Our Friends, the Hayseeds is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It centers on the rural family, the Hayseeds, and their rivalry with a neighbouring family, the Duggans.
It was Smith's first movie as a director and was a popular success at the box office, leading to a number of sequels. However no known copy of it exists today and it is considered a lost film.
Synopsis
The Hayseeds and Duggans live on selections next to each other. Joe Hayseed and Pansy Duggan want to get married but their families quarrel when the Hayseeds' cow gets into the Duggan's corn and they are forbidden to see each other.
The two families have a brawl on the bush fence, a fight that only ends in exhaustion. However, a bush fire unites them and Jim and Pansy marry. Pansy falls pregnant and Dad Hayseed and Dad Duggan both hope for a boy which will be named after them. She ends up giving birth to twin girls.[5][6]
The film was divided into four sections: the first two dealing with a day in the life of the Hayseeds; the last two under the title "Pansy's Wooing" with Joe and Pansy's courtship.[1] A contemporary reviewer said that of the film's 5,000 foot length, 1,000 feet was dedicated to humorous titles.[7]
Smith was a theatrical manager touring Adelaide with some shows. He was losing money and decided to pivote to filmmaking. According to Everyones "tt was hot —as only it can be in Adelaide —and on a Sabbath that Beau Smith with a little debit balance against him in his theatrical ventures —drove out to Paradise with a team of actors —there to commence the first of the “Hayseeds” series which was finally to lure him from the stage to the screen."[9]
While shooting the bushfire scene off the side of a hill at Campbelltown, the fire got out of control and momentarily trapped the actors. According to contemporary press reports, "they came out of that fire black as coal heavers, almost blind with smoke, and singed badly. Their faces were a study of horror and fear, and that heartless photographer turned the handle all the time. But he got a most realistic picture."[10]
Filming finished on Thursday 1 February 1917 and the film was previewed for local cinema owners in Adelaide the following morning.[11][12]
Reception
The film was previewed in Sydney on 28 February 1917.[13]
It was commercially released in Sydney in March, then rolled out throughout the rest of Australia over 1917.
Critical
The Adelaide Mail said of the film that "the tone was pleasing, and made an undeniably good impression on those who witnessed it... the film is splendidly put together. It contains but little plot, most of the scenes presenting incidents of everyday life. Some of the scenes, however, are a little drawn-out, particularly the fight between the Hayseed and Duggan families."[1]
The Adelaide Register called it "a clever study".[14]
The Adelaide Journal wrote "it gives a remarkably vivid conception of a settler's hardships and vicissitudes. Many of the scenes are familiar, but they have been connected by Mr. Beaumont Smith in a telling manner, and he has woven an interesting story around the incidents of backblocks life."[11]
The Adelaide Advertiser wrote "As Dad Hayseed Mr. Roy Redgrave is beyond criticism. He is the cocky farmer of the comedy stage, even to the gait and his indifference to appearances."[15]
The Bulletin said, "The story is genuinely Australian, with its pictures of the slaves to Cow, the quarrel of neighbors over straying Cow, and the reconciliation
when all hands are called in to help at a bushfire on the land of one of the quarrellers."[16]
The Sydney Morning Herald said the film contained "rugged types of character are pressed into service which need no introduction to those who have read or seen On Our Selection, The Waybacks and While the Billy Boils. Nearly all the episodes are in the open, and the photography is remarkably good."[4]
Box office
In May 1917 Table Talk reported the film had "been doing good business in Sydney fior the past two months".[17]
In July 1917 another writer from The Bulletin stated the film "is having as successful a run in the country as any other all-Australian production, though the exaggeration is silently resented. The general setting is right, but the family fights and clumsy capers of the principals are all wrong. As a typical Hayseed Duggan wouldn’t earn tuppence, while old Dad would figure better as a retired American multimillionaire."[18]
Box office response was strong and there were a number of sequels starting with The Hayseeds Come to Sydney. It was the first feature from theatrical entrepreneur Beaumont Smith who went on to become one of Australia's most prolific filmmakers of the silent era.
In July 1920 it was announced the series was to be re-released after having been withdrawn for twelve months.[19]
In 1925 a profile on Smith in Everyone's magazine stated, the film "is still asked for in the country and were it possible to re-issue this film —it is now ten years or more since it was taken —it would still have a popular appeal."[9] The following year the same paper wrote "Beau made more ambitious productions after that; five, six and seven reelers; but I might not be far out in guessing that none of them returned any- where near an equal percentage of profit on the original investment."[20]
^"WADDINGTON'S FEATURES". Sunday Times. No. 1625. New South Wales, Australia. 11 March 1917. p. 28. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"THE OLD ORDER". The Referee. Sydney. 7 February 1917. p. 14. Retrieved 13 October 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
^ ab"AMUSEMENTS". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 24, 696. New South Wales, Australia. 1 March 1917. p. 9. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"AN ADELAIDE PHOTOPLAY". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. LIV, no. 16, 045. South Australia. 2 February 1917. p. 4 (SPECIAL WAR EDITION). Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^ ab""THE HAYSEEDS."". The Journal. Vol. LII, no. 14235. South Australia. 2 February 1917. p. 1 (SPECIAL SPORTS EDITION). Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"OUR FRIENDS—THE HAYSEEDS'". Daily Herald. Vol. 7, no. 2145. South Australia. 3 February 1917. p. 7. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"AMUSEMENTS". The Daily Telegraph. No. 11796. New South Wales, Australia. 1 March 1917. p. 6. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^""THE HAYSEEDS."". The Register (Adelaide). Vol. LXXXII, no. 21, 915. South Australia. 3 February 1917. p. 7. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"AN ADELAIDE PHOTOPLAY". The Advertiser. Vol. LIX, no. 18, 193. South Australia. 3 February 1917. p. 11. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"AT POVERTY POINT.", The Bulletin, Sydney, N.S.W: John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 22 February 1917, nla.obj-665534759, retrieved 20 July 2024 – via Trove
^"On and Off the Stage". Table Talk. No. 1659. Victoria, Australia. 10 May 1917. p. 12. Retrieved 20 July 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
^"AT POVERTY POINT.", The Bulletin, Sydney, N.S.W: John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 26 July 1917, nla.obj-696844021, retrieved 20 July 2024 – via Trove
^"THE SCREEN", Everyones., Sydney: Everyones Ltd, 21 July 1920, nla.obj-556982404, retrieved 24 August 2024 – via Trove