In 2012, Syracuse CineFest screened the Library of Congress’ copy of The Street of Forgotten Men. It was the film’s first screening since a showing at Pordenone in Italy in the 1990’s. This essay, “Remembering The Street of Forgotten Men” by Thomas Gladysz, appeared in the Syracuse CineFest 2012 program. (The images which accompany the essay did not accompany the essay’s original publication.)
Remembering The Street of Forgotten Men
by Thomas Gladysz
Described at the time as “strange and startling” and “a drama of places and of people you have never seen before,” The Street of Forgotten Men tells the story of a gang of professional beggars whose underworld headquarters is known as a “cripple factory.” Led by the colorfully named Easy Money Charlie (played by Percy Marmont), the gang preys on public sympathy by disfiguring themselves and feigning various disabilities.
The Street of Forgotten Men also tells the story of a Bowery Cinderella, played by winsome Mary Brian, whose life is linked to these con artists as well as to a young millionaire, played by handsome Neil Hamilton.
Set in the Bowery and shot in part on the streets of New York City, the film is a mix of old-fashioned melodrama and gritty realism. It was based on a short story by George Kibbe Turner, a muckraking journalist and novelist of the time. In its review of the film, the New York Daily News stated “The Street of Forgotten Men dips into the dark pools of life. It shows you the beggars of life — apologies to Jim Tully — and in showing them it shows them up.” On the other coast, the San Francisco Bulletin noted “For fine dramatic detail, for unusualness, for giving us a glimpse into a world we never see and into the other sides of characters we simply pass in pity on the streets, The Street of Forgotten Men is a photoplay revelation.”
The film’s most unusual scenes occur when this band of beggars check into work and are fitted with fake bandages, artificial arms and legs, false high heeled shoes and other trick paraphernalia for the luring of sympathetic coins into battered tin cups. Canes and crutches along with signs that read “I Am Blind” and “Please help a cripple” lend atmosphere to the group’s “changing room.” According to studio press sheets, a mendicant officer and 20-year veteran of the Brooklyn Bureau of Charity served as adviser for scenes shot inside the dingy cripple factory.
Though the film and its source material was a look back at the Bowery and the practices of the down-and-out, a 1926 article in the New York Times reported that the film may have in turn inspired a group of fake beggars. “The police are investigating the speakeasy. It was recalled that several months ago a motion picture, The Street of Forgotten Men, . . . showed just such an establishment for equipping ‘cripples’ as that described by Williams, and the police thought the movie idea might have been put to practical use.”
Aside from its strangeness, there is much to recommend in The Street of Forgotten Men. The film was shot in the Astoria studios on Long Island, as well as on location in 1925 New York City. One memorable scene — when Marmont and Brian come across the character known as Bridgeport White-Eye — was filmed on a busy Fifth Avenue near Saint Patrick’s Cathedral. Shot with a concealed camera, the unaware crowds passing on the street along with images of shops and businesses from long ago — including a vegetarian restaurant — prove striking. According to press reports from the time — which should be taken with a grain of salt, the appearance of pathetic-looking actors dressed in disheveled attire drew spontaneous donations from passers-by not realizing a motion picture was being filmed. Another memorable scene with a good deal of local color takes place at the still standing Little Church Around the Corner on East 29th.
Two performers not listed in the film’s credits also made their mark in The Street of Forgotten Men. One was a dog named Lassie. (This bull terrier-cocker spaniel mix predated the more famous Collie.) A 1927 New York Times article about the canine stated, “It is said that the death of Lassie in The Street of Forgotten Men was so impressive that persons were convinced that she must have been cruelly beaten. Her master, Emery Bronte, said that the dog seemed to enjoy acting in the scenes, and that after each ‘take’ she went over to Mr. Brenon and cocked her head on the side, as if asking for a pat or two.” Regrettably, one of the seven reels of The Street of Forgotten Men is missing, and not all of Lassie’s scenes are extant.
The other performer who made an impression was Louise Brooks, who was dancing with the Ziegfeld Follies when she agreed to play a bit part in The Street of Forgotten Men. Though not credited, the film marked her screen debut. As a moll, Brooks’ role was slight – she appears on screen for only about 5 minutes. Nevertheless, her brief role drew the attention of an anonymous Los Angeles Times reviewer who singled out the actress when they wrote, “And there was a little rowdy, obviously attached to the ‘blind’ man, who did some vital work during her few short scenes.” This was Brooks’ first film review.
Like the film, the director of The Street of Forgotten Men has fallen into the shadows of history. Herbert Brenon enjoyed a long career which lasted from 1912 to 1940, but today he is one of those early directors who is largely forgotten though deserving of greater recognition. The Street of Forgotten Men was shot shortly after Brenon made the film for which he is best remembered, Peter Pan (1924). His other notable efforts include The Spanish Dancer (1923) with Pola Negri, Dancing Mothers (1926) with Clara Bow, Beau Geste (1926), The Great Gatsby (1926), God Gave Me Twenty Cents (1926), and Laugh, Clown, Laugh (1928) with Lon Chaney. All were hits.
Though now little known, The Street of Forgotten Men was well regarded in its day. Marmont, a leading star of the silent era, was singled out for his exceptional Lon Chaney-like performance, and director Brenon was praised for his realistic depiction of Bowery life. The National Board of Review named the film one of the best pictures of 1925, and it was picked as one of the best of the year by newspapers around the country.