Woman to Woman (1923 film) explained

Woman to Woman
Director:Graham Cutts
Alfred Hitchcock (uncredited)
Producer:Michael Balcon
Victor Saville
Starring:Betty Compson
Cinematography:Claude McDonnell
Editing:Alma Reville
Distributor:Woolf & Freedman Film Service
Runtime:82 minutes (8 reels; 7455 feet)
Country:United Kingdom
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

Woman to Woman is a 1923 British silent drama film directed by Graham Cutts, with Alfred Hitchcock as the uncredited assistant director and co-screenwriter.[1] [2] The film was the first of three adaptions of the 1921 play Woman to Woman by Michael Morton. To capitalise on the success of the film, Cutts and Hitchcock made another film, The White Shadow, with Compson before she returned to the United States.[1]

Hitchcock met his future wife, Alma Reville, while working on this film.[3]

Plot

As described in a film magazine review,[4] Deloryse, a dancer of exquisite charm and grace, is wooed and won by David Compton, an English officer billeted in Paris. On the eve of their marriage, her fiancée is unexpectedly called away. A blow to the head robs him of his memory and he forgets all about the faithful young woman who sacrificed all for him. Later, fate brings them together and, while the man's heart is wrung by the wrong that he has unwittingly done to Deloryse by marrying another woman, Deloryse's one thought is to protect the future of their son. For this, she sacrifices herself by dancing at a fete of the second woman in the case, even after a doctor had warned her that to do so would be fatal.

Preservation

As of August 2010, the film is missing from the BFI National Archive, and is listed as one of the British Film Institute's "75 Most Wanted" lost films.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alfred Hitchcock Collectors' Guide: Miscellaneous British Films. Brenton Film. 15 September 2018 .
  2. Web site: Woman to Woman. 18 November 2011. Silent Era.
  3. Web site: Woman to Woman / BFI Most Wanted . https://web.archive.org/web/20120803092942/http://old.bfi.org.uk/nationalarchive/news/mostwanted/woman-to-woman.html . dead . 3 August 2012 . British Film Institute . 11 August 2010.
  4. Simmons . Michael L. . Box Office Reviews: Woman to Woman . Exhibitors Trade Review . 15 . 10 . 25 . Exhibitors Review Publishing Corporation . 26 January 1924 . New York . 22 July 2022.