A Cure for Suffragettes explained
A Cure for Suffragettes is a 1913 American silent comedy film. It was written by Anita Loos and directed by Edward Dillon for Biograph Company.[1] It stars Dorothy Bernard, Kathleen Butler, and Dorothy Gish.[2] [3]
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Notes and References
- Book: Graham, C.C. . D.W. Griffith and the Biograph Company . Scarecrow Press . Filmmakers Series . 1985 . 978-0-8108-1806-4 . May 31, 2019 . 206 . A CURE FOR SUFFRAGETTES Edward Dillon (d); Anita Loos (au); finished 24 September 1913 (f); New York (1); 17 November 1913 (r); 405 feet (rl); LU1630 ....
- Barrett-Fox . Jason . 2012 . Rhetorics of Indirection, Indiscretion, Insurrection: The "Feminine Style" of Anita Loos, 1912–1925 . JAC . 32 . 1/2 . 221–249 . 2162-5190 . 41709681.
- Sloan . Kay . 1981 . Sexual Warfare in the Silent Cinema: Comedies and Melodramas of Woman Suffragism . American Quarterly . 33 . 4 . 412–436 . 10.2307/2712526 . 0003-0678 . 2712526. 2152/31143 . free .