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Nursing a Viper (1909)
Character: N/A
During the French Revolution, a wealthy couple lives safely by professing republican beliefs. When a mob attacks a nearby chateau an aristocrat bursts into the couple's home. They save his life by disguising him as a servant, but he soon forces his attentions on the wife. Hearing their struggle, the husband intervenes and, stripping the aristocrat of his disguise, thrusts him outdoors to be killed by the mob.
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Flo's Discipline (1912)
Character: Florence Dow
Flo is the headmistress at Dow's School for Boys (enrollment: 12). The boys get too rowdy at the dinner table, so she dismisses the popular, but permissive, assistant principal. But the boys sneak out and he teaches them outdoors, until Flo turns the garden hose on them and chases the boys into the ice-house, which she locks. After an hour, she sends a bucket of hot coffee in with the assistant principal, but she removes the ladder he uses, stranding him. After another hour, he agrees to surrender, and she releases the boys. He leaves, but love has bloomed in the interim.
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The Salvation Army Lass (1909)
Character: N/A
A girl from the New York slums falls in with crooks. After her love is arrested following a barfight turned deadly, her life seems directionless-- that is, until she's saved from the streets by a band of Salvationists. She enrolls, and soon afterward encounters her former love in the same bar. Her faith is real, and strong, and her former love doesn't like this.
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Her Child's Honor (1911)
Character: The Mother
Unable to bear the abuse of her drunken soldier husband, the wife left her home and went to the city, where she became a nurse in a hospital. Her husband, recovering from a spree, treated his wife's disappearance as a joke and soon went with his company to the Philippines. Meantime a doctor at the hospital had fallen in love with the young wife and when news came from the Philippines that her husband had been killed she married him. They were very happy and a child was born to them. To a friend in her old home she sent a photograph of herself and family. Then her soldier husband returned for he had not been killed. During a reception at her new home he appeared on the scene. A dancer was to be there, but being unable to keep the engagement, the wife had prepared to perform the dance herself. The appearance of her soldier husband greatly excited her for it made her second marriage illegal.
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Not Like Other Girls (1912)
Character: Flo
Flo is not like the other girls at the Ferncliffe Seminary, in that she does not like the attention of the young men at the nearby college, and their efforts to win her affection prove disastrous to their ruffled spirits. Flo has a guardian, John Strong, who has made some unfortunate speculations and to recover his losses uses his ward's fortune, and in the end loses all. He writes to his son and tells him the truth and the only way to keep himself out of jail is a marriage between his son, Owen, and Flo, his ward. Owen arrives home and after persuasion on his father's part, agrees to help him. Flo is invited down for a visit.
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The Taming of Jane (1910)
Character: Jane
A fickle tomboy eventually falls for the suitor who had previously been annoying her.
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The Slave (1909)
Character: Nerada
A Greek woman marries a struggling sculptor. When he can't support her and their baby, she offers to sell herself as a slave to allow them to buy food.
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The Broken Oath (1910)
Character: N/A
A girl saves her sweetheart from the dealings of a deceitful gang that he has fallen in with.
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The Awakening of Bess (1909)
Character: Bess
The Awakening of Bess is a silent short film of 1909 directed by Harry Solter . The protagonists of the film are Florence Lawrence (wife of the director) and King Baggot , a well-known theatrical actor, here in his cinematographic debut.
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The Jilt (1909)
Character: Mary Allison - Frank's Sister
John is seduced and abandoned by a cruel flirt. Later he learns that his friend Frank is engaged to the same woman. He relates his story to Frank and convinces him to jilt her at the altar.
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Jones and His New Neighbors (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Jones' new house looks like all the others on the street. One night Jones enters the wrong house and finds himself in a precarious situation.
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Jones and the Lady Book Agent (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
After overhearing Jones mocking her, the lady book agent slips a suggestive note into Jones's pocket. A jealous Mrs. Jones finds the note, and a huge quarrel erupts.
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The Medicine Bottle (1909)
Character: Mrs. Ross
While she attends a party, Mrs. Ross leaves her young daughter to care for her bed-ridden mother. At the party, Mrs. Ross realizes she left the wrong medicine, and desperately tries to contact her daughter before it's too late.
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The Note in the Shoe (1909)
Character: Ella Berling
A shoe-factory worker puts a note in a shoe box offering to marry the lucky buyer. As a result, she is dismissed from her job, but her employer finds her so attractive that he suggests a new job for her, as his wife.
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The Prussian Spy (1909)
Character: The Maid
Lady Florence hides her lover, a Prussian spy, from the French troops who are hunting for him. One of her other suitors, a French officer, discovers the hiding place and threatens to kill the spy.
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The Road to the Heart (1909)
Character: Mexican Woman
Miguel casts out his daughter when she marries a poor man, causing his wife to leave him, too. After he is unable to find a reliable cook, he reconciles with his daughter so he can get a good meal.
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The Roue’s Heart (1909)
Character: Noblewoman
Mons. Flamant, a typical roué of the French nobility, is surrounded by all the pleasures and pastimes his fabulous wealth can procure. In a quest of diversion he visits the art rooms, just as a young girl enters with a magnificent piece of sculpture and places it on sale. The roué is so impressed with the work and the girl that he purchases it at once and follows her to the atelier, where he learns that she is the maid of the sculptress, whom he sees and at once falls passionately in love with her, but when he learns that she is totally blind, his feelings change to one of deepest pity.
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Schneider’s Anti-Noise Crusade (1909)
Character: Mrs. Schneider
Schneider is trying to write a speech but he can't concentrate with all the noise around him. During the night, Schneider catches burglars in his house, but when he sees they are stealing all the noisy distractions, he helps them get away.
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Those Boys! (1909)
Character: The Maid
Two boys find a pistol their father has hidden. While they're playing with it, they line up a target, not realizing their sisters are on the other side of the door. The parents realize the gun is missing and avert the disaster.
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Tis an Ill Wind That Blows No Good (1909)
Character: Mary Flinn
Out-of-work, Tim steals a sandwich, then knocks out the policeman who chases him. He changes into the policeman's uniform, and is approached by a wife who needs help with her drunken husband.
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A Troublesome Satchel (1909)
Character: In Crowd
Sight unseen, a man buys a bag that turns out to contain burglar tools. He can't get rid of the bag, even when he's robbed. The thieves assume he's a colleague and return the bag and tools.
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The Wooden Leg (1909)
Character: Claire
A father wants to marry his daughter to a rich man, but she's in love with someone else. She borrows a tramp's wooden leg, pretending that it's hers, and the disgusted suitor rejects her.
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A Wreath in Time (1909)
Character: Mrs. John Goodhusband
A few of us have had the chance to read our own obituary notice, but it fell to the lot of John Goodhusband the rare privilege of viewing his own elegiac cinerary floral offerings, and at the time John was anything but a "dead one."
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Bear Ye One Another’s Burdens (1910)
Character: Mrs. George Rand
When an infirm husband learns of the dire circumstances his wife must endure, he makes every effort to bring himself back to health.
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The Blind Man’s Tact (1910)
Character: N/A
Five days more! Only five more days says the physician, and the man who has for so long a time been totally blind will be able to take off the bandage, and have the great, light world before him!
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The Rosary (1910)
Character: N/A
A pretty model with two rival art students (her father's pupils) in love with her, a situation not at all surprising considering how alluring she looks in the garb of a nun, posing for their canvas. Jealousy and anger ensues.
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The Little Rebel (1911)
Character: Rosalind Trevaine
A Civil War spy story in which a girl and the officer she loves find themselves on opposite sides of the conflict.
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The Two Fathers (1911)
Character: Gladys
An impoverished father is forced to give up his daughter for adoption. After she is grown, she realizes she has two fathers: her real one and her "adopted" one.
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Taking a Chance (1912)
Character: Mrs. Flo Mills
A matchmaking wife brings suspicion upon herself when she tries to reunite a young couple.
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Her Generous Way (1909)
Character: N/A
A wife innocently inspires suspicion by generously giving away some money given to her for a hat.
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Lest We Forget (1909)
Character: N/A
A rich little girl helps a poor little girl by making their Christmas enjoyable.
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Debt (1910)
Character: N/A
An extravagant wife leaves her husband, but returns when he strikes it rich.
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The Eternal Triangle (1910)
Character: The Wife
A young wife instigates a duel between a dashing count, with whom she has been having an affair, and her elderly husband. In the duel, the husband is mortally wounded and his now repentant wife chooses to join him in death.
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A Game for Two (1910)
Character: Mrs. Henderson
A wife tries to drive away her husband's best friend by flirting with him, but trouble arises when the friend flirts back.
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The Governor’s Pardon (1910)
Character: N/A
An honest man trades places with a convict so the convict can see his dying wife, but he is killed on his way back to prison. The governor must step in to assure the right man is released from prison.
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Jane and the Stranger (1910)
Character: Jane
Jane thinks she has witnessed a murder and the suspect is arrested; she later learns the truth and saves him from hanging.
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The Maelstrom (1910)
Character: N/A
A young woman marries a man she hardly knows or understands; in a moment of crisis, the two suddenly realize what they mean to each other.
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The Mistake (1910)
Character: N/A
A husband learns from his mistake after he wrongly accuses his wife of infidelity.
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Mother Love (1910)
Character: The Mother
A mother loses her sanity when she loses her child. Her husband brings home a newly adopted child, and she regains her health.
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The New Shawl (1910)
Character: Marie
A husband becomes jealous when he finds his wife's shawl in a suspicious location.
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The Nichols on a Vacation (1910)
Character: Mrs. Nichols
A philandering husband arranges an ill-planned rendezvous at the same restaurant his wife and daughter are dining at.
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Old Heads and Young Hearts (1910)
Character: N/A
Two old gentlemen who have been pals from boyhood decide that their children ought to marry. This intention is a commendable one, to be sure, and what is more, their son and daughter like each other pretty well, still more, the wish of the parents would have been automatically done if the old men only had sense enough to remember the adage about the cooks and the broth.
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Once Upon a Time (1910)
Character: N/A
A woman is forced to reevaluate the quiet man in her life when she finds he actually could be her knight in shining armor.
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Pressed Roses (1910)
Character: N/A
Roses and trousers have little in common and pressed roses presage something wrong in the scheme of things. When roses are pressed instead of a pair of trousers, chaos and confusion is the result
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A Reno Romance (1910)
Character: Grace
A couple goes to Reno to be divorced, but change their minds at the last moment.
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The Right Girl (1910)
Character: N/A
There is always a right girl for all of us; sometime, somewhere, somehow we find her. But often the discovery leads through strange channels and peculiar by-ways. A young heiress, discouraged by fruitless efforts to secure a suitable husband at the seashore and fashionable summer resorts, decides to go to visit her old nurse, to recuperate. She does not want the town people to know she is an heiress, so she changes places with the nurse's daughter. A youth who is pretty much "down and out" receives a letter from a city friend saying that the heiress is in town. The friend advises him to board at the house at which she is staying with the intention of courting the her.
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The Stage Note (1910)
Character: N/A
A clever girl inventively uses a stage prop to attract help when burglars enter her house.
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The Tide of Fortune (1910)
Character: N/A
The indolent, thriftless black sheep of the family, the good-for-nothing son of a rich banker bothers his busy brother, who is disgusted with the antics of his drunken sibling.
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Transfusion (1910)
Character: N/A
After an accident, a young girl desperately needs a blood transfusion to save her life. A young blacksmith agrees to be the donor and wins her heart as well.
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Two Men (1910)
Character: TheOrphan
An orphaned girl raised by a miner in the wilderness falls in love with a tenderfoot, even though the miner loves her as well.
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The Winning Punch (1910)
Character: N/A
A girl's affections waver between the winner of a boxing match, and a greedy count.
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Age Versus Youth (1911)
Character: Nora Blake
A brash young man loses the business he inherits but learns a lesson in love from the daughter of his rival.
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Always a Way (1911)
Character: Ruth Craven
A minister is talked into performing a marriage ceremony for his sister and the beau he despised.
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Art Versus Music (1911)
Character: Ethel Vernon
A pianist's music annoys a painter, making him unable to work. Eventually they fall in love.
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Aunt Jane’s Legacy (1911)
Character: Bessie Elkins - the Niece
Aunt Jane's nieces and nephews bicker over an anticipated legacy.
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During Cherry Time (1911)
Character: Violet - the Country Girl
An actress teaches a young girl how to flirt and win back her beau.
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A Fascinating Bachelor (1911)
Character: The Nurse
A nurse ignores her other patients in order to concentrate on her favorite one, a fascinating bachelor.
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A Good Turn (1911)
Character: N/A
A woman's sweetheart is prevented from killing himself by two burglars who are afraid they will be accused of murder if he pulls the trigger.
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Her Artistic Temperament (1911)
Character: Flo
A girl from the country writes glowing letters about life in the big city despite the fact that it's really been disastrous.
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Her Two Sons (1911)
Character: The Younger Brother's Wife
Two brothers, one a minister and the other a cad, both love the same girl.
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His Bogus Uncle (1911)
Character: The Object of Their Affection
A scheming suitor ends up losing his girl to a rival even after he receives an inheritance.
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The Hoyden (1911)
Character: Gladys Weston
A young soldier is shipped overseas after a hasty marriage; when he returns he doesn't recognize his wife who has changed from the tomboy he married to a sophisticated young woman.
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The Life Saver (1911)
Character: Jessie Storm - the Local Girl
A local girl's romance with the lifeguard at a seaside lifesaving station is threatened by the arrival of tourists.
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The Maniac (1911)
Character: Dora Elsmore
An escaped mental patient assumes the identity of a society girl's dead father and threatens her marriage.
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The Matchmaker (1911)
Character: Evelyn Bruce - the Young Governess
A young governess catches the eye of an aristocrat and romance blossoms.
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One on Reno (1911)
Character: Mrs. Appleby
When a bored wife seeks a Reno divorce, she regains the attentions of her inattentive husband.
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Opportunity and the Man (1911)
Character: Flora Hamilton
One man squanders a fortune and loses his house and sweetheart to another who strikes it rich.
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The Professor’s Ward (1911)
Character: Edith - The Professor's Ward
An orphaned young woman rejects her appointed suitor and falls in love with her guardian.
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A Rebellious Blossom (1911)
Character: Flo - The Rebellious Daughter
A widow threatens her rebellious daughter that she will remarry if the girl does not behave at school.
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Romance of Pond Cove (1911)
Character: Florence Earle
When a young man loses his wealth, he also loses his fiancee, but he is more than consoled by her younger sister.
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A Rural Conqueror (1911)
Character: Marjorie Thorne
Florence Lawrence stars in this society comedy in rural surroundings.
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The Slavey’s Affinity (1911)
Character: Peggy - a Boarding House Drudge
A maid loves her employer, sacrificing her own happiness in order to insure his.
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The State Line (1911)
Character: The Sheriff's Daughter
A kindhearted criminal saves the life of the sheriff's daughter and is allowed to make it across the state line in order to avoid jail.
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Through Jealous Eyes (1911)
Character: Flo - the Doctor's Office Nurse
A jealous mother is envious of the affection shown toward her future daughter-in-law by her husband.
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Vanity and Its Cure (1911)
Character: Effie Hart
A silly and extravagant wife must learn to curb her wild ways before her husband is willing to take her back.
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The Surgeon’s Heroism (1912)
Character: N/A
A surgeon risks his life in order to finish surgery on a patient when a fire breaks out in the hospital.
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A Village Romance (1912)
Character: Flo - the Country Girl
John Cummins, a wealthy society man, while out in his auto, discovers he is out of gasoline. He stops at a country store and meets Flo Page, the daughter of the proprietor. It is a case of mutual attraction, causing many a heartache to Si, the clerk, who adores Flo. Cummins manages to have sundry excuses for visiting the little general store, and finally realizes he is head over heels in love with the girl.
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The Face on the Screen (1916)
Character: N/A
Florence, trying to escape fortune hunters, is residing at the seashore, when her maid dies. Florence has pretended to be the maid of this woman and she continues the deception. Her death is cabled to her attorney in New York, who advises her cousin and his wife, who have an adopted son, Harry. Later Harry meets the girl in her disguise as maid, and both are impressed.
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The Advent of Jane (1912)
Character: Dr. Jane Bixby
Dr. Jane Bixby, a new doctor in a rural town, solves the mystery of the moonshiner's still.
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After All (1912)
Character: Margie
A spurned suitor threatens to kill Margie's sweetheart if she does not give him up.
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All for Love (1912)
Character: Flo
Little Flo is the daughter of a blind musician and the pair live by means of the few pennies tossed to them on the street, the father playing the violin and Flo dancing and singing to his accompaniment. Death overtakes the old man in front of the country residence of an eccentric novelist named Roland. Roland and his sister take Flo into their home and, becoming much attached to her, they virtually adopt her.
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The Angel of the Studio (1912)
Character: Roxie
An unattractive girl endeavors to make herself attractive to an artist, but he sees only the artificial beauty of a model.
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Betty’s Nightmare (1912)
Character: Betty
Betty, a farm cook, yearns to be an actress, but her dreams turn into nightmares, and she seeks comfort in the arms of a hired hand.
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Her Cousin Fred (1912)
Character: Flo Ballard
Fred acts as a matchmaker for his cousin Flo and his friend George.
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In Swift Waters (1912)
Character: Flo Armstrong
A foolish suitor gains favor in a girl's eyes when he pretends to have saved her life. When the truth is known, she rejects him for the real hero.
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The Lady Leone (1912)
Character: Lady Leone Mervyn
An heiress, under the protection of the Queen, falls in love with a poor knight.
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The Players (1912)
Character: Flo Lakewood
Two actors, trying to soak up local color for an upcoming play, fall in love with the same girl.
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Sisters (1912)
Character: Annie / Mary (twin sisters)
When a fireman rescues his long-lost sister-in-law he mistakes her for his wife when she dies, and contemplates suicide until he learns the truth.
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Tangled Relations (1912)
Character: Florence the Governess
Two old sweethearts, Henry Jones and Mrs. Mary Owen, he a widower and she a widow, meet at a summer resort and, renewing their old love, get married. On their way back to the city they send telegrams home, he to his only daughter, Florence, and she to her only son, Tom. The children receive the telegrams and are filled with disappointment.
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The Winning Punch (1912)
Character: Nellie Wilson
A country suitor's jealousy of his rival for his sweetheart's hand culminates in fisticuffs.
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The Closed Door (1913)
Character: Florence Ashleigh
The daughter of an aristocratic Southern family, proud, but impoverished, enters into a marriage of convenience with a wealthy stockbroker.
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The Girl O’ the Woods (1913)
Character: Mab Hawkins
Romance develops between a young woman from the Tennessee hills and a man from the city; she saves his life when her brothers threaten to kill him; they part, eventually to be reunited years later.
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His Wife’s Child (1913)
Character: Flo
A young girl survives a dreadful childhood and grows up to right an old wrong.
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The Spender (1913)
Character: Flo
An actress cures a wayward young man of his extravagant spending.
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Suffragettes Parade in Washington (1913)
Character: Herself
At the opening of the film Pennsylvania Avenue is shown, nearly blocked by a motley mob of sightseers looking at the marching Suffragettes. The big banner demanding a Constitutional amendment guaranteeing equal rights to American women makes a pathway along which the Suffragettes are seen marching steadily and persistently, although still hemmed in by the mob.
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The Coryphee (1914)
Character: Florence
An actress assumes a guilty appearance in order to save her faithless cousin's marriage.
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Counterfeiters (1914)
Character: Flo
Two lovers disguise themselves as counterfeiters in order to escape from the girl's disapproving parents.
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Diplomatic Flo (1914)
Character: Flo
A woman adopts the guise of a spy when she uncovers an arms plot concerning a country in Central America.
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The Disenchantment (1914)
Character: Flo - the Maid
A maid discards her beau in favor of a musician whom she idolizes; when reality sets in, she takes her old beau back.
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The Doctor’s Testimony (1914)
Character: Florence Lund
A doctor commits perjury in order to win a woman whose husband could go to prison based on his testimony.
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The False Bride (1914)
Character: Florence Gould & Amy St. Clair (Dual Role)
A woman of loose morals takes the place of a young bride.
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Her Ragged Knight (1914)
Character: Flo - Bob's Ward
A confirmed bachelor falls in love with the young woman whom he had pawned off on his aunt when she was first put into his custody.
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The Honor of the Humble (1914)
Character: Flo Soule - The Gamekeeper's Daughter
A young girl falls in love with a count, despite her father's disapproval.
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The Little Mail Carrier (1914)
Character: Flo - the Little Mail Carrier
A female mail carrier is injured on her route and recovers at a bachelor's lodge.
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A Mysterious Mystery (1914)
Character: Miss Lawrence
A moving picture actress is mistaken for an escaped asylum patient; the insane girl then steps into the actress's life.
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A Singular Cynic (1914)
Character: Flo Welton
When placed in a position to choose between two jealous suitors, a young woman turns the tables on them by choosing a third.
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The Test (1911)
Character: Miss Gillman
A girl chooses between two boys by testing how each one would help the poor.
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Tragic Love (1909)
Character: The Maid / In Factory
Bob Spaulding, a manly fellow, meets Dr. Rankin and his wife on the street while they are engaged in a violent tiff. The doctor is about to strike his wife when Bob interferes, incurring the resentment of the doctor. During the flurry Mrs. Rankin drops her card case. From a card inside he learns the address and goes there to return it. They meet, and it is a case of love at first sight; but she is a wife, and beyond his reach.
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I Did It (1909)
Character: N/A
A mother punishes her son for eating a plate of cream puffs, unaware that the daughter really did it. As the daughter watches the punishment, she feels guilty, and confesses her misdeed.
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Sweeping Against the Winds (1930)
Character: N/A
A small textile factory down south is run by a cruel foreman that bullies and fires on whim the workers, especially the office girl who starts a day nursery for their children. He's also a part owner in the business. His methods usually scare away the man hired as the plant manager, until a replacement (secretly one of the other owners) arrives.
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Lady Helen's Escapade (1909)
Character: N/A
A bored Lady Helen goes slumming as a domestic in a boarding house. There she falls in love with a sensitive young musician. The other women in the house are jealous, and accuse her of trying to steal the musician's violin. Lady Helen retreats to her own home, and arranges a position for the musician which allows them to be together.
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The Brahma Diamond (1909)
Character: The Guard's Sweetheart
An unscrupulous tourist plots to steal the famous diamond, "The Light of the World," tricking a young woman into helping him. She is caught and imprisoned, while he prepares to sell the diamond and make his getaway.
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The Country Doctor (1909)
Character: Mrs. Harcourt
While caring for his sick daughter, a doctor is called away to the sickbed of a neighbor. He finds the neighbor gravely ill, and ignores his wife's pleas to come home and care for his own daughter, who has taken a turn for the worse.
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What Drink Did (1909)
Character: Mrs. Alfred Lucas
A man leaves his wife and two daughters for work in a carpentry shop. At work, he initially refuses a beer with lunch, then gives in. After work, two friends take a little while to convince him to go for a refreshing malt beverage, then to have another and another....
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A Drunkard's Reformation (1909)
Character: Woman in the Play
A man arrives home late and drunk as usual. His wife reminds him that he's supposed to take their daughter out to a play. While watching the play, he's faced with his own drinking evils and how his life would be without them.
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After Many Years (1908)
Character: Mrs. John Davis
A castaway returns home after years lost at sea, to the wife and child he left behind. Has she waited faithfully or has she moved on?
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Resurrection (1909)
Character: Katusha
Nekhludoff, a Russian nobleman serving on a jury, discovers that the young girl on trial, Katusha, is someone he once seduced and abandoned and that he himself bears responsibility for reducing her to crime. He sets out to redeem her and himself in the process.
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Confidence (1909)
Character: Nellie Burton
Nellie flees her old life and goes east to become a nurse, where she marries a doctor. One of her old colleagues finds her and tries to blackmail her. When the blackmail plot is exposed, Nellie's husband expresses his complete faith in her.
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An Awful Moment (1908)
Character: Mrs. Mowbray
After a judge (Harry Solter) does his job and sentences a man, a gypsy woman (Marion Leonard) erupts in vehement protests and has to be taken forcefully out of the courtroom. Later the gypsy follows the judge to his home and plots a vicious revenge on his wife (Florence Lawrence).
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Where the Breakers Roar (1908)
Character: At the Beach
A group of collegiates decide to go for a splash. A lunatic, having escaped from a nearby asylum, heads for the surf, brandishing a knife. Innocent seaside fun becomes a struggle against a maniac on the water.
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The Reckoning (1908)
Character: The Wife
Mack Sennett appears as a lover in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Test of Friendship (1908)
Character: Jennie Colman
Mack Sennett appears as a guest and a man in the fight in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Way of Man (1909)
Character: Mabel Jarrett
A woman is scarred in an accident and refuses to stand in the way of her lover's marriage to another.
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The Helping Hand (1908)
Character: Wedding Guest
Mack Sennett appears as a wedding guest in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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One Touch of Nature (1909)
Character: Mrs. John Murray
Mack Sennett appears as a cop in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Cardinal's Conspiracy (1909)
Character: The Princess
A royal woman rejects her arranged marriage. The cardinal hatches a plan: the suitor will shave and change clothes. He arranges with 4 clowns to stage an attack on the princess which he easily repels. It works; the princess falls for him, especially when the cardinal arranges his arrest.
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Two Memories (1909)
Character: Party Guest
Henry and Marion have a lover's quarrel and part in anger. They do not reconcile, and ten years pass without contact. Marion becomes a society girl and spends her time at parties with her friends. Henry has become very ill and wishes to see Marion one more time. He writes asking her to visit. When she recieves the note, she laughs and tosses it on the floor, but, later, on a whim, decides to take all her drunken friends with her to visit him. When they arrive, Marion finds Henry dead, clutching her portrait in his hand. She sends her friends away and falls to her knees in remorse. Mary Pickford's debut!
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The Necklace (1909)
Character: N/A
Mrs. Kendrick borrows a jeweled necklace from a friend for an important social event. The necklace is stolen, and Mr. Kendrick goes into debt to replace it. The thief discovers it's costume jewelry, but the Kendricks never learns the truth; Husband and wife struggle for years to pay off the huge debt.
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The Girls and Daddy (1909)
Character: Dr. Payson's First Daughter
Sisters guarding their house from a burglar set upon stealing their daddy's money.
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Antony and Cléopatra (1908)
Character: Cleopatra
A short film based on William Shakespeare's play of the same name. It was the first film to dramatize the ill-fated romance between Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII of Egypt.
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Elusive Isabel (1916)
Character: Isabel Thorne
Based on the spy novel of the same name by Jacques Futrelle.
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The Stolen Jewels (1908)
Character: Mrs. Jenkins
It would have taken more than the wonderful powers of deduction of a Sherlock Holmes to have dispelled the mystery that shrouded the disappearance of a case of jewels at the home of Robert Jenkins, a wealthy stockbroker, and although they were eventually brought to light, it was through a most remarkable accident.
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A Baby's Shoe (1909)
Character: The Poor Mother
The story tells of the young widowed mother of two children who is forced by extreme poverty to part with one of her children, a baby girl, by placing it in a basket on the door steps of a wealthy banker. Before leaving the baby the poor mother takes one of its little shoes to keep as a memento.
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The Deception (1909)
Character: Mabel Colton
A wife offers to support her artist husband by teaching piano. She can't find work at the conservatory, and ends up working in a laundry, without telling him the truth. When he discovers her lie, he is determined to leave her, until she is injured and he understands the sacrifice she made for him.
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Drive for a Life (1909)
Character: Mignon
Harry's jealous former mistress puts poison in some candy intended for his new fiancée. Harry discovers what she has done, and races to save his fiancée before she eats the candy.
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The Unfoldment (1922)
Character: Katherine Nevin
Katherine Nevin and her brother Jack are given positions on the newspaper of James Osborne following their father's death. Osborne's city editor, Charles MacLaughlin, who is hated and feared by his business associates, is strongly attracted to Katherine, who accepts his mother's invitation to dinner. In spite of his ruthless manner Katherine tries to change the atheistic views of "Mac" and his embittered crippled brother, Angus.
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The Winning Coat (1909)
Character: Lady-in-Waiting
A young courtier gambles in a tavern and wins a coat from the leader of a gang. In the pocket he finds details of a plan to kidnap the Queen. He returns to the castle and hides until the kidnappers show up, then he exposes the kidnapping plot.
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Her Humble Ministry (1911)
Character: The Reformed Woman
A reformed woman shows a petty thief the righteous path by her good example.
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A Girlish Impulse (1911)
Character: Gladys Stevens
A hastily written letter is used in a blackmail scheme by a scorned suitor.
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The Wife’s Awakening (1911)
Character: The Wife
The Harrington's first born has died and the father and mother are inconsolable in their grief. Mrs. Harrington later seeks diversion in society, but the husband is engrossed in his work as a scientist, having a laboratory in his house. He conducts several experiments and is on the verge of success in his invention when an explosion of the chemicals occurs and it subsequently develops that he is blinded for life, his eyesight being permanently destroyed.
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The Satin Girl (1923)
Character: Sylvia
The story revolves around a young woman named Lenore Vance (Mabel Forrest), who loses her memory after witnessing the death of her father Silas Gregg (William H Turner). She commits a series of robberies due to being brainwashed by her elderly, reclusive, chemist uncle, Fargo (Marc Mac Dermott). She later becomes the person of interest in the murder, being labelled by the authorities as "The Satin Girl". Dr. Richard Taunton (Norman Kerry) and becomes infatuated with her. After discovering that Lenore has taken pieces of jewelry from him, he uses a piece of evidence left behind to investigate the crimes himself.
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The Red Girl (1908)
Character: The Red Girl
Mack Sennett appears as a man in the bar in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Pirate's Gold (1908)
Character: N/A
Young Wilkinson is leaving his dear old mother for a journey to seek his fortune in a foreign clime. Now, the little cottage is situated near the coast. The waters of the sea have been infested with a band of gold-thirsty pirates, who pillaged every ship that came their way. Having successfully perpetuated one of their nefarious exploits, they are struck by a storm and forced to put out from their floundering vessel in a small yawl, in which they place a chest of valuables, for the shore.
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The Bandit’s Waterloo (The Outwitting of an Andalusian Brigand by a Pretty Senora) (1908)
Character: Unconfirmed Character
A gang of lawless freebooters who terrorized the country and made travel in the mountains a hazardous pastime hold up a stylish landau in which are seated an old gentleman, a duenna, and a pretty young Senora. The inevitable happens; all are relieved of their valuables, and while the gentleman and duenna are sent on their way, the girl is held a prisoner.
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The Ingrate (1908)
Character: The Trapper's Wife
A hunter lost in the Northern woods is rescued by a trapper and his wife. He makes advances to the wife, is rejected, and tries to kill the trapper.
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A Woman's Way (1908)
Character: N/A
The pretty daughter of a French-Canadian backwoodsman incites the love of a trapper who is so smitten with the beauty of this wood nymph that he purchases her into marriage from her father. The transaction meets with repugnance from the girl. She was entirely contented with conditions, a child of nature, carefree. However, she finds her pleading of no avail, and so pretends to accept the situation. The trapper and Canadian go into the cabin to seal the bargain with a drink, and while inside the girl closes and fastens the door on them and makes her way through the woods to escape.
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Romance of a Jewess (1908)
Character: Ruth Simonson
This early D.W. Griffith short shows the director's interest in Jewish ghetto life, portrayed here with sympathy and sentimentality. The melodramatic plot involves the conflict between generations in an immigrant Jewish family.
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Father Gets in the Game (1908)
Character: First Couple
D.W. Griffith film about an elderly father who grows tired of seeing his son bring home beautiful women so he gets a makeover and heads out on the prowl.
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The Joneses Have Amateur Theatricals (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
The amateur dramatic society chooses the Joneses' residence as the location of its next meeting, and both Joneses catch 'the acting bug' in this split-reel subject.
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Her First Biscuits (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
A new bride has made a batch of biscuits. Her husband pretends to like them, so she delivers the rest to his office. But one bite of these biscuits makes you violently ill, and soon all his visitors (he runs a theatrical booking agency), plus the workmen at home, are ill; when she shows up at the office, they all go after her.
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The Lure of the Gown (1909)
Character: Veronica
"Fine feathers make fine birds", and handsome gowns make handsome women. Hence it is when Isabelle appears on the scene clad in a gown that is a masterpiece of the dressmaker's art she easily fascinates the male contingent, among whom is Enrico, the sweetheart of Veronica, a street singer. Enrico is so enraptured at the sight of Isabelle in her resplendent attire that he becomes her abject slave, casting aside the poor, peasant-clad little Italian street singer, who has loved him devotedly. Crushed almost beyond endurance the poor girl stands sobbing at the entrance of the park where the inconsistent lever left her. Her tears attract the attention of a wealthy young couple who happen to pass. In answer to their queries she tells them how contemptibly her sweetheart acted, and all because of the fascinating influence of a gown.
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A Smoked Husband (1908)
Character: Mrs. Bibbs
After his wife receives an extravagant dress, a man find himself the victim of an attempted burglary; He hides in his fireplace, which is then fired. The police arrive and pursue the man, now covered in soot. He jumps onto the roof below his, landing two dandies into a trough of paint.
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The Devil (1908)
Character: A Model
Mack Sennett appears as a waiter in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Vaquero's Vow (1908)
Character: Wedding Party / In Bar
Mack Sennett appears as a man in the bar and in the wedding party in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Call of the Wild (1908)
Character: Gladys Penrose
George Redfeather, the hero of this subject, returns from Carlisle, where he not only graduated with high honors, but was also the star of the college football team. At a reception given in his honor by Lieut. Penrose, an Indian agent, the civilized brave meets Gladys, the lieutenant's daughter, and falls desperately in love with her.
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Concealing a Burglar (1908)
Character: Mrs. Brown
Mack Sennett appears as a policeman and waiter in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Clubman and the Tramp (1908)
Character: Bridget / Dinner Guest
Mack Sennett appears as a dinner guest and a policeman in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Valet's Wife (1908)
Character: Muse
Bachelor Reggie writes his uncle that he has a wife and child, but then must produce them when the uncle visits.
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The Christmas Burglars (1908)
Character: Mrs. Martin
Mack Sennett appears as one of character Mike McLaren's assistants in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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Mr. Jones at the Ball (1908)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Mr. Jones at the Ball is a 1908 American silent short comedy film, part of the once-popular Biograph series centered around the titular Jones and his long-suffering wife. In this film, Jones rips his suit pants and chaos ensues.
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Mr. Jones Has a Card Party (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Mr. Jones, since his last escapade, had made strenuous efforts to amend the reputation he had gained in the eyes of the ladies of the Temperance League. But Oh! the ordeal, for such it was, was telling on him, and his pent-up spirits were threatening ebullition, when at last the chance comes. The league arranges to attend a three-days' convention out of town, and when Mrs. Jones departs, Jones sends a note to Smith, telling him to bring the gang, and they would have a "Prayer Meeting," enjoining him not to forget the "fixings." Well, the gang are not long in putting in an appearance, for they feel that every minute's delay is a chunk lost from a golden opportunity for fun.
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Trying to Get Arrested (1909)
Character: The Nanny
A tramp tries to get himself arrested so he can sleep in the nice, warm jail, but the police keep ignoring him or arresting the wrong person.
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Eradicating Aunty (1909)
Character: Flora - Aunty's Ward
A young couple must endure a tedious visit from their aunt until their friend offers to find a way to make her leave.
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His Wife's Mother (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Jones's mother-in-law prohibits his smoking and drinking, so he takes her out for the evening and gets her drunk.
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Jealousy and the Man (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jim Brooks
House painter Jim Brooks thinks his wife is cheating on him with his best friend John West. The intrigue is in fact a birthday surprise.
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Betrayed by a Handprint (1908)
Character: Myrtle Vane
Mrs. Wharton, a dashing widow, gives a party at her beautiful villa in honor of the presentation to her of a handsome diamond necklace by her fiancé. During the evening bridge participated in by a number of the guests, among whom is Myrtle Vane. Miss Vane is playing in wretched luck, and is advised several times by Mrs. Wharton to desist, but she still plays on in the vain hopes of the tide of fortune turning, until at last, in the extreme of desperation, she stakes her all and loses. Shame and disgrace stare her in the face. What can she do to recoup her depleted fortune? As one of the guests there is Professor Francois Paracelsus, the eminent palmister, who of course, was called upon to read the palms of those present. Sheets of paper were prepared and each imprinted their hand on a sheet to be read by the erudite soothsayer at his leisure, and so were left on the drawing room table.
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The Honor of Thieves (1909)
Character: Rachel Einstein
Mack Sennett appears as a man at the dance and a cop in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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Eloping with Auntie (1909)
Character: Margie
A girl is being shipped off to Europe with her aunt to break up her romance. Her suitor dresses himself as the aunt and manages to fool everyone long enough for them to elope.
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His Ward's Love (1909)
Character: The Reverend's Ward
Reverend Howson loves his young ward, but urges her to marry someone else. She accepts the proposal, but then sees the Reverend kissing an object she has dropped, and realizes he loves her.
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The Automobile Thieves (1906)
Character: N/A
A young couple conducts a series of robberies, followed by a chase, in which they are shot and killed.
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The Bribe (1914)
Character: N/A
A woman is commanded under hypnosis to break into her father's safe.
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The Planter's Wife (1908)
Character: Tomboy Nellie
John Holland, a planter in a small way, is devotedly attached to his wife and infant child. The wife wearies of the monotonous grind of farm life and is easy prey of a contemptible villain, in the person of Tom Roland, the ubiquitous "other man".
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The Peachbasket Hat (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Mrs. Jones leaves her baby with the maid and goes shopping for a new hat. Meanwhile, the maid invites a band of gypsies into the house for a palm reading. After the gypsies leave, no one can find the baby, and everyone assumes it's been kidnapped-- until the baby is found under a hatbox.
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The Honeymooners (1914)
Character: Florence Blair
Two couples head for Reno to swap partners, but change their minds at the last minute.
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Mr. Jones’ Burglar (1909)
Character: Mrs. Jones
Mr. Jones stays out late playing poker with his buddies. While he's gone, a burglar starts to break into his home. Mr. Jones arrives home just in time to catch him. Instead of calling for the police, he restages the capture in an overdramatic fashion and makes sure his wife sees it. She is so grateful she forgets to be mad at him for staying out so late.
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Sweet and Twenty (1909)
Character: Alice's sister
Alice misunderstands when she sees her sweetheart Frank accidentally kissing her sister, and gets upset. Frank claims he'll kill himself by throwing himself into the river, but gets cold feet when it comes time to actually do the deed. Fortunately for him, his girlfriend has come running worried after him, and all is forgiven between them.
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Money Mad (1908)
Character: Bank Customer / Landlady
The central figure is an old miser, a Harpagon of sorts, who, like Frosine, stashes his ill-gotten money in a secret cellar. While the miser is at the bank, exchanging stolen notes for gold coin, a couple of thugs witness the transaction and see their opportunity-- It seems avarice grips the hearts of all those who'd possess the bag.
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The Heart of O Yama (1908)
Character: O'Yama
Pretty Miss Chrysanthemum has but little to say as to the disposal of her heart, at least, such is the custom in Japan. Her parents attend to that for her. However, pretty little O Yama Sum had a will of her own, and casting tradition to the winds, insisted upon making her own choice. The Grand Daimio has long loved the pretty O Yama and presents himself before her mother in quest of her hand. His offer is scorned by O Yama, for she loves another, a low-born but worthy warrior.
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The Feud and the Turkey (1908)
Character: Nellie Caufield's Sister
Mack Sennett appears as a member of the Wilkenson clan in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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The Taming of the Shrew (1908)
Character: Katharina
Based on Shakespeare's play. Petruchio courts the bad-tempered Katharina, and tries to change her aggressive behavior.
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The Sacrifice (1909)
Character: Mrs. Hardluck
Oh, the woe of simultaneous birthdays, as were Mr. and Mrs. Hardlucks', and both being of a generous nature, were seized with an insatiable desire to make on this anniversary of their nativity suitable gifts, each to the other, Hardluck has a watch, but no fob. Mrs. Hardluck has a wealth of hair, but no decorative comb for her hair. What is worse, finances are low, or rather exhausted. An idea strikes Hardluck. He will pawn his watch and buy a comb; thus surprising her. Mrs. Hardluck's mind is also illumined by a bright thought. She will sacrifice her hair, and with the money buy him a fob. This they do, of course, unknown to each other. Well, here's the situation: He had no fob for his watch, and she no comb for her hair; but now he has no watch for his fob, and she has no hair for her comb. Mack Sennett appears as an extra in this film produced by the Biograph Company.
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Higgenses Versus Judsons (1911)
Character: Freda Judson
The sons and daughters on the opposing sides of a Kentucky feud fall in love and dismantle their fathers' guns to prevent further bloodshed.
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The Cord of Life (1909)
Character: Woman in Tenement
Antonine, a worthless, good-for-nothing scoundrel, demands money of his cousin Galora, an energetic, provident husband and father. His demands are met with a positive rebuff, and when he becomes insistent be is forcibly ejected by Galora. As he leaves the tenement he vows to get even, and lies in wait until Galora has gone out on business. Climbing to the fifth floor, on which the Galoras live, he watches his chance, which comes when Mrs. Galora goes for an instant to visit a neighbor on the same floor. Darting into the apartment and raising the window he perceives the awful result of a drop to the ground, five stories below, and so evolves a plan that is dastardly in the extreme. Taking the infant child from the cradle, and placing it in a basket he lets it out with a short rope, the end of which he secures by letting the sash down on it, so that to raise the window would precipitate the baby to destruction.
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The Politician's Love Story (1909)
Character: N/A
A haughty politician, on seeing a satirical cartoon in a newspaper, rushes to the paper's offices to shoot the cartoonist. On discovering the cartoonist is a pretty woman, he falls instantly in love and wastes no time in trying to woo her.
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The Curtain Pole (1909)
Character: Mrs. Edwards
An upper class drawing room. A gentleman breaks the curtain pole and goes in search of a replacement, but he stops into a pub first. He buys a very long pole, and causes havoc everywhere he passes, accumulating an ever-growing entourage chasing him, until he escapes them through a bit of movie magic, only to discover that the pole has already been replaced.
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The Old-Fashioned Way (1934)
Character: Undetermined Role (uncredited)
The Great McGonigle and his troupe of third-rate vaudevillians manage to stay one step ahead of the bill collectors and the sheriff.
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At the Altar (1909)
Character: Girl at Wedding
At the Italian boarding house the male boarders were all smitten with the charms of Minnie, the landlady's pretty daughter, but she was of a poetic turn of mind and her soul soared above plebeianism and her aspirations were romantic. Most persistent among her suitors was Grigo, a coarse Sicilian, whose advances were odiously repulsive. The arrival at the boarding house from the old country of Giuseppe Cassella, the violinist, filled the void in her yearning heart. Romantic, poetic and a talented musician, Giuseppe was indeed a desirable husband for Minnie.
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Secrets (1933)
Character: Undetermined Role (uncredited)
In the 1860s, Mary Marlowe defies her father's wishes to marry a British lord and runs away with clerk John Carlton as he heads West to make his fortune. Mary and John endure the difficult journey and settle into a small cabin, then face the hostilities of a cattle rustling gang, as well as the tragic loss of their only son. With Mary's help, John defeats the gang, which propels him to political power that, over the years, gradually erodes the once-happy marriage.
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Gambling Wives (1924)
Character: Polly Barker
Bank clerk Vincent Forrest loses his savings in a gambling den run by Madame Zoe and her provider, Van Merton. Forrest's wife Ann begins an affair with Merton when she discovers that Forrest is infatuated with Madame Zoe. Ann loses heavily gambling, but Vincent soon realizes what is happening in time to save his wife and to restore her happiness.
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So Big! (1932)
Character: Mina (uncredited)
A farmer's widow takes on the land and her late husband's tempestuous son.
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The Hard Hombre (1931)
Character: The Sister
When Peaceful Patton goes to work at the Martini ranch he is mistaken for the notorious outlaw the Hard Hombre. This enables him to force the ranchers to divide up the water rights. But he is in trouble when his mother arrives and exposes the hoax.
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Lucky Jim (1909)
Character: N/A
Gertrude chooses Jim over Jack, which makes Jack very jealous. Later Jim dies, and Jack marries Gertrude. He finds himself once again very jealous of the late Lucky Jim.
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1776, or The Hessian Renegades (1909)
Character: N/A
During the American Revolution, a young soldier carrying a crucial message to General Washington is spotted and pursued by a group of enemy soldiers. He takes refuge with a civilian family, but is soon detected. The family and their neighbors must then make plans to see that the important message gets through after all.
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Yellow Dust (1936)
Character: N/A
After he's accused of a series of stagecoach robberies, an innocent man has to find the real crooks.
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Night Must Fall (1937)
Character: N/A
Wealthy widow Mrs. Bramson notices that her maid is distracted, and when she learns the girl's fiancé, Danny, is the reason, she summons him in. Mrs. Bramson's niece Olivia takes a liking to Danny, and comes to believe that he may have been involved in the disappearance of a local woman.
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Sinners in the Sun (1932)
Character: N/A
A New York fashion model finds herself being pursued by a poor but honest garage mechanic and a rich philanderer.
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Those Awful Hats (1909)
Character: Theatre Audience
A pair of young ladies cause trouble at the cinema with their lavish hats.
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The Mended Lute (1909)
Character: Rising Moon
In an Indian tribe, a girl escapes from her father and suitor to be with the man she loves.
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His Chorus Girl Wife (1911)
Character: Sybil Sanford - a Chorus Girl
A young man's parents refuse to accept his new wife, but a reconciliation is eventually brought about.
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Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935)
Character: (uncredited)
Hard-working, henpecked Ambrose Ambrose Wolfinger takes off from work to go to a wrestling match with catastrophic consequences.
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