The Marriage Market | |
Producer: | Harry Cohn |
Starring: | Pauline Garon Jack Mulhall Alice Lake |
Studio: | CBC Film Sales Corporation |
Distributor: | CBC Film Sales Corporation |
Runtime: | 58 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Marriage Market is a 1923 American silent romantic comedy film directed by Edward LeSaint and starring Pauline Garon, Jack Mulhall, and Alice Lake. The film was released by the CBC Film Sales Corporation, which would later become Columbia Pictures.[1]
As described in a film magazine review,[2] mischievous pranks lead to the expulsion of Theodora Bland from a young woman's fashionable academy. She aids Dora Smith, who is escaping from a reform school, and later impersonates her in the home of novelist Roland Carruthers. The latter hides her from the Sheriff. Theodora's relatives endeavor to force her into an unwelcome marriage. After various adventures, she defeats their schemes and weds Roland.
A historical sequence in the film reproduces the scene depicted in the 1875 painting The Babylonian Marriage Market by Edwin Long, which was also done in the Babylonian story of Intolerance (1916).
Complete copies are held at the UCLA Film and Television Archive and the National Archives of Canada.[3]