David Copperfield (1913)
January 2, 1913Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Kenneth Ware
David Copperfield
Reginald Sheffield
David Copperfield as a Child (as Eric Desmond)
Len Bethel
David Copperfield
Alma Taylor
Dora Spenlow
H. Collins
Wilkins Micawber
Jack Hulcup
Urian Heep
Jamie Darling
Daniel Peggotty
Edna May
Little Emily - as a child
Amy Verity
Little Emily
Cecil Mannering
Steerforth
Ella Fineberg
Agnes Wickfield
Miss Harcourt
Betsy Trotwood
Johnny Butt
Mr. Murdstone
Miss West
Mrs. Micawber
Charles Dickens
Writer
Shiel Porter
Mr. Wickfield
Details.
Release DateJanuary 2, 1913
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 7m
Last updated:
Wiki.
David Copperfield is a 1913 British black-and-white silent film based on the 1850 novel David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. It is the second-oldest known film adaptation of the novel. Running six reels, it is significant as a very early British feature film at a moment when the world film industry was beginning its move away from traditional short films towards longer and more ambitious works.
The film was made by the Hepworth Manufacturing Corporation, was produced by Cecil Hepworth and was written and directed by Thomas Bentley. In the United Kingdom it was released in August 1913, and in the United States it was released on 1 December 1913. It ran at 67 minutes on seven reels.A review of the film in The Dickensian said:
"It occupies close upon two hours to exhibit and is divided into six parts, telling the story of David's life from Blunderstone to his happy union with Agnes. Obviously the part of David is enacted by three different actors, Master Eric Desmond, Mr Len Bethel and Mr Kenneth Ware. The first-named being one of the cleverest child actors we have seen. We have no space to speak of all the characters presented. Each and all of them were Dickens' creations to the life and not mere exaggerations as is often the case.
The film not only includes all of the most prominent characters and all the necessary incidents of the book to make the story intelligible to the lay reader, but they have been enacted in the actual places in which the novelist laid them."