My Official Wife (1926 film) explained

My Official Wife
Director:Paul L. Stein
Cinematography:David Abel
Studio:The Vitaphone Corp.
Distributor:Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. (as Warner Brothers Production)
Runtime:74 min. (7,846 feet)
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)
Budget:$148,000
Gross:$315,000

My Official Wife is a 1926 American silent romantic drama film by Austrian director Paul L. Stein, and his first American film. It stars Irene Rich and Conway Tearle. It is an adaptation of the 1891 novel My Official Wife by Richard Henry Savage (which had been filmed once before in 1914 by the Vitagraph Company of America with Clara Kimball Young as the lead), but the storyline was updated to include World War I.

Reception

Reviews were extremely mixed. Film Daily compiled newspaper review quotes upon the film's release (as it did for many releases), citing the New York American as stating it was "repulsive ... players are badly miscast." The Daily News called it "worth going to see ... well acted, well directed and nicely dressed up bit of screen hokum." The Evening World called it a "matinee picture for unhurried chocolate munchers ... too long and too slow moving," and the Morning Telegraph dubbed it "first rate entertainment ... our interest never for one moment lagged."

According to Warner Bros records the film earned $219,000 domestically and $96,000 foreign.

Preservation

With no prints of My Official Wife located in any film archives,[1] if is a lost film.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. https://memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.mbrs.sfdb.7758/ Library of Congress / FIAF American Silent Feature Film Survival Database: My Official Wife