His Majesty O'Keefe | |
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Directed by | Byron Haskin |
Produced by | Harold Hecht |
Written by |
Borden Chase James Hill |
Based on | novel by Lawrence Klingman Gerald Green |
Starring |
Burt Lancaster Joan Rice André Morell Abraham Sofaer |
Music by |
Dimitri Tiomkin (original score) Robert Farnon (alternate score: UK release) |
Cinematography | Otto Heller |
Edited by | Manuel del Campo |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date
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Running time
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91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.5 million |
Box office | $2.5 million (US & Canada rentals) |
His Majesty O'Keefe is a 1954 adventure film starring Burt Lancaster. The film was directed by Byron Haskin and Otto Heller and included choreography by Daniel Nagrin. The cast also included Joan Rice, André Morell, Abraham Sofaer, Archie Savage, and Benson Fong.
The film is based on the book of the same name by Laurence Klingman and Gerald Green (1952).
Captain David O'Keefe (Burt Lancaster), seeking his fortune in the 19th century South Pacific, decides to enlist island natives to harvest copra, but runs into a wall of cultural problems. Backed by a Chinese dentist, he obtains a ship and sets about harvesting copra while fending off cantankerous native chieftains and ambitious German empire-builders. The natives, happy with their existence, see no reason to work hard to obtain copra, either for a German trading company or for O'Keefe. He finally motivates them by showing them how to produce large quantities of Rai stones, the stone money of Yap, their valued coinage.
The story is based on the life of a sailor named David O'Keefe who in 1871 was shipwrecked on Yap in the Caroline Islands, where he found the natives highly prized Rai stones quarried at great effort and danger on the island of Palau. He organized the natives to produce the large stone disks by employing modern methods and then used them to buy copra for coconut oil. The stones he produced were not valued as highly as those obtained by traditional methods due to the lack of personal sacrifice in their production, and the effect of an inflationary over-production.