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THE MAD GENIUS was shot in March 1931. Seeing it apart from SVENGALI, it is a modest and modestly successful picture. Nowadays it is even regarded as a horror cult classic, although personally I fail to see any horror in the film myself! Seeing it immediately after SVENGALI, its already modest virtues are diminished. Most of the production crew is the same, although instead of ARCHIE MAYO, MICHAEL CURTIZ directs. The sets are again by ANTON GROT. There was also Gordon Hollingshead, assistant director and Barrymore's personal friend, who has been assistant director for 11 Barrymore features. WARNER BROS. had paid $15,000 to MARTIN BROWN for the rights to THE IDOL (also known as TSARKOV) but credits list the Russian play by DISKOY as the source. Based in some respects upon the life and work of SERGE DIAGHILEFF, world famous master of the Russian Ballet, the character is nevertheless a fictitious creation. Tsarkov, the BARRYMORE character, does not have SVENGALI's hypnotic powers but otherwise is virtually the same character in a slightly different situation. The object of Barrymore's domination is switched from a female singer to a male dancer. |
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BARRYMORE's make-up is not as baroque as it was in SVENGALI. But the costumes are identically romantic, sometimes simply identical: black tie, black top hat, long black coat with fur collar. "SMOKE" KRING, wardrobe expert and who has served Barrymore for 12 features, keeps a mental file of every costume Barrymore has worn in a picture. Barrymore never forgets a garment used in a picture and frequently wants the same one for some new production. This happened in MOBY DICK when the star demanded the same old pea jacket that he had used 5 years before in THE SEA BEAST and again in SVENGALI when he wanted the ragged robe made of a paisley shawl, in which he had died in BEAU BRUMMEL. It happened a third time in THE MAD GENIUS when BARRYMORE insisted upon a certain fur trimmed overcoat which he had worn in SVENGALI and upon a velvet jacket which had pleased him 4 years ago in WHEN A MAN LOVES. Another veteran in Barrymore's studio service is JOHNNY WALLACE, make-up artist who assists Barrymore in his characterizations. After 13 pictures, WALLACE knows every mood and manner of the star, exchanges books and recipes with him, comments on picture roles and is in other regards treated and respected as a friend and companion. Barrymore is apt to call one of them "old man", his favourite appellation for people of whom he approves. |
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