Traveling Salesman (1921 film)

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Traveling Salesman
File:Roscoe Arbuckle Traveling Salesman May 14 1921 Motion Picture News Page 2996.jpg
Traveling Salesman
Motion Picture News 5 14 1921
Directed by Joseph Henabery
Written by James Forbes (play: The Traveling Salesman)
Walter Woods
Starring Fatty Arbuckle
Cinematography Karl Brown
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release dates
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  • June 5, 1921 (1921-06-05)
Running time
5 reels; 4,514 feet
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

Traveling Salesman is a 1921 American comedy film starring Fatty Arbuckle. It is based on a 1908 play, The Traveling Salesman, by James Grant Forbes. A 1916 film of the play starred Frank McIntyre who had also starred in the play.[1][2] The survival status of both films is classified as unknown,[1] which suggests that they are lost films.

Plot

File:Traveling Salesman (1921).jpg
Film still with Clarke and Arbuckle

As described in a film publication,[3] Bob Blake (Arbuckle), a travelling salesman, is the victim of a practical joke and gets off the train before his intended destination of Grand River. Bob is drenched in the pouring rain and, when he cannot find lodging, breaks into a private house that the sheriff is going to sell for a tax delinquency. The house belongs to Beth Elliott (Clarke), a telegraph operator at Grand River Station. Bob looks her up so he can pay for his lodging and falls in love with her. Franklin Royce (Holland), also in love with Beth, is jealous of Bob and accepts a proposition from Martin Drury (Taylor) to trick Beth out of the proceeds of the tax sale. In the end, Bob saves the house and wins the girl.

Cast

See also

References

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  2. The Traveling Salesman as produced on Broadway at the Liberty Theatre (August 10, 1908) and the Gaiety Theatre (September 7, 1908) totaling 280 performances; IBDb.com
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External links