"Nobody Loves a Fat Man?"

June 13, 1914 - MOVIE PICTORIAL, courtesy of Mr. Bruce Long


Roscoe Arbuckle was busy tying the helpless and hapless Mabel Normand to a dreadful-looking contrivance that apparently contained a dynamite bomb when I first saw him. But even as he completed the task he was set upon by a squad of police officers. When the melee was over Director Mack Sennett expressed his satisfaction and Mr. Arbuckle was free to rest.

He lumbered toward me, rolled a cigarette with a one-armed sweep, lit it, took a puff and sighed contentedly.

I gently assured him that I would not ask how much he weighed, that I knew already.

"How much did they say I weighed?" Mr. Arbuckle asked alertly.

"A little over 300 pounds."

"What! Three hundred! I don't weigh a pound over one hundred and eighty, and, what's more, I never did," Mr. Arbuckle asserted with something like a glare.

"Indeed," I remarked, making a note of the point. "And--please pardon my curiosity -- but you're married, aren't you?"

"Yes," Mr. Arbuckle admitted, "I am married but don't tell them that."

"You see," he added hastily, "my wife and I do have such times reading the love letters I receive. Being single does make for popularity, you know.

Mrs. Arbuckle's stage name is Minta Durfee, if you want to know. But don't tell them that."

"I wouldn't think of it," I said solemnly.

"And another thing," Mr. Arbuckle continued. "Don't say that I played in 'The Round Up.' I never did.* It was Maclyn Arbuckle. I like well enough to plead guilty to having done it but my habitual integrity forbids. Besides there are too many people who know it was he and not me. Of course I don't agree with him when he says nobody loves a fat man. I know better as I have hinted."

"You were on the legitimate stage for a while, weren't you?" I asked.

I knew very well that he was but you have to be respectful to the man who is giving you an interview.

"Yes," Mr. Arbuckle answered, "I was. Outside of the few sweet years on the Loop circuit, I spent nine months with Ferris Hartman and "The Campus" company, on an oriental tour. We toured China, Japan, India, Honolulu, the Philippine Islands and even some civilized places. I pasted up notices and appreciations in fourteen different languages and I might have had more if I could have been sure whether the writers in some of the other languages were roasting me or praising me. The tour ended in January, 1913. Since then I have been in the pictures.

"My first experience in motion pictures was at Universal's Hollywood studio, under Director Al Christie, to whom I had been introduced by Robert Leonard. I had been with Universal four weeks when Fred Mace left Keystone and I was taken on to fill the vacancy. I have been with Keystone ever since.

"I have done my worst in 'Two Old Tars,' 'A Noise from the Deep,' 'The Riot' and 'The Gangsters.' But outside of falling on my ear, being surrounded by snakes, chased by bears, and made to do forty-five foot dives off the long wharf at Santa Monica, my work has been rather uneventful."

With that Roscoe Arbuckle ceased to talk in favor of enveloping himself in clouds of cigarette smoke through which he peered at me like one of the genii of the Arabian Nights.

"As you were going to say?" I ventured to ask, encouragingly.

"I'll say just this," he began with a sudden burst of enthusiasm. "I am a member of Keystone's baseball team and a finer little aggregation of ballplayers never existed in this immediate vicinity, nor for a good distance around."

"Let me see," I mused. "Wasn't that the team that was beaten so badly last week by a bunch of boys from the high school up on the--"

"Excuse me," Mr. Arbuckle said hurriedly. "I hear the director calling me. I must get back to my work. Give them all my regards, will you?"

Whereupon he returned to the fray, pounced upon Ford Sterling and his squad of policemen, dispersed them, took possession of the helpless and hapless Mabel Normand and dragged her away while the camera clicked steadily.

Since his first stage experience ten years ago as super for a hypnotist, he has been steadily rising. He has been gaining in weight for a good deal longer than that, for he weighed only sixteen and a half pounds when he was born.


* Arbuckle did later appear in the 1920 version of "The Round Up"

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