The Great Prince Shan Explained

The Great Prince Shan
Director:A.E. Coleby
Starring:Sessue Hayakawa
Ivy Duke
Tsuru Aoki
Valia
Studio:Stoll Pictures
Distributor:Stoll Pictures
Runtime:86 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:Silent
English intertitles

The Great Prince Shan is a 1924 British silent drama film directed by A.E. Coleby and featuring Sessue Hayakawa,[1] Ivy Duke, Tsuru Aoki, Valia, David Hawthorne, Fred Raynham and Henry Vibart in important roles. The film is adapted from the 1922 novel of the same title by E. Phillips Oppenheim. It was made at Cricklewood Studios by Stoll Pictures, the largest British production company of the era. Location shooting took place on the French Riviera.[2] It was one of two films former Hollywood star Hayakawa made for Stoll along with Sen Yan's Devotion released later the same year.

Plot

The father of a young aristocratic woman is assassinated and she is reluctant to marry a cultured, reserved and brilliant Prince Shan, graduate of Oxford and Harvard, but becomes his mistress.

Cast

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Miyao, Daisuke. Daisuke Miyao

    . Daisuke Miyao. Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom. 28 March 2007. Duke University Press. 978-0-8223-3969-4. 262.

  2. Nelmes p.331