Charles Reisner (also frequently billed as "Riesner") started his
professional life as a prizefighter. He performed in vaudeville
for ten years and eventually wound up writing lyrics for musical comedy
on Broadway. After a spell under the auspices of impresario
Charles B. Dillingham, Reisner
moved to California in 1915, finding a job as an actor in one-reel
comedies at Universal. He added further credentials to his resume
at Vitagraph before his arrival at Keystone, where he made the
acquaintance of
Charles Chaplin. Before
long his innate ability to devise intricate visual sight gags got him
involved as a gag writer (as well as occasional bit part actor) in
classic Chaplin comedies at First National, including
A Dog's Life (1918) and
The Kid (1921). His collaboration with
the famous comic ended with
The Gold Rush (1925), for which
Reisner was credited as assistant director.
Moving on to Warner Brothers, he directed Charles' brother
Syd Chaplin in
The Man on the Box (1925),
Oh! What a Nurse! (1926) and
The Better 'Ole (1926). Reisner
also worked on the frenetic
Buster Keaton comedy
Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928),
using many of the old sight gags from bygone days of vaudeville comedy.
Alas, it failed at the box office and proved to be Keaton's last film
for his own production company.
During the 1930s Reisner made
occasional forays into mystery and crime drama with minor entries like
Sophie Lang Goes West (1937), but he was always more comfortable directing the screen's zaniest
comedians, from
Jack Benny in
It's in the Air (1935) to
The Marx Brothers in their hilarious and
underrated
The Big Store (1941), from
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello who were
Lost in a Harem (1944) to
Joan Davis in one of the screen's
last full-on slapstick farces,
The Traveling Saleswoman (1950).