“The
girl” in Buster Keaton’s films can be hit or miss. All of them are, of course, products of their
time, and some are little more than pretty still lifes for Buster’s heart to go
pitter-patter over. However, others are
surprisingly fun, funny, and/or capable.
Here are Buster’s best girls!
The Girl (Sherlock
Jr.)
Don’t
sell her short for not having a name – after all, Buster’s character here is
called “the projectionist.” The girl
loses some points for being easily swayed between suitors by the size of their
chocolates (not a euphemism,) but she doesn’t lose faith in the projectionist
when he’s set up to take a hit in her and her father’s estimation. Furthermore, while the projectionist spends
the second half of the picture dreaming
about solving the case and exonerating himself, the girl is the one who
actually does it, performing some fine detective work of her own.
Betsy (The
Navigator)
I kind
of love Betsy. Like Rollo, she’s a sweet
but spoiled rich kid utterly unprepared for being marooned at sea on an ocean
liner, and her early attempts to help them provide for themselves are just as
laughable as his. But again, she brushes
up right along with Rollo, learning the ins and outs of ship life and actually
making contributions in the big climactic sequence. I really like the way she looks out for Rollo
when he’s in the diving suit.
Annabelle Lee (The General)
Since
Annabelle Lee first thinks Johnnie’s a coward who refuses to join the army and
doesn’t believe him when he insists otherwise, she’s fairly borderline. She’s not initially very nice and she gets
damseled early on, but once she and Johnnie connect again, she steps up quite a
bit. She does her part: stoking the
furnace on the train, driving it a few times, and going back for Johnnie when
they get separated. Bonus points for
possibly being named after an Edgar Allan Poe poem.
Kitty King (Steamboat Bill, Jr.)
Kitty
is just too cute. I adore the shot of
her and Willie seeing each other in the barber shop, and the way she gets him
suited up to work on the boat is very sweet.
She’s got a bit of an attitude that’s awfully fun, too. One of her best scenes has her coming up
behind Willie, ready to make amends after an earlier quarrel, but she loses her
nerve at the last second and starts sashaying away in the other direction just
as Willie turns around. His bewildered look,
trying to figure out how he could have missed her walking by him, is priceless.
Sally Richards (The Cameraman)
I know,
MGM sighting – horrors, right? But it’s The Cameraman, so it still essentially
counts as a Buster movie. Sally is maybe
a bit too good to be true, but I like her kindness; poor, bungling Luke could
use a little of that. Their first scene
together is lovely, and I like her continued efforts to help him in his
news-reel aspirations.
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