929 W. C. Fields, then working in New York, tried to exercise the motion picture rights to his old stage sketch "The Family Ford", only to find that it had already been filmed as a
Vitaphone short. Fields, determined that such unauthorized use would not happen again, arranged with nearby movie producer
Lou Brock to make a talking picture of "An Episode on the Links." The film was made at the Ideal studio in Hudson Heights, New Jersey. Brock was releasing his films through
RKO Radio Pictures, assuring national exposure for Fields, but Brock declined to hire Fields for additional films. In 1931 Fields's
Follies co-star
Marilyn Miller was working for
Warner Bros., and she prevailed upon the studio to hire Fields for her feature film,
Her Majesty, Love (1931). Fields was noticed in the reviews but did not make enough of an impression to guarantee further film work. Paramount hired him as a member of an ensemble of comedy players, in two feature films:
Million Dollar Legs and
If I Had a Million (both 1932). Fields was prominently featured in both but these were not starring vehicles, to which Fields was accustomed. Fields, with his career stalling, asked his golfing buddy, pioneer comedy producer-director
Mack Sennett, for work at the Sennett studio in any behind-the-scenes capacity. Sennett wanted Fields the performer, and they settled on Fields both acting and writing his own material. Four two-reel comedies resulted -- with Fields abandoning the fake mustache for good -- and Sennett released them through Paramount in 1932 and 1933. These shorts, adapted with few alterations from Fields's stage routines and written entirely by himself, were described by Simon Louvish as "the 'essence' of Fields". The first of them,
The Dentist, is unusual in that Fields portrays an entirely unsympathetic character: he cheats at golf, assaults his caddy, and treats his patients with unbridled callousness. William K. Everson wrote that the cruelty of this comedy made it "hardly less funny" but that "Fields must have known that
The Dentist presented a serious flaw for a comedy image that was intended to endure", and Fields showed a somewhat warmer persona in his subsequent Sennett shorts. The Sennett shorts found an audience and Fields regained his status as a comedy lead. Financial difficulties brought Sennett's releasing arrangement with Paramount to a close after only one year, and Paramount signed Fields for feature films.
Success in feature films In the sound era, Fields appeared in 13 feature films for Paramount. The popular success of his next release,
International House, established him as a major star. An
outtake from the production -- with the set, props, and camera shaking visibly while the camera was rolling -- was allegedly the only film record of that year's
Long Beach earthquake. Director Eddie Sutherland sent the film clip to
Paramount News, which included the
International House vignette in its weekly newsreel. The film was shown in theaters around the world. Sutherland had staged the entire episode as a publicity stunt for the movie. Fields's 1934 classic ''
It's a Gift includes another one of his earlier stage sketches, one in which he endeavors to escape his nagging family by sleeping on the back porch, where he is bedeviled by noisy neighbors and salesmen. That film, like You're Telling Me! (1934) and Man on the Flying Trapeze'' (1935), ended happily with a windfall profit that restored his standing in his screen families. Beginning in 1933, a tongue-in-cheek revival of the 1844 temperance play
The Drunkard—urging audience members to hiss the villain and cheer the hero—became a popular attraction in Los Angeles. Fields became a fan of the show and attended it frequently. He was so taken with it that he decided to make a film of it, starring himself. What emerged was
The Old Fashioned Way (1934), starring Fields as the impresario of a small-time repertory troupe. Fields not only played the villain in the
Drunkard sequence, but reprised his old juggling specialty for the camera under the direction of comedy specialist
William Beaudine. Fields, an avid reader, had hoped to appear in a film adaptation of one of Charles Dickens's works. In 1935, Fields achieved this ambition when he was cast as
Mr. Micawber in the
David O. Selznick production of
David Copperfield, released by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Mississippi (1935) followed at Paramount, co-starring
Bing Crosby and W. C. Fields, with an original score by
Rodgers and Hart. ==Illness==