List of Robert Benchley collections and film appearances

Humorist Robert Benchley (1889–1945) produced over 600 essays,[1] initially compiled over twelve volumes, during his writing career.[2] He was also featured in a number of films, including 48 short treatments that he mostly wrote or co-wrote, and numerous feature films.[3]

Robert Benchley The Woolen Mitten Situation (1926)

The following is a list of those compilations and appearances.

Books

Benchley produced twelve compilation books of his work for the various publications he wrote and freelanced for, and numerous posthumous compilations of his work have been produced since his death. Unless otherwise indicated, all volumes featuring illustrations were drawn by Gluyas Williams.[4]

Collections During His Lifetime

Book Prefaces, Introductions, and Forewords

  • Ellison Hoover Cartoons From Life - Simon & Schuster, 1925.
  • Justin Stafford Lucien Esty Ask Me Another! The Question Book - Viking Press, 1927.
  • Gluyas Williams The Gluyas Williams Book - Doubleday, Doran, 1929.
  • Peter Arno Peter Arno's Hullabaloo - Horace Liveright, 1930.
  • The Fourth New Yorker Album" - Doubleday, Doran, 1931.
  • Dwight Fiske (and Dawn Powell) Without Music - The Chatham Press, 1933.
  • S. J. Perelman Strictly From Hunger" - Random House, 1937.
  • Gluyas Williams Fellow Citizens" - Doubleday, Doran, 1940.
  • Morton Thompson Joe, The Wounded Tennis Player" - Doubleday, Doran, 1945.

Posthumous

  • Benchley--Or Else - Harper and Brothers, 1947. 273p - 71 essays, six of which were originally published in The New Yorker.[4]
  • Chips off the Old Benchley - Harper and Brothers, 1949. 360p. - Collection of 77 essays compiled by Gertrude Benchley, Robert's wife. Many of the illustrations were previously unpublished in book form.[4]
  • The "Reel" Benchley - A. A. Wyn, Inc., 1950. 96p - No Williams illustrations, instead consisting of stills and scripts from many of Benchley's short films.[4]
  • The Benchley Roundup - Harper and Brothers, 1954. 288p- A collection of essays, written between 1915 and 1945, edited by Nathaniel Benchley
  • Benchley Lost and Found: Thirty-Nine Prodigal Pieces - Dover Publications, 1970. 183p.
  • The Benchley Omnibus - University of Chicago Press, 1983. 353p - Edited by Nathaniel Benchley.
  • The Best of Robert Benchley - Avenel Books, 1983. 353p.
  • Benchley at the Theatre: Dramatic Criticism, 1920-1940 by Robert Benchley - Ipswich Press, 1985. - Edited by Charles Getchell, the volume contains 84 of Benchley's theatrical reviews written for Life and The New Yorker over his career.[4]
  • Robert Benchley's Wayward Press: The Complete Collection of his The New Yorker Columns written as Guy Fawkes (S.L. Harrison, ed.) - Wolf Den Books, 2008. 341p - Collection of all Wayward Press columns, with a Prologue by Nat Benchley.
  • The Athletic Benchley-105 Exercises from The Detroit Athletic Club News - Glendower Media, 2010. ISBN 978-0914303022

Film and television

Benchley filmed for Fox Film Corporation, Universal Pictures, RKO Radio Pictures, and then primarily for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Paramount Pictures. Toward the end of his career, he did freelance acting around Hollywood. The films are listed by release date, not by production date.

Short films

  • The Treasurer's Report (1928, Fox Film Corporation) as Treasurer
  • The Sex Life of the Polyp (1928, Fox) as Lecturer
  • The Spellbinder (1928, Fox) as Himself
  • Furnace Trouble (1929, Fox) as Himself
  • Lesson No. 1 (1929, Fox) as Lecturer
  • Stewed, Fried, and Boiled (1929, Fox) as Lecturer
  • Your Technocracy and Mine (1933, Universal Pictures) as Himself
  • How to Break 90 at Croquet (1935, RKO Radio Pictures) as Joe Doakes
  • How to Sleep (1935, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer - Written and acted by Benchley, the short was based on a study on sleep and won the Academy Award in 1935 for Best Short Film, Benchley played narrator and sleeper)[5] as Lecturer
  • How to Behave (1936, MGM) as Himself
  • How to Train a Dog (1936, MGM) as Lecturer / Dog Owner
  • How to Vote (1936, MGM) as Himself
  • How to Be a Detective (1936, MGM) as Lecturer
  • The Romance of Digestion (1937, MGM) as Joe Doakes
  • How to Start the Day (1937, MGM) as Lecturer
  • A Night at the Movies (1937, MGM - Written and acted by Benchley, this short was his most well-received since How to Sleep. About a man going to the movies,[6] the short was nominated for an Academy Award) as Husband[7]
  • How to Figure Income Tax (1938, MGM) as Joe Doakes
  • Music Made Simple (1938, MGM) as Robert Benchley
  • An Evening Alone (1938, MGM) as Doakes
  • How to Raise a Baby (1938, MGM) as Lecturer Father
  • The Courtship of the Newt (1938, MGM) as Zoology professor
  • How to Read (1938, MGM) as Lecturer
  • How to Watch Football (1938, MGM) as Football Fan
  • Opening Day (1938, MGM) as City Treasurer Benchley
  • Mental Poise (1938, MGM) as Psychoanalyst / Mr. Ostegraf
  • How to Sub-Let (1939, MGM) as Joseph A. Doakes
  • An Hour for Lunch (1939, MGM) as Lecturer / Joe
  • Dark Magic (1939, MGM) as Joseph A. Doakes
  • Home Early (1939, MGM) as Joe Doakes
  • How to Eat (1939, MGM) as Lecturer / Joe Doakes
  • The Day of Rest (1939, MGM) as Joe Doakes
  • See Your Doctor (1939, MGM) as Lecturer / Joseph H. Doakes
  • That Inferior Feeling (1940, MGM - Also known as That Inferior Feeling) as Joseph H. 'Joe' Doake
  • Home Movies (1940, MGM) as Joe Doakes
  • The Trouble with Husbands (1940, Paramount Pictures - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joe Doakes
  • Waiting for Baby (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joseph Doakes
  • Crime Control (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Sgt. Benchley / Joe Doakes
  • The Forgotten Man (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joe Doakes
  • How To Take a Vacation (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as The Husband
  • Nothing But Nerves (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Mr. Benchley
  • The Witness (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joe Doakes
  • Keeping In Shape (1941, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Lecturer / Joe Doakes
  • The Man's Angle (1942, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joe Doakes
  • My Tomato (1943, MGM - Starring Benchley) as Joseph A. Doakes
  • No News Is Good News (1943, MGM - Written by and starring Benchley) as Answer Man / Newscaster
  • Important Business (1944, MGM - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joseph A. Doakes
  • Why, Daddy? (1944, MGM - Written by and starring Benchley - his last short film for MGM) as Joseph A. Doakes
  • Boogie Woogie (1945, Paramount - Written by and starring Benchley) as Frederick Stumplefinger, Father
  • Hollywood Victory Caravan (1945, Paramount and the United States Treasury Department - Starring Benchley, a film version of the touring show) as Himself
  • I'm a Civilian Here Myself (1945, United States Navy - Written by and starring Benchley) as Joe Doakes

Feature films

Television

  • Light's Diamond Jubilee (1954) TV special broadcast on all 4 TV networks, archive footage (from How to Raise a Baby)

Further reading

  • Gordon Ernst, Robert Benchley: An Annotated Bibliography. (Greenwood Press, 1995).

Works cited

References

  1. Yates, 58-59.
  2. Altman, 363.
  3. Altman, 364-367.
  4. The Robert Benchley Society.
  5. Altman, 295-298.
  6. Altman, 321–325.
  7. Nat Benchley.
  8. Altman, 327-328.
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