Harold Clayton Lloyd, Sr.
(April 20, 1893 –
March 8, 1971) was an
American
film actor and producer, most famous for his silent comedies.
Harold Lloyd ranks alongside
Charlie
Chaplin and
Buster Keaton as one
of the most popular and influential film comedians of the
silent film era. Lloyd made nearly 200 comedy
films, both silent and "
talkies," between
1914 and 1947. He is best known for his "Glasses Character", a
resourceful, success-seeking go-getter who was perfectly in tune
with 1920s era America.
His films frequently contained "thrill sequences" of extended chase
scenes and daredevil physical feats, for which he is best
remembered today. Lloyd hanging from the hands of a clock high
above the street in
Safety
Last! is one of the most enduring images in all of cinema.
Lloyd did many of these dangerous
stunts
himself, despite having injured himself in 1919 during the filming
of
Haunted Spooks when an
accident with a prop bomb resulted in the loss of the thumb and
index finger of his right hand (the injury was disguised on film
with the use of a special
prosthetic
glove, though the glove often did not go by unnoticed).
Although Lloyd's individual films were not as commercially
successful as Charlie Chaplin's on average, he was far more
prolific (releasing twelve
feature
films in the 1920s while Chaplin released just three), and made
more money overall ($15.7 million to Chaplin's $10.5
million).
Early life and entry into films
Lloyd was
born in Burchard
, Nebraska
to James
Darsie Lloyd and Elizabeth Fraser; his paternal great-grandparents
were from Wales
. When
he was a child, his parents divorced and Harold chose to stay with
his father who was always dreaming up grand get-rich-quick schemes
that ended in disasters. They eventually ended up in Omaha where
Harold had his first acting experience in a local stock company. In
1912, his father J. Darsie "Foxy" Lloyd was awarded the
then-massive sum of $6000 in a personal injury judgment (although
this was split evenly between Lloyd and his lawyer) after being run
over by an Omaha beer truck.
Reportedly, on the toss of a coin ("Heads is
New York or Nashville or where I decide!, tails is San
Diego
"), he and Harold moved west.
Harold had acted in theatre since boyhood, and started acting in
one-reel film comedies shortly after moving to California. Lloyd
soon began working with
Thomas
Edison's motion picture company, and eventually formed a
partnership with fellow struggling actor and director
Hal Roach, who had formed his own studio in 1913.
The hard-working Lloyd became the most successful of Roach's comic
actors between 1915 and 1919.
Lloyd hired
Bebe Daniels as a
supporting actress in 1914; the two of them were involved
romantically and were known as "The Boy" and "The Girl." In 1919,
she left Lloyd to pursue her dramatic aspirations. Lloyd replaced
Daniels with
Mildred Davis in 1919.
Lloyd was tipped off, by Hal Roach, to watch Davis in a movie.
Reportedly, the more Lloyd watched Davis the more he liked! Lloyd's
first reaction in seeing her was that "she looked like a big French
doll!"
Lloyd's early film characters, such as "Lonesome Luke," were by his
own admission a frenetic imitation of Chaplin.. From 1915 to 1917,
Lloyd and Roach created more than 60 one-reeler comedies in the
spirit of Chaplin's early comedies.

Lloyd in
A Sailor-Made Man
(1921), his first feature.
By 1918, Lloyd and Roach had begun to develop his character beyond
an imitation of his contemporaries. Harold Lloyd would move away
from tragicomic personas, and portray an everyman with unwavering
confidence and optimism. The "Glasses Character" (often named
"Harold" in the silent films) was a much more mature comedy
character with greater potential for sympathy and emotional depth,
and was easy for audiences of the time to identify with. The
Glasses Character is said to have been created after Roach
suggested that Harold was too handsome to do comedy, without some
sort of disguise; previously, he had worn a fake mustache as the
Chaplinesque "Lonesome Luke". Unlike most silent comedy personas,
"Harold" was never typecast to a social class, but he was always
striving for success and recognition. Within the first few years of
the character's debut, he had portrayed social ranks ranging from a
starving vagrant in
From Hand to
Mouth to a wealthy socialite in
Captain Kidd's Kids.
in 1921, Roach and Lloyd moved from shorts to feature length
comedies. These included the acclaimed
Grandma's Boy, which, (along
with Chaplin's
The
Kid), pioneered the combination of complex character
development and film comedy, the highly popular
Safety Last!, which cemented Lloyd's
stardom, and
Why Worry?.
Lloyd and Roach parted ways in 1924, and Lloyd became the
independent producer of his own films. These included his most
accomplished mature features
Girl
Shy,
The
Freshman,
The Kid
Brother, and
Speedy,
his final silent film.
Welcome
Danger was originally a silent film but Lloyd decided late
in the production to remake it with dialogue. All of these films
were enormously successful and profitable, and Lloyd would
eventually become the highest paid film performer of the 1920s.
They were also highly influential and still find many fans among
modern audiences, a testament to the originality and film-making
skill of Lloyd and his collaborators. Like other great silent
comics, Lloyd was the driving creative force in his films,
particularly the feature-length films . From this success he became
one of the wealthiest and most influential figures in early
Hollywood.
'Talkies' and semi-successful transition
In 1924, Lloyd formed his own independent film production company,
the Harold Lloyd Film Corporation, with his films distributed by
Pathé and later
Paramount and
Twentieth Century-Fox. Lloyd was a
founding member of the
Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences.
Released a few weeks before the start of the
Great Depression,
Welcome Danger was a huge financial
success, with audiences eager to hear Lloyd's voice on film.
Lloyd's rate of film releases, however, which had been one or two a
year in the 1920s, slowed to about one every two years until
1938.
The films released during this period were:
Feet First, with a similar scenario to
Safety Last which found him clinging to a skyscraper at
the climax;
Movie Crazy with
Constance Cummings;
The Cat's-Paw, which was a dark political
comedy and a big departure for Lloyd; and
The Milky Way, which was
Lloyd's only attempt at the then-fashionable genre of the
screwball comedy.
To this point the films had been personally produced by Lloyd's own
company. Unfortunately, his go-getting screen character was now out
of touch with
Great Depression
movie audiences of the 1930s. As the length of time between his
film releases increased, his popularity declined, as did the
fortunes of his production company. His final film of the decade,
Professor Beware, was made
by the Paramount staff, with Lloyd functioning only as actor and
partial financier.
On
March 23,
1937,
Lloyd sold the land of his studio
Harold Lloyd Motion Picture
Company to
The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The location is now the site
of the
Los Angeles
California Temple.
Lloyd produced a few comedies for
RKO
Radio Pictures in the early 1940s but otherwise retired from
the screen until 1947. He returned for an additional starring
appearance in
The Sin
of Harold Diddlebock, an ill-fated homage to Lloyd's
career, directed by
Preston Sturges
and financed by
Howard Hughes. This
film had the inspired idea of following Harold's
Jazz Age, optimistic character from
The
Freshman into the
Great
Depression years which followed. Indeed,
Diddlebock
actually opened with footage from
The Freshman (for which
Lloyd was paid a royalty of $50,000, matching his actor's fee), and
Lloyd was sufficiently youthful-looking to match the older scenes
quite well. Lloyd and Sturges had different conceptions of the
material, however, and fought frequently during the shoot; Lloyd
was particularly concerned that while Sturges had spent three to
four months on the script of the first third of the film, "the last
two thirds of it he wrote in a week or less". The finished film was
released briefly in 1947, then shelved by producer Hughes. Hughes
issued a recut version of the film in 1951 through RKO under the
title
Mad Wednesday. Such was
Lloyd's disdain that he sued Howard Hughes, the California
Corporation, and RKO for damages to his reputation "as an
outstanding motion picture star and personality", eventually
accepting a $30,000 settlement.
Marriage and home
Lloyd married his leading lady,
Mildred
Davis, on Saturday,
February 10,
1923. Together, they had two children: Gloria
Lloyd (born 1923), and
Harold
Clayton Lloyd, Jr., (1931-1971). They also adopted Gloria
Freeman (1924-1986) in September 1930, whom they renamed Marjorie
Elizabeth Lloyd, but who was known as "Peggy" for most of her life.
Lloyd, for a time, discouraged Davis from continuing her acting
career. He later relented, but by that time her career momentum was
lost. Mildred died in 1969, two years before Lloyd's death. Lloyd's
son was homosexual, and according to granddaughter Annette Lloyd in
the book "Harold Lloyd: Master Comedian," Harold Sr. took this is
good spirit.
Lloyd's Beverly Hills home, "
Greenacres," was built in 1926–1929,
with 44 rooms, 26 bathrooms, 12 fountains, 12 gardens, and a nine
hole golf course. The estate left the possession of the Lloyd
family in 1975, after a failed attempt to maintain it as a public
museum.
The grounds were subsequently subdivided, but the main house
remains and is frequently used as a filming location, appearing in
films like
Westworld and
The Loved One. It is
listed on the
National Register of
Historic Places.
Radio and retirement
In October 1942, Lloyd emerged as the director and host of
The
Old Gold Comedy Theater, an
NBC radio
anthology series, after Preston Sturges, who had turned the job
down, recommended him for it. The show presented half-hour radio
adaptations of recently successful film comedies, beginning with
Palm Beach Story with
Claudette Colbert and
Robert Young.
Some saw
The Old Gold Comedy Theater as being a lighter
version of
Lux Radio
Theater, and it featured some of the best-known film and
radio personalities of the day, including
Fred Allen,
June
Allyson,
Lucille Ball,
Ralph Bellamy,
Linda
Darnell,
Susan Hayward,
Herbert Marshall,
Dick Powell,
Edward G. Robinson,
Jane
Wyman, and
Alan Young, among others.
But the show's half-hour format — which meant the material might
have been truncated too severely — and Lloyd's sounding somewhat
ill at ease on the air for much of the season (though he spent
weeks training himself to speak on radio prior to the show's
premiere, and seemed more relaxed toward the end of the series run)
may have worked against it.
The Old Gold Comedy Theater ended in June 1945 with an
adaptation of
Tom,
Dick and Harry, featuring
June
Allyson and
Reginald Gardiner
and was not renewed for the following season. Many years later,
acetate discs of 29 of the shows were discovered in Lloyd's home,
and they now circulate among old-time radio collectors.
Lloyd remained involved in a number of other interests, including
civic and charity work. Inspired by having overcome his own serious
injuries and burns, he was very active as a Shriner with the
Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children. He
was a Past Potentate of Al-Malaikah Shrine in Los Angeles, and was
eventually selected as Imperial Potentate of the Shriners of North
America for the year 1949-50.
He appeared as himself on several television shows during his
retirement, first on
Ed Sullivan's
variety show
Toast of the
Town June 5, 1949 and again in July 6, 1958. He appeared
as the Mystery Guest on
What's My
Line? in April 26, 1953, and twice on
This Is Your Life: on March 10, 1954
for
Mack Sennett, and again on December
14, 1955 on his own episode. During both appearances, Lloyd's hand
injury can clearly be seen.
Lloyd studied colors,
microscopy, and was
very involved with
photography,
including
3D photography and color
film experiments.
Some of the earliest 2-color Technicolor tests were shot at his Beverly Hills
home (These are included as extra material in the
Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection DVD Box Set). He
became known for his
nude photographs of
models, such as
Bettie Page and stripper
Dixie Evans, for a number of men's
magazines. He also took photos of
Marilyn
Monroe lounging at his pool in a bathing suit, which were
published after their deaths. In 2004, his granddaughter Suzanne
produced a book of selections from his photographs,
Harold
Lloyd's Hollywood Nudes in 3D! (ISBN 1-57912-394-5).
Lloyd also provided encouragement and support for a number of
younger actors, such as
Debbie
Reynolds,
Robert Wagner, and
particularly
Jack Lemmon, whom Harold
declared as his own choice to play him in a movie of his life and
work.
Renewed interest

The Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection of
DVDs, released November 2005.
Lloyd kept copyright control of most of his films and re-released
them infrequently after his retirement. Lloyd did not grant
cinematic release because in the main most theaters could not
accommodate an organist, and Lloyd did not wish his work to be
accompanied by a pianist: "I just don't like pictures played with
pianos. We never intended them to be played with pianos".
Similarly, his features were never shown on television as Lloyd's
price was high: "I want $300,000 per picture for two showings.
That's a high price, but if I don't get it, I'm not going to show
it. They've come close to it, but they haven't come all the way
up". As a consequence, his reputation and public recognition
suffered in comparison with Chaplin and Keaton, whose work has
generally been more available.
Also, Lloyd's film character was so intimately associated with the
1920s era that attempts at revivals in 1940s and 1950s were poorly
received, when audiences viewed the 1920s (and silent film in
particular) as old-fashioned.
In the early 1960s, Lloyd produced two compilation films, featuring
scenes from his old comedies,
Harold Lloyd's World of
Comedy and
The Funny
Side of Life.
The first film was premiered at the 1962
Cannes Film
Festival
, where Lloyd was feted as a major
rediscovery. The renewed interest in Lloyd helped restore
his status among film historians. Throughout his later years he
screened his films for audiences at special charity and educational
events, to great acclaim, and found a particularly receptive
audience among college audiences: "Their whole response was
tremendous because they didn't miss a gag; anything that was even a
little subtle, they got it right away".
Following his death, and after extensive negotiations, most of his
feature films were leased to
Time-Life
Films in 1974. As Tom Dardis confirms: "Time-Life prepared
horrendously edited musical-sound-track versions of the silent
films, which are intended to be shown on TV at sound speed, and
which represent everything that Harold feared would happen to his
best films".
Through the efforts of
Kevin Brownlow
and
David Gill and the
support of granddaughter
Suzanne
Lloyd Hayes, the British
Thames
Silents series re-released some of the feature films in the
early 1990s on home video, at corrected projection speeds and with
new orchestral scores by
Carl Davis. More
recently, the remainder of Lloyd's great silent features and many
shorts were fully restored, with new orchestral scores by Robert
Israel. These are now frequently shown on the
Turner Classic Movies (TCM) cable
channel. An acclaimed 1990
documentary (
Harold
Lloyd: The Third Genius) by Brownlow and Gill, which was shown
as part of the
PBS series
American Masters, also created a renewed
interest in Lloyd's work in the early 1990s.
A DVD Collection of restored versions of most of his
feature films (and his more important shorts) was released by
New Line Cinema in partnership with
the Harold Lloyd Trust in November 2005, along with limited
theatrical screenings in New York
and other
cities in the US, Canada and Europe. Annette Lloyd has also
said that if there is a large-enough show of support by fans, a
second collection may be released in the future .
Academy Award
In 1953, Lloyd received a special
Academy
Award for being a "master comedian and good citizen." The
second citation was a snub to Chaplin, who at that point had fallen
foul of
McCarthyism and who had had his
entry visa to the United States revoked. Regardless of political
aspects, Lloyd accepted the award in good spirit.
Death
Lloyd died
at age 77 from prostate cancer on
March 8, 1971, in
Beverly
Hills
, California
. He was interred in a crypt in the Great
Mausoleum at Forest Lawn Memorial Park
Cemetery
in Glendale, California
.
Walk of Fame
Harold
Lloyd has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
. His was only the fourth ceremony preserving
his handprints, footprints, autograph, and outline of his famed
glasses (which were actually a pair of sunglasses with the lenses
removed), at Grauman's Chinese Theatre
, in 1927. In 1994, he was honored with his
image on a
United States
postage stamp designed by caricaturist
Al Hirschfeld.
Tributes and references to Lloyd
- In the 1983 film Project A, actor
Jackie Chan performs several stunts
inspired by Lloyd's films, including a stunt where he hangs on to,
and eventually falls off from, the hands of a clock tower.
- In the opening scene of Back
to the Future, amongst the plethora of clocks in "Doc"
Brown's house, one featuring the tiny figure of Lloyd hanging from
the hands can be seen, and Doc Brown himself ends up hanging from
the hands of the Hill Valley clock tower by the end of the movie.
(Christopher Lloyd, who portrayed
Doc Brown, however, despite this coincidence, is of no relation to
Harold Lloyd.)
- Stanley Baxter's 1980 book
Stanley Baxter On Screen features a mock-up of Baxter as
Lloyd dangling from the clockface in Safety Last.
- In Sverrir Stormsker's song
Þú og
þeir Harold is mentioned along with many other famous
people. The song was Iceland's Tribute to the Eurovision Song
Contest in 1988.
Filmography
Autobiography and notable biographies
See also
References
- worldconnect.rootsweb.com
- Harold Lloyd
- "Harold LLoyd" "In 1949, Harold’s face graced the
cover of TIME Magazine as the Imperial Potentate of the Ancient
Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, their
highest-ranking position. He devoted an entire year to visiting 130
temples across the country giving speeches for over 700,000
Shriners. The last twenty years of his life he worked tirelessly
for the twenty-two Shriner Hospitals for Children and in the
1960’s, he was named President and Chairman of the Board."
External links