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  • Writer's pictureSouth West Silents

Shoes (1916) Directed by Lois Weber

Updated: Oct 12, 2020

Our run of screening unique silent films continues to run into March 2017 and we have a real treat coming up over the next few weeks. A screening of the brand new restoration of Lois Weber’s wonderful Shoes (1916)! 


Shoes (1916), Live Music by John Sweeney, Intro by Pamela Hutchinson (Silent London) Sunday 12th March / 1:30 pm / Curzon Arts & Cinema, 46 Old Church Rd, Clevedon BS21 6NN


But before the screening at  the Curzon Cinema & Arts, Clevedon  take place we thought we would share a couple of thoughts from our good friend, Rob Byrne, President of The San Francisco Silent Film Festival Board of Directors and a film preservationist himself. (Rob was one key members behind the glorious restoration of D.W.Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915)).   

“When the history of the dramatic early development of motion pictures is written,” declared Motion Picture magazine in 1921, “Lois Weber will occupy a unique position.” Lois Weber was not only America’s first major female film director, she was a true pioneer. She began her career when the longest films ran 20 minutes and directed her last feature a quarter century later in 1934. Her filmmaking concentrated on dramatic subjects and included more than 60 features and countless short films. But her greatest fame and most lasting impact came as a result of her “social problem” films, made between 1914 and 1921, which took courageous stands on controversial issues. Noted for their artistry and realism, her films raised the status of moviegoing, making it respectable for middle-class audiences.


The product of a deeply religious family and a veteran of the Church Army Workers, Lois Weber saw film not only as entertainment, but also as a medium for evangelizing about important social issues. In her 1913 lecture “The Making of Picture Plays That Will Have an Influence for Good on the Public Mind,” Weber described her use of film’s “voiceless language” to “carry out the idea of missionary pictures.” Abortion, birth control, capital punishment, religious hypocrisy, a living wage, child labor, prostitution, and white slavery were all topics that Weber addressed in her films.


shoes-1916

Universal released Shoes, under the banner of its Bluebird Photoplay productions, on June 12, 1916, just one month after Where Are My Children? In Shoes, Eva Meyer is poorly paid shopgirl who works in a five-and-dime. She is the sole wage earner for her family of three sisters, their mother, and a father unwilling to find work. At the end of each week, Eva dutifully hands over her meager earnings to her mother. Eva’s salary barely covers the grocer’s bill and cannot provide for nice clothes or decent shoes like those of her coworkers. She becomes increasingly disheartened and begins to consider the uninvited advances of Charlie, a cad with clearly dishonorable intentions.


Weber adapted her script for Shoes from a short story by Stella Wynne Herron published in the January 1, 1916, issue of Collier’s magazine. The film follows Herron’s narrative closely, with dialogue from the story occasionally appearing verbatim in the film’s intertitles. Herron’s inspiration for her story came from social reformer Jane Addams’s 1912 book on prostitution A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil, which Herron quotes in her epigraph: “When the shoes became too worn to endure a third soling and she possessed but 90 cents toward a new pair, she gave up the struggle; to use her own contemptuous phrase, she ‘sold out for a new pair of shoes.’”

Film scholar Shelley Stamp asserts, “Weber’s interest in the fate of underpaid retail clerks echoed many sociological studies of the era that investigated the ‘problem’ of young female wage earners.” In one such study, social reformer Louise De Koven Bowen focused specifically on department store girls “surrounded by, and selling, the luxuries they crave for a wage compensation inadequate for a life of decency and respectability.” According to Bowen’s 1911 report, these daily temptations could lead to the girls’ “moral as well as physical breakdown.” Weber described the impetus for making Shoes in an interview given to Moving Picture World during the film’s production: “I did missionary work in the slums of New York … especially among young girls …. I know them and their problems, and not a few of my stories have been suggested by incidents recalled from those early experiences.”


The motion picture press reacted positively to Weber’s new feature but remained cautious about its commercial appeal. Wid’s Independent Review of Feature Films praised “the splendid psychology of the development of the characters” but recommended eliminating one of the flashbacks that conclude the film. Motion Picture News appreciated Weber’s realism but noted that “there is such a thing as being too realistic.” These advance reviews may have tempered their endorsement, but the popular press lauded the film and its fledgling star Mary MacLaren. The Los Angeles Times described Shoes as “the greatest photoplay which Lois Weber has ever produced” and singled out Mary MacLaren’s “perfection of acting.” Louella Parsons declared Shoes one of the best films of 1916. The public apparently agreed, as Shoes was Universal’s most-booked Bluebird production of the year.

weber-lois-001-at-centre-of-pyramid-of-male-crew

In 1913, Lois Weber described her desire to “raise the standard” of film and “bring back refined audiences.” At a time when the courts had declared movies “a pure entertainment business” unworthy of First Amendment protection, Weber stood with the vanguard that was striving to bring cultural legitimacy to the medium. While some of the issues she explored may seem Victorian by today’s standards, her groundbreaking work helped establish motion pictures as the definitive visual art of the 20th century.


Our thanks to Rob and SFSFF for allowing us to reprint this essay on Lois Weber’s Shoes (1916) and Milestone Films for the stunning pictures which accompanies this essay. 

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