The Girl of Gold | |
Director: | John Ince |
Producer: | Regal Pictures |
Starring: | Florence Vidor |
Cinematography: | James Diamond |
Editing: | Claude Berkeley |
Distributor: | Producers Distributing Corporation |
Runtime: | 6 reels |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Girl of Gold is a 1925 American silent melodrama film directed by John Ince and starring Florence Vidor. It was released by Producers Distributing Corporation.[1] [2]
As described in a film magazine review, Helen Marrimore, daughter of a wealthy mine owner, is dubbed “The girl of gold” by society, and snubbed by them. She attends a house party under an assumed name, and she meets Schuyler Livingstone, and sister Ada, shorn of their wealth in Wall Street. Her father meets Schuyler through a motor accident and he decides his daughter shall marry Schuyler. He consents for his sister’s sake. At a spectacular ball she gives in the mine, Schuyler and Helen are caught in a cave-in. She learns the truth about her father’s bargain. They are then rescued.
A copy of The Girl of Gold is preserved in a private collection[3] and it has been released on dvd.