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Baby Lillian Wade Movies

1914  
 
A typical moralistic silent melodrama, this one-reel Selig Polyscope presentation featured Harold Lockwood as a husband, who dallies with an unscrupulous actress (Eugenie Besserer) while his family is away. At the point of nearly breaking up his marriage, Henry Ashton is brought to his senses by his little daughter (Baby Lillian Wade), the Elizabeth of the title. Directed by character actor Fred Huntley, Elizabeth's Prayer was the third of ten dramas to team Lockwood with brunette Mabel Van Buren (here playing the wife). ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
The leading lady of the Selig Polyscope Company, blond Kathlyn Williams, played a dual-role in this two-reel melodrama set in the Alaskan wilderness, with young Harold Lockwood, Henry Otto, Al W. Filson, Baby Lillian Wade, and comedian Fernando Galvez in support. The silent melodrama was directed by Lem Parker after an original screenplay by J.G. Nattinger. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
A touching so-called "uplift" melodrama, A Little Child Shall Lead Them featured the Selig Polyscope Company's leading lady Kathlyn Williams as Helen Brant, an alcoholic adulteress whose husband, Harold Lockwood, is about to begin divorce proceedings. The marriage, however, is saved in the nick of time by the couple's young daughter (Baby Lillian Wade). ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
A silent melodrama produced by the Selig Polyscope Company, The Child of the Sea starred Kathlyn Williams as a girl who saves the assistant lighthouse keeper (Harold Lockwood) from being disgraced by a rival. The latter was played by Herbert Rawlinson, a handsome actor from England whose screen career lasted for more than 30 years. Rawlinson's final film, Jail Bait, was directed by the notorious Edward D. Wood Jr. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
Disgraced by drink, a doctor turns burglar in this silent melodrama from the Selig Polyscope Company. During one of his heists, the doctor (Harold Lockwood) comes across a baby (Selig kid star Baby Lillian Wade) in desperate need of medical attention. With little thought to his own safety, Lockwood attends to the child, earning the love and respect of her mother, Kathlyn Williams. Both Lockwood and Williams were among the most popular American screen actors of their day. The former would later become a major star at the American Company, who teamed him in scores of melodramas with blond May Allison. Sadly, Lockwood died in the 1918 influenza epidemic. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
A typical "uplift" melodrama of the early 1910s, this one-reel Selig Polyscope presentation featured Harold Lockwood as the widower of two small children (Utahna La Reno and Baby Lillian Wade). He falls in love with Kathlyn Williams and she with him, but the woman refuses to marry until the children accept her. Juvenile actress Utahna La Reno was the daughter of pioneering screen actor Dick La Reno. Written by the prolific Hettie Grey Baker, Their Stepmother was filmed in Los Angeles by E.A. Martin. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1913  
 
This early silent melodrama starred Harold Lockwood as a struggling young writer who cannot marry Kathlyn Williams because of the their different social positions. Years later, however, Lockwood saves the now widowed woman's young daughter (Baby Lillian Wade) and they are reunited. A one-reel Selig Polyscope presentation, The Tide of Destiny also featured Anna Dodge (aka Mrs. George Hernandez) and William Brown. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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