By the Shortest of Heads explained

Director:Bert Haldane
Producer:Barker Motion Photography
Starring:George Formby
Production Companies:-->
Country:United Kingdom

By the Shortest of Heads is a 1915 British film directed by Bert Haldane and starring George Formby.[1] It was Formby's first film; he was aged ten at the time.

Plot

A stable boy outwits a gang of villains and wins a £10,000 prize when he comes first in a horse race.

Cast

Background

George Formby Snr was worried that his son, George Formby, would watch him on stage and begin a career on stage; he was against the boy following in his footsteps, saying "one fool in the family is enough". After a year of Formby working at a stables in Middleham, he was apprenticed to Thomas Scourfield at Epsom, where he ran his first professional races at the age of 10, when he weighed less than 4st. In 1915 Formby Snr allowed his son to appear on screen, taking the lead in By the Shortest of Heads. After completing the filming, Formby Jnr was sent to Ireland to continue his jockey training, as were the five horses Formby had purchased that year, which joined others he had previously bought.

The film is now considered lost, with the last-known copy having been destroyed in 1940.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: By the Shortest of Heads . 31 July 2024 . British Film Institute Collections Search.