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Pete Smith (born Peter Schmidt September 4, 1892, New York City -
January 12, 1979, Santa Monica, California) was a film producer and
narrator of "short subject" films from 1931 to 1955.
Smith was a publicist at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer who was
recruited to overdub the actions of trained dogs in the studio's "Dogville"
comedies. Smith's speaking voice was distinctively nasal, and he would
go on to narrate the studio's sports reels. Smith would embellish the
action by running certain scenes in reverse or adding his own pungent
commentary. Both the studio and the moviegoing public picked up on
Smith's flair for comedy, and soon he had his own series, Pete Smith
Specialties.
Smith made more than 150 shorts, almost all of which
were comedy documentaries. They were made as filler material for MGM's
cinema exhibition packages, which typically consisted of a feature film,
a B-movie or a serial, plus one or two "short subjects" of various
types, such as animated cartoons, newsreels and documentaries. The Smith
shorts were typically 9 to 11 minutes long, shot in black-and-white,
with many of the laughs generated by the highly ironic voice-over
narration delivered by Smith himself. (His somewhat nasal,
matter-of-fact idiosyncratic vocal style has been imitated and parodied
by many.)
The subject matter of the individual films was
enormously diverse. Among the topics Smith cast his affectionate but
jaundiced eye upon were: Emily Post-style household hints, insect life
seen through a microscope, military training and hardware (during World
War II), and dancing lessons. There were even several
"series-within-the-series", such as lighthearted general-knowledge
quizzes, professional football highlights (in the days before widespread
television), quirky looks at many different kinds of animals (for
example, Donkey Baseball and Social Sea Lions), and "Goofy Movies"
(playing antique silent dramas for laughs). Smith narrated a patriotic
short for the U.S. Government, The Tree In a Test Tube (1943), filmed in
color, featuring Laurel and Hardy in a demonstration of household wood
products, with Smith explaining the various exhibits for the viewer.
In the 1940s movie stuntman and actor Dave O'Brien
became the primary focus of Pete Smith Specialties. The hapless O'Brien
would personify everyday nuisances: dealing with pests at the movies,
demonstrating pet peeves, tackling hazardous home-improvement projects,
and other problems with which the audience could identify. O'Brien's
scenes were shot silent, compelling O'Brien to express his satisfaction
or frustration entirely in visual terms as narrator Smith offered
get-a-load-of-this commentary. O'Brien knew the format so well that he
also directed many of the shorts, under the name "David Barclay." He
staged many of the sight gags himself, taking stupendous pratfalls for
the camera.
The Pete Smith Specialities, instantly recognizable and
highly popular in their day, are nowadays rarely seen, being almost
completely unavailable on video or DVD. They occasionally appear between
feature films on Turner Classic Movies.
Smith retired in 1954 (his last films were released in
1955). His last years were spent in a Santa Monica, California nursing
home where, despondent over his failing health, he committed suicide on
January 12, 1979.
[Awards
Smith's short subjects were nominated for Academy
Awards sixteen times in various short film categories. One of these,
1933's Menu, was written by novelist Thorne Smith. Pete Smith won twice,
in 1938 for Penny Wisdom, and in 1941 for Quicker'n a Wink. The latter
used then-recent cinematic techniques to show events which normally
occur too rapidly for the human eye to witness them properly ... such as
the shattering of a bottle of milk and the spilling of its contents. In
1954, at the end of his career, Smith was awarded an honorary Oscar "for
his witty and pungent observations on the American scene in his series
of "Pete Smith Specialties."
Smith has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1625
Vine Street.
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