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L-KO Kompany

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The L-KO Kompany, or L-KO Komedies, was an American motion picture company founded by Henry Lehrman that produced silent one-, two- and very occasionally three-reel comedy shorts between 1914 and 1919. The initials L-KO stand for "Lehrman KnockOut".

History

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Silent film star Eva Novak had her film debut with L-KO Kompany in Roped into Scandal (1917). Another of her films with L-KO, The Sign of the Cucumber, survives.

By the spring of 1914, Henry "Pathé" Lehrman had directed several important Keystone Cops comedies including The Bangville Police (1913) and Kid Auto Races at Venice (1914), Charlie Chaplin's debut. Wooed away from Mack Sennett by producer Fred J. Balshofer,[1] Lehrman left Keystone, along with star performer Ford Sterling, to found Sterling Comedies under the umbrella of the Universal Film and Manufacturing Co., later Universal Pictures. After a relatively short time, Lehrman was fired from Sterling Comedies and founded L-KO as a separate unit within Universal.

L-KO's first comedy star was veteran English comic Billie Ritchie, who had played the role of the drunk in Fred Karno's stage production A Night in the English Music Hall before Chaplin did. Ritchie made his film debut in the first L-KO production, Love and Surgery, which was released October 25, 1914. Also making their first films in this venture were Gertrude Selby, a comedian who became the main female foil in L-KO comedies, and Fatty Voss, L-KO's answer to Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle. Louise Orth, who had appeared in some Biograph comedies and would go on to appear in many L-KO's, was also aboard for the first release. Before long this group of performers was joined by Hank Mann[2] and other disaffected talent from Mack Sennett's "fun factory," such as Alice Howell, Harry Gribbon and ultimately Mack Swain, whose "Ambrose" character continued at L-KO for a time. Henry Bergman had made one picture with Phillips Smalley before turning up at L-KO; not long after he would join Charlie Chaplin's regular troupe of character actors.

Lehrman proved even more frugal with budget than Sennett had been, and he favored a rough-and-tumble style of slapstick that reputedly resulted in injury. Author Kalton C. Lahue reported that there were stunt persons and bit players of the time who would not answer a call from L-KO owing to the possibility of danger;[3] stuntman Harvey Parry referred to him as '"Suicide" Lehrman.'[4] Lehrman eventually brought on directors John G. Blystone, Harry Edwards and David Kirkland to help raise the total output of L-KO, but stingily refused to award directors credit for L-KO films.

As the result of yet another dispute—this time with executives at Universal—Lehrman left L-KO towards the end of 1916 and took over the Sunshine Comedies unit at Fox. After Lehrman's departure, L-KO was taken over by Julius and Abe Stern -- brothers-in-law to Universal's founder Carl Laemmle -- and they named John G. Blystone director-in-chief.[5] Blystone headed L-KO for a few months but he ultimately went to Fox Sunshine as well. L-KO nonetheless kept going for quite some time and proved a valuable training ground for new or developing comedy talent. Director Charles Parrott, better known as Charley Chase, came onto the L-KO lot in August 1918 and directed a few subjects through to near the end of L-KO's existence. Dapper comic Raymond Griffith made his film debut at L-KO in 1915 and comedian Eva Novak did so in 1917. Even Fatty Voss managed to direct one two-reeler, Fatty's Feature Fillum, just before his untimely death in 1917. He, thus, spent his entire film career at L-KO.

What finally brought around the end of L-KO was not Lehrman's departure, nor declining receipts for L-KO's product, but an outbreak of Spanish flu on the lot, which forced Universal to shut the whole studio down. L-KO's last release, An Oriental Romeo (1919) starring Chinese funnyman Chai Hong, was released on September 24, 1919, though the studio had already been closed for good in May.

Legacy

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While L-KO never had a break-out star as prominent as Charlie Chaplin, in nearly every other way it was successful in competing with Keystone; moreover, as Mack Sennett broke with the Triangle Film Corporation in July, 1917, L-KO managed to outlast Keystone by a year. However, it remains an extremely obscure Silent Comedy brand. Although L-KO produced around 300 titles in its five-year existence; little more than 10 percent of these films are known to exist today. Given Lehrman's preference for violent sight gags and Ritchie's confrontational style of humor, surviving L-KO films stand as some of the edgiest and darkest entries in the annals of American Silent Comedy.

Confirmed extant (and Lost) films

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Title Release Date Director Star Notes
Love and Surgery October 25, 1914 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie Survives
Partners in Crime November 1, 1914 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie Survives
The Fatal Marriage November 8, 1914 Henry Lehrman (Uncofirmed) Billie Ritchie Lost
Lizzy’s Escape November 11, 1914 Henry Lehrman (Uncofirmed) Billie Ritchie Lost
The Groom’s Doom November 22, 1914 Billie Ritchie Lost
The Blighted Spaniard November 29, 1914 Lost
Fido's Dramatic Career December 6, 1914 Lost
Adventures of Uncle December 11, 1914 Ernest Shields Lost
The Rural Demons December 13, 1914 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie Survives
The Baron's Bear Escape December 20, 1914 Henry Bergman Survives
The Manicure Girl December 27, 1914 Louise Orth Lost
Gem and Germs January 3, 1915 Henry Lehrman Louise Orth Lost
Cupid in a Hospital January 6, 1915 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie Survives
Through a Knot Hole January 10, 1915 Billie Ritchie Lost
Thou Shalt Not Flirt January 13, 1915 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie Lost
Almost a Scandal February 17, 1915 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie
Poor Policy April 25, 1915 Harry Edwards Billie Ritchie
Love and Sour Notes May 19, 1915 John G. Blystone Billie Ritchie
The Child Needs a Mother July 7, 1915 John G. Blystone Fatty Voss
Vendetta in a Hospital September 8, 1915 Billie Ritchie
Silk Hose and High Pressure September 8, 1915 (According to IMDb) Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie
No Flirting Allowed September 19, 1915 Hank Mann
A Tale of Twenty Stories August 22, 1915 Vin Moore Hank Mann fragment only
Sin on the Sabbath December 8, 1915 Billie Ritchie
A Stool Pigeon's Revenge May 12, 1916 John G. Blystone Hank Mann
Gertie's Gasoline Glide May 17, 1916 Gertrude Selby
Billie's Waterloo June 7, 1916 Billie Ritchie
Cold Hearts and Hot Flames September 20, 1916 John G. Blystone Billie Ritchie
Live Wires and Love Sparks March 19, 1916 Henry Lehrman Billie Ritchie
Bombs and Bandits 1917 Vin Moore Billy Bevan
The Sign of the Cucumber 1917 Richard Smith Eva Novak
Soapsuds and Sirens 1917 Noel M. Smith Harry Lorraine
The Belles of Liberty 1917 James D. Davis Eva Novak
All Jazzed Up 1917 William Watson Eva Novak
Adventurous Ambrose April 17, 1918 Walter S. Fredericks Mack Swain
The King of the Kitchen December 4, 1918 Frank Griffin Harry Gribbon
Charlie, the Little Daredevil January 15, 1919 Alfred J. Goulding Chai Hong
The Freckled Fish January 22, 1919 Joseph Le Brandt Chai Hong fragment only

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Fred J. Balshofer and Arthur C. Miller, One Reel a Week, University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1967, pg. 109
  2. ^ "Hank Mann Joins L-KO," Moving Picture World, March 20, 1915, pg. 1752
  3. ^ Kalton C. Lahue and Terry Brewer, Kops and Kustards: the Legend of Keystone Films, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1967
  4. ^ Kevin Brownlow and John Kobal, "Hollywood: The Pioneers," Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1980.
  5. ^ [1] MOMA: Cruel and Unusual Comedy: "Food Fights -- Chaos á la carte"
  • Simon Louvish, Keystone: The Life and Clowns of Mack Sennett, Faber & Faber, New York, 2003.
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