March 26, 2026

S E11: Buster Keaton: The Great Stone Face and the Stunts That Should Have Killed Him

S E11: Buster Keaton: The Great Stone Face and the Stunts That Should Have Killed Him
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THE MR. HANSoN PODCAST

"The Man Who Never Laughed: The Silent Genius of Buster Keaton"

He was born in a Kansas farmhouse in 1895, and before he could read, he was being thrown across stages for money.

His father Joe — a vaudeville man — discovered something extraordinary about his son early: the boy didn't break. He didn't react. He absorbed impact like it was weather, stood back up, and stared at the audience with a face that refused to give them anything to question. That face — blank, still, unshakable — became the most famous expression in the history of silent film. The Great Stone Face.

By the time Buster Keaton was in his twenties, he was one of the most innovative filmmakers in the world. He didn't just star in films. He designed them. He understood camera geometry the way an engineer understands load-bearing structures. He planned stunts with the precision of someone who knew that almost right was the same as dead. He made a two-ton wall fall around him with inches to spare. He put a full-size locomotive through a burning bridge for a single take — costing $42,000 in 1926 dollars — because there was no second bridge.

Between 1920 and 1928, he made nineteen films. Nineteen complete works of visual storytelling that redefined what cinema could be.

And then Hollywood took it all away.

MGM. The talkies. The contracts that stripped his creative control, his studio, his films, and eventually his marriage. The years of drinking and disappearing. The slow erosion of a man built for precision being forced to improvise in conditions he couldn't control.

But the work was already elsewhere.

Already permanent. Already rolling in theaters he would never visit, in languages he would never speak, in decades he would not live to see.

In this episode of The MR. HANSoN Podcast, we go inside the complete life of Buster Keaton — from the farmhouse in Piqua, Kansas to the screening rooms of Paris, from the vaudeville circuit to the wall that was supposed to kill him. Seven acts. Cinematic narration. The whole story.

And now — you're about to know the rest of it.



  1. Buster Keaton
  2. silent film history
  3. silent comedy
  4. Buster Keaton stunts
  5. The Great Stone Face
  6. classic Hollywood podcast
  7. film history podcast
  8. Buster Keaton biography
  9. silent film podcast
  10. Hollywood history


  1. Buster Keaton life story podcast
  2. the real story of Buster Keaton
  3. how did Buster Keaton do his stunts
  4. was the falling house stunt in Steamboat Bill Jr real
  5. Buster Keaton vs Charlie Chaplin who was better
  6. Buster Keaton The General locomotive crash real
  7. why did Buster Keaton stop making films
  8. Buster Keaton MGM creative control lost
  9. best podcast about silent film stars
  10. cinematic storytelling podcast about Hollywood history
  11. Buster Keaton childhood vaudeville father abuse
  12. how Buster Keaton learned to do stunts
  13. Buster Keaton legacy influence on modern comedy
  14. who influenced Jackie Chan Gene Kelly physical comedy
  15. best narrative podcast about forgotten film legends



  • What is The Great Stone Face nickname?
  • Who was Buster Keaton and why is he famous?
  • Did Buster Keaton really do his own stunts?
  • Was the falling house in Steamboat Bill Jr a real stunt?
  • How much did The General locomotive crash cost in 1926?
  • Why did Buster Keaton lose his creative control at MGM?
  • What happened to Buster Keaton's career after the talkies?
  • Who did Buster Keaton influence in modern film and comedy?


  • Was Buster Keaton abused as a child?
  • Did the vaudeville authorities try to stop Buster Keaton's father?
  • What was the Comique Film Corporation and how did Buster Keaton join it?
  • Why did The General bomb at the box office in 1926?
  • How did Samuel Beckett use Buster Keaton in his film Film?
  • What did Charlie Chaplin say about Buster Keaton's talent?


  • What is a good podcast about silent film history?
  • Are there any narrative podcasts about classic Hollywood stars?
  • What podcast covers the lives of forgotten film legends?
  • What podcasts are similar to Lore or Hardcore History but about Hollywood?
  • What is The MR. HANSoN Podcast about?
  • Are there cinematic audio podcasts about Buster Keaton?
  • What podcast covers Buster Keaton in detail?


Silent Film Era silent film, silent comedy, 1920s cinema, golden age of Hollywood, vaudeville, physical comedy, slapstick, film history

Buster Keaton Identity The Great Stone Face, deadpan comedy, stone-faced actor, expressionless performance, Buster Keaton expression, Buster Keaton biography

The Stunts Buster Keaton stunts, real stunts no CGI, practical effects, falling house stunt, locomotive crash, railroad stunt, no stunt double, dangerous film stunts

The Fall and the Legacy MGM Buster Keaton, talkies silent film transition, Hollywood history, film redemption stories, cinematic legacy, Chaplin vs Keaton, Samuel Beckett Film 1965

Podcast Discovery cinematic podcast, narrative audio, immersive storytelling podcast, premium podcast production, Paul Harvey style podcast, Wondery style podcast, HBO audio storytelling



Buster Keaton, silent film, silent comedy, The Great Stone Face, vaudeville, film history, classic Hollywood, physical comedy, Buster Keaton stunts, Steamboat Bill Jr, The General, Sherlock Jr, MGM, talkies, 1920s cinema, deadpan comedy, slapstick history, Samuel Beckett Film, Charlie Chaplin, Jackie Chan influence, Gene Kelly, cinematic podcast, narrative podcast, MR HANSoN, Fuzzy Life Entertainment, immersive audio, ElevenLabs, Paul Harvey style, prestige storytelling, Hollywood biography



The Stunt Angle A two-ton wall fell directly toward him. One window. Inches of clearance on both sides. No net. No safety protocol. He calculated the fall himself, stood on the spike, and didn't flinch. Buster Keaton didn't perform courage. He engineered it. Full story on The MR. HANSoN Podcast.

The Father Angle Before he could walk properly, his father was throwing him into orchestra pits for money. The authorities came. They examined him for bruises. Buster stared at them — calm, unreadable — and said he was fine. He was. But what they didn't understand was what that training was making him. The full story of Buster Keaton — The MR. HANSoN Podcast.

The Legacy Angle Charlie Chaplin was considered his rival. Chaplin eventually said Keaton was the greater filmmaker — not the greater performer, the greater filmmaker. Jackie Chan studied him. Gene Kelly studied him. Wes Anderson still studies him. One man. Nineteen films. A decade of work that the industry buried and the world eventually came back for. The MR. HANSoN Podcast.

The Loss Angle He built his own studio. Made nineteen films in eight years. Rewrote the language of cinema. Then MGM took the studio, the scripts, the creative control, and eventually the marriage. He was thirty-seven years old and the industry had moved on. Except the work hadn't. It was already permanent. Already rolling on screens he'd never see. Full story — The MR. HANSoN Podcast.

The Question Angle What makes a man stand still while a two-ton wall falls toward him? What makes a man put a real locomotive through a burning bridge — one take, no second engine — and then move to the next shot? The answer is not recklessness. It's something most people never develop. The MR. HANSoN Podcast tells you what it is.



00:00 — Cold Open: The Railroad Bridge, Oregon, 1926 05:20 — Act I: The Child Who Couldn't Break 14:40 — Act II: Mastering the Fall 23:00 — Act III: The Camera Doesn't Lie 31:10 — Act IV: Defying the Impossible 38:45 — Act V: The World Watches 42:30 — Act VI: The Silence Breaks 47:55 — Act VII: The Rest of the Story


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The MR. HANSoN Podcast is prestige cinematic audio storytelling — built for listeners who want more than information. Every episode is a fully realized, single-narrator narrative written to HBO and Wondery production standards, drawing on the traditions of Paul Harvey, Cormac McCarthy, Erik Larson, and Sebastian Junger. No interviews. No panels. No filler. Just one voice, one story, and the full weight of a life told the way it deserves to be. Produced by Fuzzy Life Entertainment.

"My name is MR. HANSoN. And now… you know the rest of the story."


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