His Wife's Husband (1922 American film) explained

His Wife's Husband
Director:Kenneth S. Webb
Based On:The Mayor's Wife by Anna Katharine Green
Starring:Betty Blythe
Huntley Gordon
Arthur Edmund Carewe
Cinematography:Harry Stradling Sr.
Studio:Pyramid Pictures
Distributor:American Releasing Corporation
Runtime:60 minutes
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

His Wife's Husband is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Kenneth S. Webb and starring Betty Blythe, Huntley Gordon, and Arthur Edmund Carewe.[1] It is an adaptation of the 1907 novel The Mayor's Wife by Anna Katharine Green.[2]

Plot

As described in a film magazine review,[3] "Olympia Brewster, a young college-bred woman, becomes a waitress at a mediocre hotel, and then marries a man she does not love to escape this drudgery. Immediately after the ceremony, she realizes his true character and leaves him, fleeing the hotel just as a gunshot is fired downstairs. Through a window she sees her husband prostrate and believes him killed. Later she reads his death notice in a newspaper. Not long thereafter Olympia's uncle dies, leaving her a small fortune. She marries a prosperous young attorney who becomes mayor, and later a candidate for governor. During a political crisis, he hires a secretary that he takes into his home. The secretary gives his name as Steele, though he bares a sterling resemblance to the wastrel Olympia had one married. Steele disarms her suspicions, but, after arranging the betrayal of the mayor to his political opponents, Steele brazenly informs his employer that he is his wife's husband and will have to be so acknowledged, or the mayor will have to withdrawal his candidacy for governor. An aged lady who has become Olympia's guest through unusual circumstances places in Olympia's hands the papers needed to thwart Steele's scheme, a certificate of marriage between Steele and a servant that is now Olympia's housekeeper."

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Munden p. 356
  2. Goble p. 191
  3. Tried and Proven Pictures: His Wife's Husband . Exhibitors Trade Review . 15 . 13 . 41 . Exhibitors Review Publishing Corporation . 16 February 1924 . New York . 7 September 2022.