September 19 is Talk/Meow Like a Pirate Day.
Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson’s adventure novel "Treasure Island" was published in 1883.
In 1950, the popular tale was adapted for Hollywood in what was Walt Disney’s first movie made with live actors only.
The movie starred Robert Newton as the fictional pirate Long John Silver.
His performance was certainly a memorable one; TIME’s 1950 review of Disney’s Treasure Island notes that it “offers the fun of watching an eye-rolling, lip-twitching Robert Newton as he wallows outrageously through the role of Long John Silver, one of fiction’s most ingratiating scoundrels.”
Born in Dorset and educated in Cornwall, Newton based his pirate talk on his own native British West Country dialect.
His accent might not have been far off—the south west of England has long been associated with pirates because of its strong maritime heritage; notorious pirate Blackbeard was even said to have come from Bristol, in the heart of that area.
Newton’s iconic role as Long John Silver was so influential that a variation his West Country English became the standard for portrayals of pirates on stage and in the cinema.
As historian Colin Woodard told the National Geographic in 2011, “Newton’s performance—full of ‘arrs,’ ‘shiver me timbers,’ and references to landlubbers—not only stole the show, it permanently shaped pop culture’s vision of how pirates looked, acted, and spoke.”
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Me-thinks the pirates of today are worse that those of yesteryear ...
ReplyDeleteWe just re-watched the Disney movie from the library. Love it and any of the oldies that are so fun now that I'm old, lol.
ReplyDeleteNewton's Long John Silver is not a bad legacy for an actor to leave. My favourite Newton movie - aside from "Treasure Island" - is the thriller "Obsession", and he was very good as Bill Sikes in "Oliver Twist".
ReplyDeleteThat was most interesting and I love that funny!
ReplyDeleteI should watch the film just to hear the accent! I am told I have a strong Westcountry accent although it sounds perfectly normal to me. The north Cornish coast is famous for pirates and wreckers in times gone by.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I've ever seen Treasure Island but I was a big fan of Errol Flynn swashbuckler movies.
ReplyDeleteThat is why I've been seeing pirates pop up on social media today! :) I've never seen that movie but your review makes me want to see if my local library has a copy.
ReplyDeleteWe have that same costume. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the "history lesson." I wondered how we got to thinking about pirates in the particular way we do.
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