Judy Forgot Explained
Judy Forgot is a play by Avery Hopwood (New York, October 6, 1910) that was adapted into a 1915 film.[1] The film is a five part comedy.[2] Marie Cahill starred in the film.[3] T. Hayes Hunter directed. It was produced by Universal Film Manufacturing.[4] It was advertised as a screaming farce comedy hit filmed in five acts.[5] Raymond L. Schrock wrote the screenplay.
Cahill portrayed Judy Evans in the play and film.[6] She loses her memory in a train wreck.[7] Her memory is later restored[8] after an auto accident[7] and she returns to her marital partner.[9]
Film cast
Notes and References
- Book: Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. September 8, 2011. Walter de Gruyter. 9783110951943. Google Books.
- Web site: The Moving Picture World. January 8, 1915. Chalmers Publishing Company. Google Books.
- Web site: San Francisco Call 21 August 1915 — California Digital Newspaper Collection. cdnc.ucr.edu.
- Web site: Judy Forgot. January 8, 1915. memory.loc.gov.
- Web site: Arizona republican. 1915-11-11. azmemory.azlibrary.gov.
- Web site: Who's who in the Theatre. January 8, 1926. Pitman. Google Books.
- Web site: The Moving Picture World. January 8, 1915. Chalmers Publishing Company. Google Books.
- Book: Seamon, John. Memory and Movies: What Films Can Teach Us about Memory. August 14, 2015. MIT Press. 9780262330664. Google Books.
- Web site: Film History. January 8, 2003. Taylor & Francis. Google Books.
- Book: Roberts, Jerry. The Great American Playwrights on the Screen: A Critical Guide to Film, Video, and DVD. January 8, 2003. Hal Leonard Corporation. 9781557835123. Google Books.