Number, Please?
Brief Synopsis
In this silent film, a young man chases his girlfriend's dog around a seaside resort.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Hal Roach
Director
Harold Lloyd
Mildred Davis
Roy Brooks
Walter Lundin
Cinematographer
Hal Roach
Producer
Film Details
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Short
Release Date
1920
Technical Specs
Duration
26m
Synopsis
In this silent film, a young man chases his girlfriend's dog around a seaside resort.
Film Details
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Short
Release Date
1920
Technical Specs
Duration
26m
Articles
Number, Please?
It begins as the tale of faded romance -- "an old, old story of men who have loved, lost and tried to forget," according to a solemn introductory title. But the dour tone suddenly shifts when the Boy (Lloyd) spots the Girl who spurned him (Mildred Davis) promenading at a seaside amusement park. The Boy launches a last-ditch effort to win the Girl back from the Rival (Roy Brooks), and the boardwalk attractions (roller coaster, games of skill, funhouse mirrors, and carousel) all provide springboards for Lloyd's trademark brand of congenial comedy.
The Girl promises to share a balloon ride with whichever suitor can win her mother's consent, which sparks a madcap race to reach the would-be mother-in-law. The Rival travels by motorcar while the tech-savvy protagonist opts for the telephone, which leads to a series of telecommunication snafus and frustrating encounters with disinterested operators (phenomena to which 21st-century viewers can still relate). In Harold Lloyd's universe, the laws of nature and the wonders of technology may pose pitfalls, but these are minor obstacles in the face of the wit and determination of a love-happy all-American youth.
Just before the romantic rivals cross the finish line to the Girl's heart, a sneak-thief pinches her purse, which undergoes a rapid-fire changing of hands that brings the rollicking comedy to a rousing conclusion.
The amusement park scenes were shot on the boardwalk of Ernest Pickering's Ocean Park (aka Pickering Pier, later known as Pacific Ocean Park) in Santa Monica.
Number, Please? was one of the last Lloyd films directed by comedy producer Hal Roach. The success of the Lloyd comedies (earning upwards of $200,000) enabled Roach to negotiate higher advances from the distributor (Pathé). This, in turn, allowed him to transition from a hands-on-the-camera approach to filmmaking to a more supervisory -- almost curatorial -- role at his independent production company. As studio head (not mere director), Roach was able to cultivate the talents of Charley Chase, Harry Langdon, Laurel and Hardy, and the Our Gang kids.
The film was co-directed by Fred Newmeyer, who went on to helm a number of other Lloyd pictures, including the classic Safety Last! (1923) and The Freshman (1925), both co-directed with Sam Taylor.
In his biography Harold Lloyd: The Man on the Clock Tom Dardis observed that Lloyd tended to downplay the contributions of his behind-the-scenes collaborators, and implied that he essentially directed the films himself. In discussing directorial credit, Lloyd told an audience, decades later, at the American Film Institute, "My thinking was this: that I was getting all the credit I needed by being the main comic, and the audience was giving me the full credit. Why did I have to have the credit for doing the direction?... So it was good for the boys; it helped them."
This was not mere vanity. In the book The Parade's Gone By, silent film historian Kevin Brownlow concurred that the actor's role was greater than it appeared: "Harold Lloyd, with Chaplin and Keaton, was one of the three supreme masters of the comedy film. And like Chaplin and Keaton, he was not merely an actor but a creator. He closely supervised every stage of his productions and was responsible for much of the direction."
Dardis revealed a little-known detail about Lloyd's off-camera psychology: that he was plagued by particular compulsion. "He believed that he had to leave a building, any building, by the door through which he had entered; this was just as applicable to a sports stadium as to a private house. In the years of his great mansion, Greenacres, if his car of the day was parked in the front drive, his chauffeur knew that he would have to back it around the center fountain; only then could he drive away. Whenever Harold went somewhere by car, he had to return by precisely the same route. He was inflexible about these matters."
Lloyd continued to co-star with Mildred Davis in such films as Grandma's Boy (1922) and Safety Last!. On February 10, 1923, they were married at St. John's Episcopal Church in Los Angeles. Although writer Annette D'Agostino Lloyd (no relation) noted that "there was absolutely no hint of any romantic involvement between the two" prior to the announcement, Lloyd and Davis remained married until Davis's death on August 18, 1969.
Being Lloyd's wife apparently disqualified Davis from being his co-star. The "Girl" role was promptly handed over to twenty-three-year-old Jobyna Ralston, who played the love interest in six of his features. Davis appeared in a handful of non-Lloyd films, but soon disappeared from the screen.
The African-American who serves as the Boy's accomplice at the climax of Number, Please? was Ernest Morrison. Known to viewers of the day as "Sunshine Sammy," Morrison was one of the original Our Gang kids, and later became one of the East Side Kids, a low-budget spin-off of the Dead End Kids.
Director: Hal Roach, Fred Newmeyer
Producer: Hal Roach
Screenplay: H.M. Walker (titles)
Music: Robert Israel
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The Girl), Roy Brooks (The Rival), Ernest "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison (accomplice).
BW-25m.
by Bret Wood
Number, Please?
Slapstick master Harold Lloyd demonstrates his gift for breezy comedy in the 1920 two-reel short Number, Please?
It begins as the tale of faded romance -- "an old, old story of men who have loved, lost and tried to forget," according to a solemn introductory title. But the dour tone suddenly shifts when the Boy (Lloyd) spots the Girl who spurned him (Mildred Davis) promenading at a seaside amusement park. The Boy launches a last-ditch effort to win the Girl back from the Rival (Roy Brooks), and the boardwalk attractions (roller coaster, games of skill, funhouse mirrors, and carousel) all provide springboards for Lloyd's trademark brand of congenial comedy.
The Girl promises to share a balloon ride with whichever suitor can win her mother's consent, which sparks a madcap race to reach the would-be mother-in-law. The Rival travels by motorcar while the tech-savvy protagonist opts for the telephone, which leads to a series of telecommunication snafus and frustrating encounters with disinterested operators (phenomena to which 21st-century viewers can still relate). In Harold Lloyd's universe, the laws of nature and the wonders of technology may pose pitfalls, but these are minor obstacles in the face of the wit and determination of a love-happy all-American youth.
Just before the romantic rivals cross the finish line to the Girl's heart, a sneak-thief pinches her purse, which undergoes a rapid-fire changing of hands that brings the rollicking comedy to a rousing conclusion.
The amusement park scenes were shot on the boardwalk of Ernest Pickering's Ocean Park (aka Pickering Pier, later known as Pacific Ocean Park) in Santa Monica.
Number, Please? was one of the last Lloyd films directed by comedy producer Hal Roach. The success of the Lloyd comedies (earning upwards of $200,000) enabled Roach to negotiate higher advances from the distributor (Pathé). This, in turn, allowed him to transition from a hands-on-the-camera approach to filmmaking to a more supervisory -- almost curatorial -- role at his independent production company. As studio head (not mere director), Roach was able to cultivate the talents of Charley Chase, Harry Langdon, Laurel and Hardy, and the Our Gang kids.
The film was co-directed by Fred Newmeyer, who went on to helm a number of other Lloyd pictures, including the classic Safety Last! (1923) and The Freshman (1925), both co-directed with Sam Taylor.
In his biography Harold Lloyd: The Man on the Clock Tom Dardis observed that Lloyd tended to downplay the contributions of his behind-the-scenes collaborators, and implied that he essentially directed the films himself. In discussing directorial credit, Lloyd told an audience, decades later, at the American Film Institute, "My thinking was this: that I was getting all the credit I needed by being the main comic, and the audience was giving me the full credit. Why did I have to have the credit for doing the direction?... So it was good for the boys; it helped them."
This was not mere vanity. In the book The Parade's Gone By, silent film historian Kevin Brownlow concurred that the actor's role was greater than it appeared: "Harold Lloyd, with Chaplin and Keaton, was one of the three supreme masters of the comedy film. And like Chaplin and Keaton, he was not merely an actor but a creator. He closely supervised every stage of his productions and was responsible for much of the direction."
Dardis revealed a little-known detail about Lloyd's off-camera psychology: that he was plagued by particular compulsion. "He believed that he had to leave a building, any building, by the door through which he had entered; this was just as applicable to a sports stadium as to a private house. In the years of his great mansion, Greenacres, if his car of the day was parked in the front drive, his chauffeur knew that he would have to back it around the center fountain; only then could he drive away. Whenever Harold went somewhere by car, he had to return by precisely the same route. He was inflexible about these matters."
Lloyd continued to co-star with Mildred Davis in such films as Grandma's Boy (1922) and Safety Last!. On February 10, 1923, they were married at St. John's Episcopal Church in Los Angeles. Although writer Annette D'Agostino Lloyd (no relation) noted that "there was absolutely no hint of any romantic involvement between the two" prior to the announcement, Lloyd and Davis remained married until Davis's death on August 18, 1969.
Being Lloyd's wife apparently disqualified Davis from being his co-star. The "Girl" role was promptly handed over to twenty-three-year-old Jobyna Ralston, who played the love interest in six of his features. Davis appeared in a handful of non-Lloyd films, but soon disappeared from the screen.
The African-American who serves as the Boy's accomplice at the climax of Number, Please? was Ernest Morrison. Known to viewers of the day as "Sunshine Sammy," Morrison was one of the original Our Gang kids, and later became one of the East Side Kids, a low-budget spin-off of the Dead End Kids.
Director: Hal Roach, Fred Newmeyer
Producer: Hal Roach
Screenplay: H.M. Walker (titles)
Music: Robert Israel
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The Girl), Roy Brooks (The Rival), Ernest "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison (accomplice).
BW-25m.
by Bret Wood
Number, Please?
Number, Please? was directed by Lloyd's business partner Hal Roach (who can be seen playing a bit part as a sailor at the very beginning of the picture), but it's worth noting the presence of Fred Newmeyer, the co-director of the picture. Lloyd and Newmeyer were boyhood associates in Colorado. Shortly after schooling, they took very different paths. Lloyd went into show business. Newmeyer became a professional baseball pitcher, eventually playing for the Philadelphia Athletics under famed coach Connie Mack. Unfortunately, an injury cut short Newmeyer's career and he ended up in California, working for his old friend Harold Lloyd. Newmeyer co-directed many of Lloyd's films, and also was the solo director on such efforts as Grandma's Boy (1922), one of Lloyd's personal favorites.
One of Harold's co-stars from Haunted Spooks (1920) and Get Out and Get Under (1920), Ernest "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison, appears in Number, Please? in a bit part. He and Harold pull off one of the best visual gags of the film. When Harold is trying to throw some cops off his trail, he enlists a valet (Morrison) to sit upon his shoulders with an overcoat. Thus, this tiny-headed giant would pass unnoticed by the police, or at least that was the plan.
Number, Please? is another example of how Harold Lloyd's films are a time capsule into a time and place long since forgotten. This short takes place in a popular amusement attraction in Los Angeles, California called Ocean Park. Long since gone, Ocean Park was centered around a pier that jutted out into the Pacific Ocean, just north of Venice Beach. The Ocean Park structures seen in Number, Please? were consumed by a fire just four years later in 1924.
Producer: Hal Roach
Director: Fred C. Newmeyer, Hal Roach
Screenplay: H. M. Walker
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Music: Robert Israel
Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The Girl), Roy Brooks (The Rival).
BW-25m.
by Scott McGee
Number, Please?
In the two-reel comedy Number, Please? (1920), Harold Lloyd, playing his typical role as "The Boy," tries vainly to forget about the girl he has lost by taking in a day at a local amusement park. The camera iris opens on Harold riding a roller coaster, which was an impressive feat, since the camera was also on the roller coaster. But then Harold sees "The Girl" (Mildred Davis) with her new boyfriend, "The Rival," played by Roy Brooks. When her dog gets loose in the park, both suitors have to help her catch it in the first set piece of comedy in the two-reel short. Then, the girl's uncle, a balloonist, gives her a pass for two in his balloon, provided that her mother approves. The Girl then offers to take along the first of her admirers who is able to get her mother's consent. This sets off the second piece of business in the comedy short: Harold's attempt to make a simple phone call to secure permission from the girl's mother.
Number, Please? was directed by Lloyd's business partner Hal Roach (who can be seen playing a bit part as a sailor at the very beginning of the picture), but it's worth noting the presence of Fred Newmeyer, the co-director of the picture. Lloyd and Newmeyer were boyhood associates in Colorado. Shortly after schooling, they took very different paths. Lloyd went into show business. Newmeyer became a professional baseball pitcher, eventually playing for the Philadelphia Athletics under famed coach Connie Mack. Unfortunately, an injury cut short Newmeyer's career and he ended up in California, working for his old friend Harold Lloyd. Newmeyer co-directed many of Lloyd's films, and also was the solo director on such efforts as Grandma's Boy (1922), one of Lloyd's personal favorites.
One of Harold's co-stars from Haunted Spooks (1920) and Get Out and Get Under (1920), Ernest "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison, appears in Number, Please? in a bit part. He and Harold pull off one of the best visual gags of the film. When Harold is trying to throw some cops off his trail, he enlists a valet (Morrison) to sit upon his shoulders with an overcoat. Thus, this tiny-headed giant would pass unnoticed by the police, or at least that was the plan.
Number, Please? is another example of how Harold Lloyd's films are a time capsule into a time and place long since forgotten. This short takes place in a popular amusement attraction in Los Angeles, California called Ocean Park. Long since gone, Ocean Park was centered around a pier that jutted out into the Pacific Ocean, just north of Venice Beach. The Ocean Park structures seen in Number, Please? were consumed by a fire just four years later in 1924.
Producer: Hal Roach
Director: Fred C. Newmeyer, Hal Roach
Screenplay: H. M. Walker
Cinematography: Walter Lundin
Music: Robert Israel
Cast: Harold Lloyd (The Boy), Mildred Davis (The Girl), Roy Brooks (The Rival).
BW-25m.
by Scott McGee