Silver Dollar (film)
Silver Dollar | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alfred E. Green |
Written by | Carl Erickson Harvey F. Thew |
Based on | Silver Dollar 1932 novel by David Karsner |
Starring | Edward G. Robinson Bebe Daniels Aline MacMahon |
Cinematography | James Van Trees |
Edited by | George Marks |
Music by | Milan Roder |
Production company | First National Pictures |
Distributed by | First National Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 78–84 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Silver Dollar is a 1932 American pre-Code biographical film starring Edward G. Robinson, Bebe Daniels and Aline MacMahon. Based on David Karsner's biography of the same name, it tells the story of the rise and fall of Horace Tabor (renamed Yates Martin), a silver tycoon in 19th century Colorado.[1]
A copy is preserved in the Library of Congress.[2]
Plot
[edit]Kansas farmer Yates Martin uproots his uncomplaining wife Sarah and baby son to 1876 Colorado in search of gold. He buys a claim, then immediately abandons it when two prospectors tell him of a strike in Leadville. Taking Sarah's prudent advice, he sets up a store there. To her dismay, however, he stakes miners in return for partnerships in their diggings. Just as the Martins run out of money and decide to return to Kansas, prospectors Rische and Hook show up with the news that they have struck it rich, not with gold but with silver, and Yates has a third share of it.
Yates spends his new-found riches with great abandon, purchasing, among other things, a claim from a seemingly downtrodden miner for $50,000, over his suspicious wife's objections. He is asked to run for Lieutenant Governor of Colorado. When his foreman informs him that the claim he bought is worthless, Yates tells him to keep on digging, at least until the election is over, so that he will not look like a fool. As it turns out, not only does he win the election, the claim yields a lode even richer than his first.
Yates decides to build Denver an opulent opera house. As he is inspecting its construction, he meets the alluring Lily Owens, who becomes his mistress. At the grand opening of the opera house, Yates' guest of honor is none other than General Ulysses S. Grant.
Yates sets his sights higher, using his money to take the vacated seat of a U.S. senator. He divorces a heartbroken Sarah and marries Lily in Washington, DC, with the President as a wedding guest.
However, when the president decides to put the country on the gold standard, the price of silver plummets, and Yates loses everything except the Matchless mine, which is not worth working at the current price. He declines Sarah's offer of money. A friend obtains the post of postmaster of Denver for him, but Yates collapses and dies penniless.
Cast
[edit]- Edward G. Robinson as Yates Martin
- Bebe Daniels as Lily Owens Martin
- Aline MacMahon as Sarah Martin
- DeWitt Jennings as George, the Mine Foreman
- Robert Warwick as Colonel Stanton
- Russell Simpson as Hamlin
- Harry Holman as Adams
- Charles Middleton as Jenkins
- Emmett Corrigan as President Chester A. Arthur
- Christian Rub as Rische
- Lee Kohlmar as Hook
- Wade Boteler as Mike, a Miner
- Leon Ames as Secretary (uncredited)
- Charles Coleman as Butler (uncredited)
- Walter Long as Miner (uncredited)
- Walter Rodgers as General Ulysses S. Grant (uncredited)
References
[edit]- ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: Silver Dollar
- ^ Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress page 166 c.1978 by The American Film Institute
External links
[edit]- 1932 films
- American black-and-white films
- Films based on biographies
- Films directed by Alfred E. Green
- First National Pictures films
- Films set in Colorado
- Films about mining
- Cultural depictions of Ulysses S. Grant
- Cultural depictions of Chester A. Arthur
- Films set in the 19th century
- American historical drama films
- 1930s historical drama films
- 1932 drama films
- 1930s English-language films
- 1930s American films
- English-language historical drama films