Here is a super trivia question for those diehard Bradbury fans who have read everything of Ray's and remember it. Was Buster Keaton ever mentioned by Ray in any context? (Bonus: did they ever meet in real life and how did they get along?)
We all know Ray's early love for horror films and his Laurel and Hardy stories. Ray was devoted to L & H even to the point of being instrumental in getting the music box steps marked although Ray is notably not much on historic preservation. I can think of at least two Chaplin references--in the short story "To the Chicago Abyss" and novel Dandelion Wine; I'm sure there are others.
Keaton's early costar Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle comes up in frequent mentions as a favorite of Ray's. Since Arbuckle's career ended when Ray was only one, presumably they continued to run his films after he stopped making them. (I checked Internet Movie Database and it seems Arbuckle resumed making films after the 1921 scandal until his death in 1933, so perhaps Ray saw some of those.)
But did he ever mention Keaton in any context--fiction, poetry, interviews? If so, where, and what did he say? Thanks.This message has been edited. Last edited by: dandelion,
Originally posted by dandelion: According to my best-informed source, all Ray says is he liked Keaton but preferred Harold Lloyd.
Lloyd was my second-favourite, after Chaplin. Buster comes in at number three!
Well, at least some people here like the right things.
28 October 2011, 12:43 PM
dandelion
quote:
Originally posted by philnic: I tried to find a picture of Keaton with a Halloween theme. This is the best I could find - and you have to squint to be sure that it's really BK:
If the face isn't clear, the stance is familiar! That is from a film Buster did called Haunted House, which I have not seen but will soon. Harold Lloyd also did one called Haunted Spooks. Of course today the PC people would be after him for the S-word which just adds to the charm.