|
|
|
Man and Maid (1925)
Character: Alathea Bulteel
Boulevardier Sir Nicholas Thormonde (Lew Cody) has to choose between his mistress Suzette (Renée Adorée) and his virtuous secretary Alathea (Harriet Hammond) in wartime Paris.
|
|
|
The Golden Gift (1922)
Character: Edith Llewelyn
Nita, a former singer, loses her voice and husband. To support her child, she becomes a cafe dancer. When her husband dies, she leaves her child at a mission. Nita regains her voice, becomes an opera star and reunites with her child.
|
|
|
Astray from the Steerage (1921)
Character: The Rich Wife
While an immigrant couple are detained by authorities to see if they're fit, a smuggler tries to sneak a bottle into their luggage, but he accidentally gets trapped inside, and gets sent to the house where the new Americans will work.
|
|
|
Don't Weaken! (1920)
Character: Reilly's Daughter
A dancing instructor gets involved with a newly rich family.
|
|
|
Confidence (1922)
Character: Miriam Wiggins
Bob Mortimer, an unsuccessful traveling salesman, picks up the wrong valise and finds it full of money. This gives him the confidence, which he has previously lacked, to convince the townspeople to invest in a new factory, prevent Josiah Wiggins from absconding with the invested funds, and marry Miriam Wiggins.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cupid's Day Off (1919)
Character: Shoe Store Customer
Heretofore running a shoe store has been considered a quiet, respectable business, but Ben and his partner make the interior of their emporium of fashionable footwear look like the finish to a feature number at a smart cabaret. They also put new life and the joy of winning into a gambling joint, until they are discovered cheating. This so shocks the proprietor and his regular customers that they lose their faith in human nature and send for the police. And so the merry game is kept up.
|
|
|
Married Life (1920)
Character: (uncredited)
Ben Turpin's rival marries his college sweetheart played by Phyllis Haver.
|
|
|
Live and Let Live (1921)
Character: Mary Ryan
While on a train trip, Mary Ryan runs into her old friend Jane Loomis. Mary was once a professional thief but is now reformed. Jane tells her that her uncle, Judge Loomis, has invited her to live with he and his family, but that she is planning to elope with her boyfriend instead. When the train arrives at the town where Judge Looms lives, Mary gets off and passes herself off as Jane. Complications ensue.
|
|
|
The Man from Red Gulch (1925)
Character: Betsy
In the days of the California Gold Rush of '49, Sandy is at odds with his partner, Falloner, over the latter's heavy drinking.
|
|
|
Down on the Farm (1920)
Character: Herself - in Prologue
The day starts off as any normal day on Roach's farm, where Teddy, the farmhouse dog, is doing more productive work than everyone else combined. But the day changes when Roach's farmhand sees an opportunity to be the knight in shining armor to Louise, Roach's daughter, who he wants to marry.
|
|
|
Leap Year (1924)
Character: Loris Keene
A young man, heir to his misogynistic and millionaire uncle, and in love with a nurse, gets in trouble when he gives advice on marriage to his girlfriends.
|
|
|
The Seventh Bandit (1926)
Character: Dr. Shirley Chalmette
The story of David Scanlon - a former gunfighter turned farmer, who sells the family homestead in favor of adventure in the California gold fields.
|
|
|
Yankee Doodle in Berlin (1919)
Character: Minor Role
Behind enemy lines, Captain Bob White disguises himself as a woman in order to fool members of the German High Command, including the Kaiser himself.
|
|
|
Soft Shoes (1925)
Character: Mrs. Bradley
Sheriff Pat Halahan comes into an inheritance and travels to San Francisco to collect. Faith O’Day, a cat burglar armed with pistol and flashlight breaks into his hotel room and demands that Halahan cough up his dough. Halahan sees her threat and raises her a one-dollar bet that he can return a brooch she stole earlier the same evening before its loss is discovered. Pulling off his boots to slip on his own “soft shoes,” Halahan sets off to do a little second-story work, not realizing the trouble he’s in for.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bright Eyes (1921)
Character: The Marriageable Daughter
An oil heir and the daughter of a social climbing family are set to marry.
|
|
|
Driftin' Thru (1926)
Character: The Girl
A drifter hobo is falsely accused of killing a saloon owner
|
|
|
The Midshipman (1925)
Character: Patricia Lawrence
Produced under the supervision of the U.S. Navy. James Randall, an upperclassman at the Naval Academy, falls in love with Patricia Lawrence, the sister of a plebe. She is engaged to Basil Courtney, a wealthy reprobate who arranges with Rita to discredit James.
|
|
|
Queen of the Chorus (1928)
Character: Mrs. Gordon Trent
A chorus girl falls for a young man pretending to be his boss, a millionaire. WHen his boss returns from a European trip and finds that the woman he loves is engaged to his secretary, complications ensue.
|
|