A Kiss from Mary Pickford explained

A Kiss From Mary Pickford
Director:Sergei Komarov
Starring:Igor Ilyinsky
Anel Sudakevich
Mary Pickford
Douglas Fairbanks
Vera Malinovskaya
Cinematography:Sergei Komarov[1]
Distributor:Mezhrabpom-Rus
Runtime:6 reels
Country:Soviet Union
Language:Silent film
Russian intertitles

A Kiss From Mary Pickford (Russian: Поцелуй Мэри Пикфорд|Potseluy Meri Pikford) is a 1927 Soviet silent comedy film made and directed by Sergei Komarov and co-written by Komarov and Vadim Shershenevich. The film, starring Igor Ilyinsky, is mostly known today because of a cameo by the popular film couple Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks. The footage of the couple was shot during their visit to the USSR, with the couple knowingly participating as a gesture towards the Russian film industry.[2] [3]

A print of the film still exists and is preserved at the Library of Congress.[4] The film was shown during the Berlin International Film Festival in February 1991 and at San Francisco Silent Film Festival Winter Festival at the Castro Theatre in February 2009.

Plot

Goga Palkin is a theatre check-taker in love with a beginner actress named Dusya. She has a crush on Douglas Fairbanks and only wants to date someone famous like a Hollywood star. After a chance meeting and a kiss from Mary Pickford, Goga becomes a local celebrity, and a lot of girls chase him through the streets. The popularity of her admirer makes Dusya jealous, and she falls for him.[4]

Cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book of Lists #3 (Patrick Robertson's 10 Favorite Movie Oddities) p. 196
  2. Book: Whitfield, Eileen . Pickford: The Woman Who Made Hollywood . 1997 . . 245.
  3. Book: Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film. George Allen & Unwin. Jay Leyda. Jay Leyda. 1960. 175.
  4. Web site: Russian Films in the Library of Congress. 15 April 2009. Library of Congress. 30 April 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100418005755/http://www.loc.gov/rr/mopic/findaid/russian.html. 18 April 2010 . live.