Kathleen Mavourneen | |
Director: | Charles J. Brabin |
Producer: | William Fox |
Based On: | poem and song Kathleen Mavourneen by Annie Crawford and Frederick Williams Nichols Crouch, and play Kathleen Mavourneen by Dion Boucicault |
Cinematography: | Richard Maedler |
Distributor: | Fox Film Corporation |
Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
Kathleen Mavourneen is a lost[1] 1919 American silent drama film directed by Charles J. Brabin and starring his wife Theda Bara. It was produced and distributed by Fox Film Corporation. A much filmed story based on the poem, Kathleen Mavourneen, by Annie Crawford and play by Dion Boucicault.[2] [3]
As described in a film magazine,[4] Kathleen (Bara) and Terence (McKee), Irish peasants, plan their wedding in anticipation of a lifetime of happiness. Their dreams are broken by the Squire of Traise (McDermott), attracted by Kathleen's beauty, and a forced marriage to him is the result. A while later the Squire meets Lady Clancarthy (Harris), who possesses vast estates and funds, and is convinced that he can win her if he was free of Kathleen. He lures Kathleen to a lonely spot in the woods and leaves her. After being deserted by her husband, she is set upon by ruffians, and rescued only by the timely arrival of Terence, who kills one of her assailants. Terence is tried and found guilty, the evidence supporting a theory that he lured Kathleen into the woods for a foul purpose and killed the man who came to her rescue. He pays the death penalty on the gallows, whereupon Kathleen wakes to find it was all a dream and preparations for the wedding follow.