Harry Langdon (born June 14, 1884, Council Bluffs, Iowa, U.S.—died Dec. 22, 1944, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American motion picture actor and director whom many rank among the top tier of silent film comedians.
As a young boy, Langdon ran away from his home in Council Bluffs, Iowa, to join a traveling medicine show. Although he eventually returned, Langdon repeatedly left home to perform in minstrel shows and circuses. In the early 1900s he developed a vaudeville act that featured his frustrations with a new car, an act that he performed, with variations, across the country for some 20 years.
In 1923 Langdon signed with Principal Pictures and starred in his first short silent films. Producer Mack Sennett soon bought Langdon’s contract and cast him in several shorts and a feature, His First Flame (made in 1925 but not released until 1927). While working for Sennett’s Keystone Company, Langdon teamed with director Harry Edwards and writers Frank Capra and Arthur Ripley, and together they slowly developed an innocent babylike character for the comedian. Where other silent-era screen comics such as Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lloyd were men of action in their films, Langdon often seemed frozen on the screen, hesitant to do anything, and he was capable of getting laughs with the tiniest of gestures, such as the blink of an eye or a twitch of the mouth.
In 1926 Langdon formed his own company, the Harry Langdon Corporation. Again working with Edwards, Capra, and Ripley, he starred in a short string of popular feature films now widely considered to be classics. Tramp, Tramp, Tramp (1926), directed by Edwards and costarring a young Joan Crawford, introduced the fully developed Langdon screen persona. Edwards left the Langdon team before the making of The Strong Man (1926), which was directed by Capra. In this film, Langdon is in love with a blind girl, a plot device Chaplin borrowed for City Lights (1931). Long Pants (1927), again directed by Capra, was Langdon’s third hit comedy. Audiences loved the innocent new screen character that Langdon had created, and, on the strength of these three films, he became one of the most adored comedians in the country, along with Chaplin and Lloyd.
Many believe that Langdon unknowingly sabotaged his own career by firing Capra and taking charge of his own films. Most critics agree that Langdon did not understand his own delicate screen persona, and the darker Langdon-directed films such as Three’s a Crowd (1927) and The Chaser (1928) fell flat at the box office. Just two years after they had embraced him, the moviegoing public abandoned Langdon. His career as a major film comedian was over, despite his comeback attempts at the Hal Roach Studios and Columbia in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
Although Langdon never regained his former popularity, he continued appearing in films well into in the sound era, including Hallelujah, I’m a Bum (1933) with Al Jolson. In his last years Langdon became a gagman and writer, contributing to Laurel and Hardy’s final features for Roach, including the much-admired Block-Heads (1938).
Only some years after Langdon’s death did his status as a major comedian once again flourish. Critic James Agee’s 1949 essay for Life magazine “Comedy’s Greatest Era” includes Langdon as one of the four greatest silent comedians, along with Chaplin, Lloyd, and Buster Keaton. Throughout the 1950s and ’60s, as movie fans and critics revisited silent films, Langdon’s status grew. Theatre critic Walter Kerr devoted three chapters of his exhaustive The Silent Clowns (1975) to Langdon. Noting that Langdon’s character in his best films was simultaneously both a child and a man, Kerr summed up the comedian as the most ambiguous of all silent clowns whose “survival depended on his maintaining that ambiguity, explaining himself not at all.”