Jones and His New Neighbors
Jones and His New Neighbors is a 1909 American silent comedy film written by Frank E. Woods and directed by D. W. Griffith. Produced by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in New York City, the short stars John R. Cumpson, Florence Lawrence, and Anita Hendrie. It is one film in a series of 1908 and 1909 Biograph pictures in which Cumpson and Lawrence performed together as the married couple Mr. and Mrs. Jones. When this comedy was released in March 1909, it was distributed to theaters on a "split reel", which was a single projection reel that accommodated more than one motion picture. It shared its reel with another Biograph short directed by Griffith, the dramatic "thriller" The Medicine Bottle.
Original contact-print paper rolls of both motion pictures, as well as projectable safety-stock copies of them, are preserved in the Library of Congress.
Plot
The following summary of the comedy is published in the April 3, 1909 issue of the New York trade publication The Film Index:Additional details about the film's storyline are provided in another much later summary published in Kemp P. Niver's extensive 1985 reference Early Motion Pictures: The Paper Print Collection in the Library of Congress:
Cast
- John R. Cumpson as Mr. Eddie Jones
- Florence Lawrence as Mrs. Emma Jones
- Anita Hendrie as neighbor
- Mack Sennett as police officer
- Gertrude Robinson as the maid
- Owen Moore as extra in crowd
- Linda Arvidson as extra in crowd
- Anita Hendrie as extra in crowd
- Charles Avery as extra in crowd
- David Miles as extra in crowd
- Flora Finch as extra in crowd
- Charles Inslee as extra in crowd
- Gladys Egan in unverified role, likely another crowd extra
Production
The screenplay, written by Frank E. Woods, was produced at Biograph's main studio, which in 1909 was located inside a large renovated brownstone mansion in New York City, in Manhattan, at 11 East 14th Street. Filmed in two days, on February 24 and 25, director Griffith and cinematographer "Billy" Bitzer used interior sets at the studio and shot exterior scenes on location along Perry Street in the city, just a short distance west of Biograph's facility.Biograph's uncredited actors
Identifying cast members in early Biograph releases such as Jones and His New Neighbors is made more difficult by the fact that the studio, as a matter of company policy, did not begin publicly crediting its performers on screen, in trade publications, or in newspaper advertisements until years after this short's release. All the players in this short were unidentified in their roles on screen and in print, as were the rest of Biograph's relatively small staff of "photoplayers" and crew members in other productions at the time. When this comedy was released, Lawrence was already gaining widespread celebrity among filmgoers. Few people, though, outside the motion picture industry knew her name, so in 1909 and for the remainder of her time working at Biograph, the actress was referred to by admirers and in news articles in the media simply as "'the Biograph girl'". Biograph would not reveal the names of its actors nor post them on theater bills until 1913.Biograph's "Jonesy comedies", 1908-1909
Jones and His New Neighbors is the eighth film in a series of thirteen very popular Biograph comedy shorts that were written by Frank E. Woods in 1908 and 1909. Twelve of those films were directed by Griffith and starred the duo of Cumpson and Lawrence, who portrayed a married couple named "Mr. and Mrs. Bibbs" in their first screen performance together but thereafter as the husband and wife characters "Eddie and Emma Jones" for the rest of the series. Released between September 1908 and September 1909, all of the "Jonesy" films from that period feature Cumpson as the portly and frequently "bewildered" Mr. Jones and Florence Lawrence as his pretty, much younger spouse. The other shorts in the series with Cumpson and Lawrence are A Smoked Husband, Mr. Jones at the Ball, Mrs. Jones Entertains, Mr. Jones Has a Card Party, The Joneses Have Amateur Theatricals, His Wife's Mother, Jones and the Lady Book Agent, Her First Biscuits, The Peachbasket Hat, Jones' Burglar, and Mrs. Jones' Lover The general structure and comedic style of Jones and His New Neighbors replicated those found in all the releases in the series, common traits described by biographer Kelly R. Brown in her 1999 book Florence Lawrence, The Biograph Girl: America's First Movie Star. "The stories", Brown writes, "were pure slapstick comedy, straight from vaudeville, where usually a misunderstanding escalated into the kind of comic violence which audiences loved."According to Florence Lawrence, her screen partner Cumpson seemed ill-suited by temperament to be a comedian, especially a lead in Jones and His New Neighbors or in any of the other films in the series. Lawrence in 1915two years after Cumpson's deathdescribed working with him in an interview published in the widely read fan magazine Photoplay. In that interview she said she enjoyed performing with him at Biograph, and "Mrs. Jones" also provided some insight into the success of this film and the others in the series:
Release and reception
After its release on March 29, 1909, the film and its split-reel companion circulated to theaters throughout the United States and continued to be promoted for weeks in film-industry publications and then into the early months of 1910 by newspapers in small, remote communities. A reviewer of the short in the April 3 issue of the New York trade journal The Moving Picture World found the neighborhood "complications" caused by Mr. Jones' confused antics "funny even if overdone."Only two days after the film's release, it was already being screened far from New York, in Ogden, Utah. The Orpheum Theatre there on March 31 informed the readers of the local newspaper that yet another "Jones" film had arrived, announcing "Here's a chance to laugh. Mr. Jones is with us again in Jones And His New Neighbors." The same week, in Virginia, The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram informed local moviegoers about the short's screening at the Arcade Theatre. Recycling comments about the comedy published in the March 27, 1909 issue of The Moving Picture World, the newspaper asked, "We are wont to say poor Jones, but are we sincere?" "For if it wasn't for Jones' misfortunes", the paper noted, "we would miss many a hearty laugh." In West Virginia a month later, the Dixie Theatre in Fairmont, invited residents to come see "our favorites, Mr. and Mrs. Jones, in a laughable comedy to splendid advantage"
Then, over eight months later and more than 3,400 miles northwest of Fairmont, theatrical copies of Jones and His New Neighbors and its companion short The Medicine Bottle arrived in the United States territory of Alaska, in the port town of Skagway. There the comedy was advertised on January 27, 1910, in The Daily Alaskan, which labels it a "screaming farce" and encourages readers to see it the next night at the local Elks' Hall. The Skagway newspaper, however, in its advertisement mistitles Jones and His New Neighbors and lists it instead as "Mr. Jones in the Wong House".