Marion Davies

  • Monta Bell – Lights of Old Broadway (1925)

    1921-1930DramaMonta BellSilentUSA

    Lights of Old Broadway
    Essay by Matthew Kennedy
    By 1924, Metro Pictures was ailing. Founded in 1915 it had major successes with child star Jackie Coogan, “Great Stone Face” Buster Keaton, and sensational Rudolph Valentino in Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921). But Metro lost Valentino to Paramount and was also in need of more theaters to better control exhibition. Goldwyn Pictures was in trouble, too, thanks to internecine fights between management and board. A merger could mitigate their respective business worries. When Metro and Goldwyn united on April 17, 1924, with the manipulative, canny, and robust Louis B. Mayer in charge, it became the nascent film empire Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer. Twenty-four-year-old “Boy Wonder” Irving Thalberg, formerly at Universal, was signed as supervisor of production.Read More »

  • Allan Dwan – Getting Mary Married (1919)

    USA1911-1920Allan DwanCampComedy

    A young woman must resist the charms of a handsome stranger and stay single if she wants to inherit a fortune.Read More »

  • Mervyn LeRoy – Page Miss Glory (1935)

    1931-1940ComedyMervyn LeRoyRomanceUSA

    A chambermaid impersonates the fictional subject of a composite photo that won a beauty contest, with whom a famed aviator falls in love.Read More »

  • King Vidor – Show People (1928)

    1921-1930ComedyKing VidorSilentUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Colonel Pepper brings his daughter, Peggy, to Hollywood from Georgia to be an actress. There she meets Billy who gets her work at Comet Studio doing comedies with him. But Peggy is discovered by High Art Studio and she leaves Billy and Comet to work there. Read More »

Back to top button