‘Tarzan of the Apes’
celebrates centennial in Morgan City
StMaryNow.com
~ Aug 3, 2018
The first ever Tarzan movie featured the swampy forests
of Morgan City as its backdrop a century ago. Edgar Rice Burroughs Dum-Dum
Conference and Tarzan Celebration started Thursday at Clarion Inn in Morgan
City. The event, hosted by Cajun Coast Visitors & Convention Bureau
and Burroughs Bibliophiles, ends Sunday. The conference celebrated the
100th anniversary of the release of “Tarzan of the Apes,” a 1918 silent
film that was the first Tarzan movie made and filmed mostly in the Morgan
City area. The film was based on the 1912 Edgar Rice Burroughs novel by
the same name. Scott Sidney directed the film that starred Elmo Lincoln,
Enid Markey, George B. French and Gordon Griffith.
Representatives with Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc., based
in Tarzana, California, were on hand for the conference. The company licenses
Tarzan and the literary works of Edgar Rice Burroughs. “‘Tarzan of the
Apes’ has a tremendous film legacy, and it all began in Morgan City,” said
Scott Tracy Griffin, director of special projects for Edgar Rice Burroughs
Inc. Fifty-two Tarzan movies and seven TV series have been made over the
years, Griffin said.
Al Bohl of Bossier City helped create a documentary about
the film in 2012 titled “Tarzan Lord of the Louisiana Jungle.” Bohl is
also a talented arts teacher who teaches stop-motion animation in the Bossier
Parish public school system. Filming for “Tarzan of the Apes” took place
in 1917 in Morgan City and was one the first films to be shot on location,
Bohl said. Filming took almost two months. But the film production staff
was in Morgan City a lot longer to prepare for filming. They rented the
Shannon Hardware building on Front Street along with a warehouse on the
banks of the Atchafalaya River where they built sets and costumes, Bohl
said.
Location scouts considered many different place places
to film the movie and almost decided to film it in Florida. But they decided
to film in Morgan City because the area had a good railroad system, large
population of African-Americans to play natives and a jungle that fit Burroughs’
description of Africa. “Burroughs never went to Africa. So he just made
up this place, and it was moss-laden trees and all that,” Bohl said. “Tarzan
of the Apes” became one of the first movies to make over $1 million in
its initial release and is considered one of the top six silent films of
that era, he said.
Part of the sequel, “The Romance of Tarzan” was also filmed
in 1917 in Morgan City. Bohl’s interest in “Tarzan of the Apes” began many
years ago while he was having breakfast with someone from Morgan City and
learned that the first Tarzan movie was made here. Bohl learned that the
filmmakers brought apes to put in the movie, and just left the apes in
the forest when they finished filming. “That just grabbed me and stayed
with me,” Bohl said.
His daughter, Allison DeHart of Lafayette, later became
a filmmaker, and the two began work in 2008 to produce a documentary on
the 1918 film. The documentary premier was held in Morgan City in 2012.
That documentary led to the 2018 conference with representatives from Edgar
Rice Burroughs Inc. Conference organizers hosted a screening Thursday of
“Tarzan of the Apes.” “When we got the original film, it was all messed
up. It had been edited so many times. So we took it, put it back in the
right order. We added a whole new orchestral score. So now it’s very watchable
and entertaining,” Bohl said.
Bohl hopes Morgan City’s connection to the film can help
bring more tourists to the area. “The film industry is gaining back ground
in Louisiana,” Bohl said. Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser has added Morgan City
to his movie tour throughout the state where he will visit different places
movies were filmed.