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The Life's Romance of Adam Lindsay Gordon

The Life of Adam Lindsay Gordon
Adam Lindsay Gordon.jpg
Still from film
Directed by W. J. Lincoln
Produced by W. J. Lincoln
G.H. Barnes
Written by W. J. Lincoln
G.H. Barnes
Starring Hugh McCrae
Adele Inman
Audrey Worth
Cinematography Bert Ives
Production
company
Lincoln-Barnes Scenarios
Release date
17 August 1916 (preview)
4 September 1916 (Melbourne)
Running time
5 reels – 5,000 feet
(3 reels survive)
Country Australia
Language Silent film
English intertitles

The Life's Romance of Adam Lindsay Gordon is a 1916 Australian feature-length film directed by W. J. Lincoln, based on the life of poet Adam Lindsay Gordon.

Unlike many Australian silent movies, part of the film survives today.

The story starts with Gordon's schooldays at Cheltenham College. Then details his career as a trooper in the Australian bush when he is given the task of escorting a lunatic to an asylum 200 miles away. He later resigns from the police force when he refuses to clean the sergeant's boots. He then becomes a horsebreaker and steeplechase rider.

Later, Gordon falls into debt and decides to shoot himself. The final scene is a shot of Gordon's grave in Brighton, Victoria.

The chapters were as follows:

The film was made by a partnership that W. J. Lincoln entered into with G.H. Barnes following his stint with J.C. Williamson Ltd.

The star, Hugh McCrae, had a background as a theatre actor. He went on to become a noted essayist.

Pre-production started in June 1916. The shoot seems to have taken place from mid July to mid August, on location and in the JC Williamson's Studios.

Filming was difficult with the production often short of funds – one on occasion an actor and cameraman seized the camera so they could get paid.

Barnes and Lincoln were sued by Amalgamated Pictures.

Lincoln fell ill with alcoholic poisoning and spent some time in hospital, forcing Barnes to take over direction.

William Trainor, a close friend of Gordon's, saw the film and wrote a letter of congratulations to Lincoln and Barnes saying:

Dear Friends, I cannot permit another day to pass without offering my congratulations and an explanation of my feelings on seeing the life's phases of my dear friend and comrade, Adam Lindsay Gordon, depicted so faithfully and realistically on the screen. With the material at your disposal, I think you have accomplished wonders, and in years to come your picture will prove an historic production. So vivid were some of the scenes that even the forty years since his passing has not dimmed the memory of them, and tears welled in my eyes. I feel that your picture will help Australians to understand Gordon as I knew him, one of Nature's True and Noble Gentlemen. You have my earnest well wishes for success in your praiseworthy work, and in saying this I think I voice the sentiments of all those friends who knew him well.


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