milestonesYear
Milestone
Made first stage appearance at the age of nine months, crawling into the middle of his father's blackface routine
Joined the family act before the age of three, The Two Keatons becoming The Three Keatons
1900
"Official" professional debut, October 17 at Dockstader's Theatre, Wilmington, Delaware
1900
The Three Keatons traveled widely, appearing all over the USA and becoming headliners in NYC; from the beginning Buster was the star of the act
1909
Keaton family made a brief trip to Europe, during which they played London's Palace
1917
Father's drinking led to break-up of the act
1917
Accepted a part in the Broadway show "The Passing Show of 1917" at $250 a week but broke contract after meeting Rosco 'Fatty' Arbuckle and appearing in his first film
1917
First short film as actor, "The Butcher Boy", written and directed by Arbuckle
Drafted into Army and assigned to the 40th Infantry; posted to France
1920
Played a straight role in his first feature, "The Saphead"; made on loan to Metro Pictures
1920
Took over Joseph Schenck's Comique Films (formerly headed by Arbuckle)
1920
First short film as director, "The High Sign" (shelved and not released until 1921)
1920
First released short film as director, "One Week"; co-helmed with Eddie Cline
1921
With Cline, co-wrote and co-directedthe two-reeler "The Playhouse", a special effects tour de force in which he appeared on screen simultaneously nine times, even performing a dance with himself
1922
Comique Films name changed to Buster Keaton Productions (though Schenck still owned it)
1923
Completed first feature comedy, "The Three Ages", a spoof of D.W. Griffith's "Intolerance" (1916)
1924
Released "Sherlock Jr" and "The Navigator"; the former considered by many as one of (if not) his finest films
1926
His best-known film "The General" opened to unfavorable critical response
1928
Last film released under the umbrella of "Buster Keaton Productions", "Steamboat Bill Jr"
1928
Signed contract with MGM
1928
First picture for MGM, "The Cameraman", well up to the standard of his best independent features
1929
Last silent feature, "Spite Marriage"
1929
Made first talking film as actor "The Hollywood Revue of 1929"
Appeared in eight MGM movies, ranging from mediocre to abysmal
1933
MGM contract terminated
1934
Made French film, "Le roi des Champs-Elyses"; never released in USA
1934
Signed contract with Educational Films for two-reelers
1936
Made "Grand Slam Opera", his favorite short for Educational
1937
Educational Films closed down
1937
Signed contract with MGM as gagman only
In the late 30s, a faulty refrigeration system in a film vault destroyed the negatives to all his silent movies
1938
Last directing assignments, three single-reelers for MGM ("Life in Sometown, USA", "Hollywood Handicap", "Streamlined Swing")
1939
Signed contract with Columbia; made 10 shorts over the next two years
1941
Toured USA in detective play, "The Gorilla"
1947
First appearance at Cirque Medrano, Paris (as Malec)
1949
Made TV debut re-enacting a scene from "The Butcher Boy" on "The Ed Wynn Show" (CBS)
1949
James Agee's essay in LIFE sparked renewed interest in silent films, particualrly the work of Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd and Harry Langdon
1950
Appeared as himself in Billy Wilder's "Sunset Boulevard"
1952
Acted in Chaplin's "Limelight" (only time the two appeared together)
1955
Met businessman Raymond Rohaurer who would pull together a collection of prints of Keaton's silent films
1955
Actor James Mason, then-owner of the villa Keaton had built for former wife Natalie Talmadge in 1925, discovered a cache of film cans in a locked vault in a gardner's shed which contained prints of all of Keaton's silent features and many of his short comedies too, a veritable treasure trove from which Rohaure could begin his work
1956
Appeared in Michael Anderson's "Around the World in 80 Days"
1957
Paramount released "The Buster Keaton Story", starring Donald O'Connor
1959
Awarded a special Oscar for "his unique talents which brought immortal comedies to the screen"
1963
Acted in Stanley Kramer's "It a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World"
1965
Received standing ovation as special guest at the Venice Film Festival where "Film", a 22-minte short written for him by Samuel Beckett, premiered
1966
Last film appearances (excluding archival footage) in Richard Lester's "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" and Luigi Scattini's "War Italian Style" (released in the USA in 1967)
1987
Last film unearthed and restored by Rohaurer (with Kevin Brownlow), the 1921 short "Hard Luck", premiered at London's Palladium
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