Heading Home

Headin' Home
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Directed by Lawrence C. Windom
Produced by William Shea (producer)
Herbert H. Yudkin (producer)
Written by Arthur "Bugs" Baer
Earle Browne (story)
Starring See below
Cinematography Ollie Leach
Production
company
Kessel & Baumann
Distributed by Yankee Photo Corporation
Release date
  • September 19, 1920 (1920-09-19)
Running time
55 minutes
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

Heading Home (also called Headin' Home) is a 1920 American silent sports film directed by Lawrence C. Windom.[1] It attempts to create a mythology surrounding the life of baseball player Babe Ruth.

The screenplay was written by Arthur "Bugs" Baer from a story by Earle Browne. Besides Ruth, it stars Ruth Taylor, William Sheer, and Margaret Seddon.

Plot summary

Ruth stars in the film, playing himself, but the details of his life are completely fictionalized. In the film, Ruth comes from a small country town and has a loving home life, but in real life, he grew up in Baltimore, Maryland, and spent most of his childhood in a reformatory . In the film, shades of the baseball movie The Natural, Ruth cuts down a tree to make his own bat.

Cast

  • Babe Ruth as Babe
  • Ruth Taylor as Mildred Tobin
  • William Sheer as Harry Knight
  • Margaret Seddon as Babe's Mother
  • Frances Victory as Pigtails
  • James A. Marcus as Simon Tobin
  • Ralf Harolde as John Tobin
  • Charles Byer as David Talmadge
  • George Halpin as Doc Hedges / The Constable / Dog Catcher
  • William J. Gross as Eliar Lott
  • Walter Lawrence as Tony Marino
  • Ann Brody as Mrs. Tony Marino
  • Ricca Allen as Almira Worters
  • Sammy Blum as Jimbo Jones
  • Ethel Kerwin as Kitty Wilson
  • Tom Cameron as Deacon Flack
  • Charles J. Hunt as Reverend David Talmadge
  • William Shea
  • Herbert H. Yudkin
  • Raoul Walsh as supervisor

See also

References

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