The Bishop of the Ozarks
The Bishop of the Ozarks is a 1923 American drama silent film directed by Finis Fox. The film is based on a story by Milford W. Howard, who both produced and starred in the feature. The film was distributed by Film Booking Offices of America, commonly referred to as FBO. The film is presumed lost.
Cast
- Milford W. Howard – Roger Chapman and Tom Sullivan
- Derelys Perdue – Margery Chapman
- Cecil Holland – Dr. Earl Godfrey
- William Kenton – Dr. Paul Burroughs
- R.D. MacLean – Governor of Alabama
- Mrs. Milo Adams – Shepherd woman
- Rosa Melville – Mrs. Jack Armstead
- Fred Kelsey – Mart Stoneman
- George Reed – Simon
Background
Milford W. Howard, who wrote and produced the film, was a United States representative from Alabama from 1894 to 1898, before moving to California in 1918. While still in Alabama, Howard wrote If Christ Came to Congress, an exposé of corruption, published again in 1964, and The American Plutocracy, a novel about "two classes of people...the excessively rich and the abject poor". According to the Cedar Rapids Tribune, the screenplay was due to be published as a novel following the picture's release. Howard returned to Alabama in 1923, and after the death of his first wife, he remarried and traveled to Europe where he interviewed Benito Mussolini of Italy. The interview altered his political philosophy, causing him to endorse fascism. Howard's last book published was Fascism: A Challenge to Democracy, in 1928.The Bishop of the Ozarks was the only film produced by the Cosmopolitan Film Company, not to be confused with Cosmopolitan Films or Cosmopolitan Productions. Copyright documents on file at the Library of Congress show the film was registered by the R-C Pictures Corporation, which has been suggested was the holding company of Cosmopolitan.
Cecil Holland, who portrayed Dr. Godfrey, went on to become one of the earliest makeup-men in Hollywood. Holland's work in makeup can be seen in The Mask of Fu Manchu, and The Wizard of Oz. Holland would later head up the makeup department at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and also authored the book, The Art of Make-up for Stage and Screen.