The Lady of the Photograph explained

The Lady of the Photograph
Director:Ben Turbett
Producer:George Kleine
Cinematography:Fred S. Brace
Distributor:K-E-S-E Service
Runtime:50 minutes
Country:United States

The Lady of the Photograph is a 1917 American silent comedy drama film directed by Ben Turbett and starring Shirley Mason, Raymond McKee and Gerald Pring.[1] It was made by the Edison Studios shortly before they withdrew from production activities.

Synopsis

An aristocratic but impoverished young Englishman meets an American woman in Britain, but fears he cannot be worthy of her until he has settled his debts. However a self-made American he meets on his ship across the Atlantic offers to help him out financially in exchange for helping him to become a gentleman so that he can woo a woman whose photograph he carries around with him. The Englishman is shocked to discover that it is the same woman he in love with.

Cast

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Connelly, p. 371