Alas! Poor Yorick!
- Wheeler Oakman
- Tom Santschi
- Lillian Hayward
- Hobart Bosworth
- April 21, 1913 (1913-04-21)
Alas! Poor Yorick! is a 1913 American short comedy film featuring Fatty Arbuckle.[1] The film's title is taken from the Shakespeare play Hamlet. The film was both written and directed by Colin Campbell, and was released on April 21, 1913.
Plot
A mental patient, who in his mind is an amazing actor, escapes from a psychiatric hospital. Every theater manager in town is notified and the first man that causes suspicion is Montgomery Irving, a poor actor in disgrace who honestly looks and acts crazy. He applies for the position, but he doesn't understand why he is arrested without any reason, when he was about to destroy the house the manager is informed that the real patient was captured somewhere else.
Cast
- Wheeler Oakman
- Tom Santschi (as Thomas Santschi)
- Lillian Hayward
- Hobart Bosworth
- John Lancaster
- Frank Clark
- Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
See also
- Fatty Arbuckle filmography
References
- ^ "Progressive Silent Film List: Alas! Poor Yorick!". Silent Era. Retrieved May 21, 2008.
External links
- Alas! Poor Yorick! at IMDb
- v
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- Hamlet
- Claudius
- Gertrude
- Ghost
- Polonius
- Laertes
- Ophelia
- Horatio
- Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
- Fortinbras
- The Gravediggers
- Yorick
- Common phrases from Hamlet
- Cultural references to Hamlet
- Cultural references to Ophelia
- Language of flowers
- Human skull symbolism
- Moscow Art Theatre (1911–1912)
- Richard Burton (1964)
- 1900
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- 1913
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- 1935
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- 1954
- 1961
- 1964
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- 1974
- 1990
- 1996
- 2000
- 2011
Films |
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Novels |
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Plays |
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Musicals |
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Television |
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- 15-Minute Hamlet
- The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)
- Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
- I, Hamlet
- The Klingon Hamlet
- "Lyle the Kindly Viking"
- To Be or Not to Be: That is the Adventure
- "Tales from the Public Domain"
- The Skinhead Hamlet
- "My Robin is to the greenwood gone" (16th century)
- "Pull Me Under" (1992)
- "Song for Athene" (1997)
- Hamlet (Thomas)
- Amleto (Faccio)
- Hamlet (Tchaikovsky)
- Tristia (Berlioz)
- Die Hamletmaschine (Rihm)
- Hamlet (Dean)
Films |
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Plays |
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Novels |
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Television |
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Video games |
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Books |
- Ophelia (Millais)
- Ophelia (Cabanel)
- Affe mit Schädel
- Ophelia (Waterhouse)
- Polish Hamlet. Portrait of Aleksander Wielopolski
- The River Bank (Ophelia)
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