For those who haven’t seen, PSAS Member Laura Camuti
is quoted in yesterday’s
Lost Peter Sellers films on screen after
50-year intermission
Missing British comedies found in a movie
mogul’s garage cinema are being restored for a new generation
FOR
some 50 years, the reels of film lay forgotten in a
The movies, all shot in the early 1950s when Britain was trying to
turn its film industry into a mini-Hollywood, have now been given to the
British Film Institute (BFI) to restore.
Few of them have been seen in cinemas since their original
release.
Those being screened soon include
The films were all either made or distributed by Adelphi, a
family-run company set up in 1939 by Arthur Dent who, like so many American
movie bosses, had an east European Jewish background. Dent, who had at one time
been the British representative of Sam Goldwyn, the Hollywood mogul, stored the
prints of the films in his garage in Highgate, north
His company did not make any more films after 1956 although short
clips from a few were sold by his children over the following decades.
The negatives and prints were left in cans in the garage of the
family home until Dent’s granddaughter, Kate Lees, stumbled upon them and
realised their significance as a “missing” chapter of the British
film industry.
“They’re a snapshot of a particularly prolific period
of British film-making,” said Lees, who donated them to the BFI.
One reason the first two films to be restored are those starring
Sellers is that the institute is being given money by Laura Camuti, an American
fan of the comedian. “[Sellers’s] vocal skills are
mind-boggling,” said Camuti.
Both Let’s Go Crazy and
Let’s Go Crazy, a half-hour film of zany comedy, stars
Sellers and was co-written by him and Milligan.
However, it had mixed reviews. Roger Lewis, Sellers’s
biographer, wrote that it was “amateurishly done. It lasts 32 minutes and
probably took less time to create”.
Lees herself still has a letter written by Milligan to her father,
Stanley Dent, thanking him for “the Lolly from
Three films made in 1953 and 1954, featuring Prunella Scales,
albeit in small roles, have also emerged. Scales, who has been married to the
actor Timothy West since 1963, was then just 20 and at the start of a long and
distinguished career, which has included playing Sybil in
Other virtually forgotten films in the cache showing British stars
include The Great Game, a comedy about football which featured Thora Hird and
Diana Dors, a favourite of Dent’s; and What Every Woman Wants, a drama
with Brian Rix and Joan Hickson.
Rolf Harris, who arrived in
Corbett was in his mid-twenties when he made his first film, a
year before his first professional stage appearance. Fun at St Fanny’s
was a comedy set in a boys’ boarding school and appeared just after the
first of the St Trinian’s girls’ boarding-school farces.
Other Adelphi films now with the BFI include several early ones
featuring Sid James, Max Bygraves, Joan Sims and Dennis Price