The Intrusion of Isabel explained

The Intrusion of Isabel
Starring:Mary Miles Minter
J. Parks Jones
Allan Forrest
Lucretia Harris
Studio:American Film Company
Distributor:Pathé Exchange
Runtime:5 reels
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

The Intrusion of Isabel is a 1919 American silent comedy film directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Mary Miles Minter, J. Parks Jones, Allan Forrest, and Lucretia Harris.[1] As with many of Minter's features, it is thought to be a lost film.[2]

Plot

As described in various film magazine reviews,[3] [4] [5] [6] Isabel Trevor (Minter) and her brother Bert (Jones), left penniless after the death of their father, sell their Southern home and move to New York, along with their servant Mammy Johnson (Harris). Bert finds work as a valet to Jack Craig (Forrest), but as he does not want his sister to know that he is working as a servant, he tells Isabel that he and Craig are equal partners in a business.

One day, Bert steals a roll of money from Craig and flees to Montana without telling Isabel, leaving her with no way of paying her rent. Still under the impression that Bert and Craig are business partners, Isabel, along with Mammy, moves into "Bert's half" of Craig's house. Amused and enchanted by the girl, Craig permits her to stay. When Craig's sister Marian (Land) arrives for a visit, she is also taken with Isabel and seeks to arrange a marriage between the pair. Her plans are thwarted however, when a young woman named Lois Randall (Shelby) arrives with a marriage license, which she claims that Craig signed at a drunken supper.

Meanwhile, Bert has made good in outdoor work, and returns to New York, seeking his sister and also intending to return the money that he stole from Craig. At the same time he arrives at the Craig residence, it transpires that Lois is in fact a criminal known as "Matrimony Mary" who seeks to extort money from men by the use of fraudulent marriage licenses. With this situation cleared up, and the debt between the prospective brothers-in-law settled, Isabel and Craig are free to wed.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. McCaffrey & Jacobs p. 191
  2. https://memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.mbrs.sfdb.6497/default.html The Library of Congress / FIAF American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Intrusion of Isabel
  3. The Complete Plan Book: Intrusion of Isabel . Motion Picture News . 19 . 15 . https://archive.org/details/motionpicturenew19moti_4/page/2358 . Motion Picture News, Inc. . New York City . April 12, 1919 .
  4. Reviews and Advertising Aids: The Intrusion of Isabel . Moving Picture World . 40 . 2 . https://archive.org/details/movwor40chal/page/n295 . Chalmers Publishing Company . New York City . April 12, 1919 .
  5. Reviews: The Intrusion of Isabel . Wid's Daily . 8 . 4 . 3 . Wid’s Film and Film Folks inc . New York . April 6, 1919 .
  6. Reviews: Mary Miles Minter in The Intrusion of Isabel . Exhibitors Herald and Motography . 8 . 17 . https://archive.org/details/exhibitorsherald08exhi/page/n281 . Exhibitors Herald Co. . Chicago . April 19, 1919 .