Mary Miles Minter Movies
The Louisiana-born offspring of one of film history's most vicious stage mothers, "Little" Juliet Shelby (née Reilly) was pushed into the limelight, against her will, she later stated, in a touring company of Cameo Kirby. The seven-year-old blonde charmer quickly caught the attention of Broadway impresario Charles Frohman and made her New York debut playing the daughter opposite Katherine Kaelred's vamp in a 1909 production of A Fool There Was. Major success, however, came two years later when she appeared opposite Dustin Farnum in The Littlest Rebel, a Civil War play that eventually toured for three years.Juliet's aggressive mother, Charlotte Shelby, convinced film producer P.A. Powers to cast her young daughter in an important part in The Nurse (1912), a melodrama of mother love vaguely based on the ever-popular barnstormer East Lynne. It was an auspicious screen debut for "Little Juliet Shelby" but when she returned to films after The Littlest Rebel had ended its run in 1915, it was under the new moniker of Mary Miles Minter. Apparently, Juliet Shelby had run into problems with the so-called "Gerry Society," a watchdog organization that policed the stage appearances of juveniles under the age of 16, and Mrs. Shelby simply "appropriated" the name of an older, dead relative. As Mary Miles Minter, the now veteran stage performer signed a lucrative contract with Metro, who embarked on a lavish promotional campaign and cast the youngster in a series of romantic melodramas that usually depicted her as a beautiful child growing into an even more beautiful young woman. The titles changed -- Always in the Way (1915), Emmy of Stork's Nest (1915), Dimples (1916) -- but the plot remained basically the same. She co-starred with stage veteran Mrs. Thomas Whiffen and Anna Q. Nilsson in Barbara Frietchie, each actress playing the Civil War heroine at a different age, and the drama proved Minter's biggest box-office success to date. So popular was the film that the indefatigable Mrs. Shelby searched for and found a loophole in her daughter's contract that allowed "Mary" to sign an even more lucrative deal with the American Flying-A company. Re-locating to Southern California, Mary Miles Minter was set on a collision course with the man that would eventually change her life, debonair director William Desmond Taylor. After starring in 26 popular films for American, of which apparently only Youth's Melting Pot (1916), The Eyes of Julia Deep, and The Ghost of Rosy Taylor (1918) seem to have survived, Mary Miles Minter signed with industry-leader Paramount, who obviously saw in her another Mary Pickford. Even Miss Pickford herself noticed the similarity. "She's younger than me," Pickford is said to have admitted, "but I think she looks like me." Minter's initial film for Paramount was most certainly in the Pickford vein: a screen version of the endurable Anne of Green Gables (1919), penned by "America's Sweetheart" favorite screenwriter, Frances Marion, and directed by William Desmond Taylor, who had guided Pickford through three popular melodramas. The dashing Taylor went on to direct Mary Miles Minter in her next three films, including the still extant Nurse Marjorie (1920). There is no doubt that the teenage Minter developed a crush on her much older director but Taylor was according to most reports a less than closeted homosexual and attempted to let her down gently.
Although never quite rivaling Mary Pickford at the box office, Mary Miles Minter was a star to be reckoned with when her career suddenly ended. The occasion was the still unsolved murder of Taylor on February 1, 1922, a cause célèbre that also brought down the career of Taylor's vivacious friend Mabel Normand. All sorts of rumors of studio cover-ups haunted the investigation and Taylor's secretive past uncovered a mass of potential suspects. Modern research, however, points to two possible killers: a Los Angeles drug dealer with a grudge against the director, whose anti-dope stand was well known, and Mary Miles Minter's mother, Charlotte Shelby. The latter, who may or may not have been infatuated with Taylor herself or may have attempted to prevent a possible scandal, is perhaps the most likely candidate and would reportedly go on to bribe three consecutive Los Angeles district attorneys.
Whoever the murderer was, the killing and the ensuing speculations terminated Mary Miles Minter's screen career. She left Hollywood in favor of Paris, France, apparently with little or no regret, put on considerable weight and later dabbled in real estate. A marriage to a real estate broker proved long-lasting, but tragedy and mystery continued to surround the former actress, who till the end refused to discuss the Taylor case. Estrangement and subsequent reconciliation with Mrs. Shelby kept her name (and the murder) in the press for decades and in 1981 the octogenarian Minter was brutally beaten and robbed by an intruder in her Santa Monica home. After her death from a stroke in 1984, a neighbor claimed to be Minter's illegitimate daughter and sued the estate. The case was finally dismissed in the early '90s. Judging from her few surviving films, Mary Miles Minter was no Mary Pickford but she was also not the pale imitation of legend. There is definite strength to her portrayals of young womanhood and she seems to have blossomed under the guidance of William Desmond Taylor, a fine director who deserves more recognition for his work than has so far been awarded. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
This remake of the 1916 Cecil B. DeMille picture was Mary Miles Minter's final film for Paramount. June Tolliver (Minter) is a Kentucky mountain girl whose family is feuding with the Falins. But their differences are temporarily put on hold when revenue officer John Hale (Antonio Moreno) comes around. He falls in love with June and sends her to the city to get an education. When she returns and the feud breaks out once again, June tries to become a peacemaker between the two families. Only after Hale is shot and seriously wounded do the men finally come to their senses, and upon his recovery, he and June marry. Those who think that Paramount ditched Minter because her name was dragged into the still-unsolved murder of William Desmond Taylor will be forced to admit that the studio sent her off in style. Not only was this a remake of a popular film, it was originally based on an even more well-known book and play. Minter also had very capable support in Moreno and excellent character actor Ernest Torrence, who played "Devil" Judd Tolliver. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Antonio Moreno, (more)
Carol Dolliver (Mary Miles Minter) is the young heiress sought by several suitors in this romantic adventure drama. She decides to marry engineer Laurence Teck (Maurice B. Flynn) who soon departs for a project in Africa following the wedding. When he is captured by natives, Laurence is given up for dead. Carol marries a disabled musician, but the second husband dies. She later travels to Africa to search for her first husband when a newspaper story reveals he survived his ordeal. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Maurice B. Flynn, (more)
- Starring:
- Wallace Reid, Marion Davies, (more)
Mary Miles Minter -- the most infamous of Mary Pickford imitators -- was at the peak of her popularity when this film was released. It was based on the play Tillie, a Menonite Maid by Frank Howe which, in turn, was based on the then-popular novel by Helen R. Martin. The tale, and Minter's character, are both very much of their era, when the Roaring Twenties were still kicking in and sunny young girls were still feminine ideals. Tillie (Minter) is one such young lady, cheerful and lively in spite of being raised by an austere father, a farmer (Noah Beery). An old lady dies and wills a large sum of money to Tillie, providing that she converts to the Mennonite faith before she turns 18. If she does not convert, the money goes to the woman's nephew. Tillie's father, and the folks around her, all prefer to have the girl under their control and they do everything they can to keep Tillie from discovering the conditions of the will in the hopes that she will lose the inheritance. But a mysterious young man (Alan Forrest) comes to town, and he sweeps Tillie off her feet. They marry, and it turns out that he is Jack Fairchilds, the old lady's nephew, so Tillie gets the money anyway. This picture came out around the same time that director William Desmond Taylor was found murdered in his home. Although Minter was not personally involved in Taylor's death, her name was dragged into the scandal. Contrary to popular belief, the star's career did not immediately come to a halt, but Minter's popularity waned over a period of months and her contract with Paramount was not renewed. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Noah Beery, Sr., (more)
Contrary to popular belief, the career of Mary Miles Minter did not end the moment that director William Desmond Taylor was found murdered (although Minter was not a suspect, her infatuation with the much-older Taylor caused a scandal). This picture came out five months after Taylor's murder, and it's treated just like any other Paramount release. No excuses are made for Minter -- in fact, Moving Picture World notes that "the star was far finer than the picture, but his has happened to Miss Minter before." The story is very different from Minter's usual frilly, girlish vehicles -- here, she is the wife of, believe it or not, the villainous Walter Long. How pretty Phyllis (Minter) wound up married to the rough-hewn Sydney Latimer (Long) is never divulged. All we know is that when Phyllis goes to the Fiji Islands to surprise Latimer, who she married the year before, she finds him drunkenly cavorting with the native girls. After a failed attempt to reform him, Phyllis runs away and meets up with John Webster (John Bowers). Webster mistakes Phyllis for the ward whose arrival he is expecting, and she decides to go along with it. A romance begins to blossom, but Latimer tracks her down. Because Phyllis refuses to have anything to do with her degenerate husband, he turns her over to the natives to use as a sacrifice. Webster finds out about the plan and rescues her. The native police kill Latimer, leaving Phyllis free to marry Webster. Minter's career did end a few months after this film came out, but it seems to have been her own choice -- her mother had pushed her into films as a child, and she was never really enamored of the profession. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Winifred Bryson, (more)
This Western was based on an old Clyde Fitch play and (unfortunately) bears no relation to the 1938 Gary Cooper/Merle Oberon movie of the same name. It's one of Mary Miles Minter's last films and she plays Jessica Weston, who manages a ranch while her philandering husband makes time with Molly (Viora Daniel), proprietess of the local cafe. Jessica meets a "dude" cowboy named Teddy North (Tom Moore), and when he saves her life, an attraction develops between them. North protects Jessica from her husband's cruelties, then comes to her aid once again when Weston is found murdered and she's accused of killing him. North takes the blame for the murder. But he's saved from the hangman's noose when Molly reveals that Ross, her former lover (Guy Oliver), is the guilty party. With Weston dead and out of the way, North and Jessica are able to find happiness together. It is a gross exaggeration to say that 19-year-old Mary Miles Minter completely lost her box office appeal after the unsolved murder of the man she loved, 49-year-old William Desmond Taylor. This film was released over nine months after Taylor's death and trade paper reviews of the day encouraged exhibitors to use Minter's name in their promotions. Minter, in fact, did not want to act any longer and was perfectly agreeable to seeing her contract end in 1923. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Tom Moore, (more)
One year shy of the scandal that would destroy her film career, Mary Miles Minter starred in the mystical romantic drama All Souls Eve. Minter plays a dual role, as the wife of a famous sculptor and an Irish maid. When one of the ladies dies, her soul is transmuted to the other. Jack Holt plays the sculptor, while one of the supporting roles is essayed by Clarence Geldert, in whose honor a Chicago-based theatrical award would later be named. All Souls Eve was adapted from a play by Anne Crawford Flexner. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
It's hard to say what Metro's intention was when they bought the film rights to Big Game, an unsuccessful melodrama by playwrights Willard Robertson and Kilbourn Gordon. What wound up being released was not a melodrama, but a comedy. However, the jumpy editing suggested that perhaps it was shot straight and was given a humorous bent later. Eleanor Winthrop (May Allison) is disappointed to find out that her new husband, Larry (Forrest Stanley) is a wimp and a coward. When he goes on a business trip to Canada, she insists on going with him. He looks even worse next to big, virile trapper Jean St. Jean (Edward Cecil). Eleanor finally decides to see if Larry has any backbone at all bribes Jean, offering him five hundred dollars if he can make Larry jealous. Larry finally comes through and wallops Jean. Jean gets his money and Larry wins his wife's admiration. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Monte Blue, (more)
The story to this mild little romance obviously owed a lot to the play Polly of the Circus, which was made into a 1917 film starring Mae Marsh. Here, Mary Miles Minter is the title character. Pat (Minter) is a little orphan who has been raised around the circus. Her foster father is Toto the clown (Neely Edwards). Toto hopes to marry Pat until the day the circus comes to a Southern town and she meets handsome Dick Beverley (Jack Mulhall). Beverley falls in love with Pat and takes a job as trick rider just to be near her. Beverley's aristocratic parents (Winter Hall and Helen Dunbar) find out about his new job and insist that he come home. He brings Pat with him, and his parents keep a close eye on her to see if she is worthy to marry their son. Pat finds life at the Beverleys' difficult, and while the parents are away, her circus family pays her a visit. Beverley's kid brother, Roddy (Cameron Coffey), spikes the punch with liquor and the circus folk get drunk. The Beverleys return and they throw Pat's guests out. She goes with them, but Dick goes after her. Explanations result in a wedding for Pat and young Beverley. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mary Miles Minter, Jack Mulhall, (more)
The Edgar Jepson novel, Ann Annington, was first made into a play, Ann, and then developed as a pleasant light comedy vehicle for star Mary Miles Minter. Ann (Minter) is an ambitious reporter who is assigned to interview author Harold Hargrave (Gaston Glass). The shy writer, however, absolutely refuses to be interviewed, so Ann rents a room next to his apartment and then disguises herself as a maid so she can cull information for the story. She discovers that Hargrave's mother (Helen Dunbar) is pushing him into a marriage with a prim and proper (and wholly unappealing) young lady. Since Ann is falling in love with Hargrave herself, she decides to break up the engagement by leaving a few flimsy feminine things lying around Hargrave's room. The finance finds them and calls off the wedding. Meanwhile, Ann has been sweetly flirting with Hargrave, and he's falling for her, too. When he discovers her real identity, and that she was assigned to do a story on him, it only briefly puts the brakes on the growing relationship. Ann decides to kill the story, and wins her man. At the time this picture was released, Minter was only months away from having her career cruelly destroyed by the murder of director William Desmond Taylor. While Minter almost certainly had nothing to do with his death, the scandal surrounding her love for the much older man ruined her in motion pictures. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
When an Arizona ranchman (Willard Louis) is elected senator, he heads for Washington with his daughter, Judith Baldwin (Mary Miles Minter). But they leave behind ranch hand Tod Musgrove (Monte Blue), who is in love with Judith. In Washington, two men propose to Judith -- Congressman Hamill (Guy Oliver) and Robert Courtney (William Boyd). Since she doesn't know which one to pick, she puts them to a test at her aunt's woodland cabin. Of course, they both blow it and when Tod shows up, he gets the girl. This picture was based on the stage play by George Scarborough. 19-year-old Mary Miles Minter didn't know it, but in just a little over six months after this picture's release, her career would come to a sudden end -- her former director (and girlhood crush), William Desmond Taylor would be found murdered. While she was never considered seriously as a suspect, her rashly romantic behavior over the deceased director ruined her sweet, innocent reputation. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Mary Miles Minter once more emulates her great rival Mary Pickford in Don't Call Me Little Girl. Ms. Minter plays a Miss Fixit type who descends upon a small town and warms everyone's heart therein. Her biggest task is to land a husband for her plain-jane cousin Ruth Stonehouse. Don't Call Me Little Girl was directed by Joseph Henaberry, Fatty Arbuckle's favorite director; ironically, within a year both Minter and Arbucke's careers would be destroyed by scandal. The film was based on Jerry, a play by Catherine Chisholm Cushing. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
When Royal Renshaw (Jay Belasco) weds Jenny Riano (Mary Miles Minter), a sweet country girl, his millionaire parents have a fit. They send Royal away on a yachting trip and convince Jenny to have the marriage annulled. They then marry their son off to the society girl of their choice, Jolanda Van Mater (Margaret Shelby, Minter's real-life sister). The only problem -- other than the fact that Royal doesn't love her -- is that Jolanda is a drug addict and spends most of her time at the establishment of dealer Polly Primrose (Catherine Wallace). Jenny, meanwhile, becomes a concert violinist. On their way to a sanitarium, Royal and his wife are in a car accident. She is killed, and he is taken to the hospital. His life is in the balance, and in his semi-conscious state, he calls for Jenny. Even though a full opera house is waiting for her appearance, Jenny rushes to Royal's side, and they are reunited. This overwrought melodrama was directed by William Desmond Taylor who, less than two years later, would be fatally shot. The murder was never solved, but the headlines it created destroyed Mary Miles Minter's career, even though she was undoubtedly innocent of the crime. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Although Nurse Marjorie (Mary Miles Minter) proves to be a skilled caregiver, she is actually the daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Donegal (Arthur Hoyt and Vera Lewis). To her parents' consternation, she has decided to take a stab at being self-supporting. Her main patients are a child with a broken leg and John Danbury (Clyde Filmore) of the House of Commons, who has been temporarily blinded. Danbury falls in love with Marjorie and becomes jealous because she's spending so much time with the other patient, who he thinks is a grown man. In an attempt to discourage the romance, Marjorie takes Danbury to meet her parents -- only they don't go to the Donegal estate, but the home of a fish dealer who has agreed to stand in. However, the woman's comically uncouth ways don't dampen his spirits or his suit, and Marjorie is finally impressed with his sincerity. So she reveals her true identity, manages to overcome the obstacle of her title, and is united with Danbury. This film was based on the novel by Israel Zangwill, who was famous for his tales of British life. It is apparently the only surviving film made by director William Desmond Taylor that starred Mary Miles Minter. In 1922, Taylor was mysteriously murdered, and although it is almost certain that Minter had nothing to do with the crime, the negative publicity still ruined her career. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Director William Desmond Taylor and his star, the beautiful Mary Miles Minter, returned to familiar ground with this Pollyanna story, almost a remake of the team's previous film, Anne of Green Gables (1919). Minter once again played a hard luck little girl, this time terrorized by a brutal German grandfather (Theodore Roberts) and cheated out of her fortune. But Judy is of the plucky sort, whose positive look on life not only enables her to reclaim the inheritance but also find love with a pleasant young man (Allan Sears). The names of Mary Miles Minter and William Desmond Taylor are forever linked in tragedy. She was apparently madly in love with her much older director, who tried his best to discourage her. But various letters of endearment found in Taylor's possession after his sensational (and unsolved) murder in 1922 reportedly ended Minter's screen career. A surviving publicity still from Judy of Rogue's Harbor seems to tell the story: Taylor is depicted playfully holding mistletoe over Minter's head, making it possible for leading man Allan Sears to steal a kiss. Although smiling pleasantly enough, Minter is visibly recoiling and seeking protection from her dashing but much older director. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
The trade magazine Motion Picture News called Mary Miles Minter "a clever little star when she has the right backing." Read between the lines, it hints at the limitations of her talent. Here she had solid backing with co-stars like Monte Blue and John Bowers and an accomplished director in Charles Maigne. Easter Hicks (Minter) lives in the Cumberland mountains. Her father (Guy Oliver) is a moonshiner who is in hiding from the revenue officers. She meets Clayton (Bowers), a city man, and falls in love with him in spite of her father's violent disapproval. Another mountain dweller, Sherd Raines (Blue), loves Easter, but he is willing to give her up when Clayton convinces him that he is willing to marry the girl. Raines has been studying to become a preacher and he offers to perform the ceremony. But Pap Hicks shows up at the wedding with a gun, intending to kill Clayton. Raines jumps in front of Clayton to protect him, but Easter tries to protect Raines and takes the shot. As she recovers from her wound, she realizes she really loves Raines, and Clayton hands over the wedding ring. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Given that silent star Mary Miles Minter was famous for her wide, deep-blue eyes, it's not surprising that many of her films incorporated the word "Eyes" in their titles. In Eyes of the Heart, Minter is cast as a sightless young lady, led to believe that the world is a fairy-tale wonderland. Upon regaining her sight, she quickly realizes that much of the world is ugly and unpleasant -- and that the three "Prince Charmings" in her life are a trio of petty criminals. Disillusioned, she falls in with a safecracker who intends to exploit her heightened sense of touch. She is rescued by her erstwhile protectors, who have fortuitously reformed in time for a happy ending. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Irish Mary O'Rourke (Mary Miles Minter) comes to America to visit her sister Norah (Myrtle Reeves, who quit acting and became Mrs. Oliver Hardy in 1921). She finds that Norah married a man named John Stuyvesant and has a baby, but her husband has deserted her. Mary is outraged by this, so she snatches up the baby and takes it to the Stuyvesant home. She waves it in front of the lady of the house (Lydie Knott), insisting, "This is your son's baby." Mrs. Stuyvesant is very pleased with the baby, and with Mary, who she assumes to be the mother, and welcomes them into her home. Mary wants to set things straight, but she has been told that Mrs. Stuyvesant is an invalid and may not be able to stand the additional shock this disclosure would cause. So she stays and eventually John Stuyvesant (Alan Forrest) and his cousin, J. Frederick Stuyvesant (Charles Spere) return from Arizona. John is surprised to find he has a wife and child since he had promised to marry Genevieve Harbison (Margaret Shelby, the real-life sister of Minter). But he can't say anything, either, for fear of shocking his mother to death. Genevieve is not so patient, however -- she insists that John marry her, now. He sets it up, but Mary and J. Frederick find out about it, and they go to stop it. But when Mary pulls out the marriage license, the name listed is John Frederick -- John's cousin. J. Frederick admits to his marriage to Norah, but explains that he has been trying keep quiet about it while waiting for an inheritance to come through. Meanwhile, John realizes he's not so thrilled with Genevieve and marries Mary instead. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Mary Miles Minter was supposed to be a contender for Mary Pickford's girlish crown, but she never came close. It's no wonder with pictures like this one -- based on L.M. Montgomery's book, it's an innocuous effort in which Minter does very little other than look cute. Adult siblings Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert (Marcia Harris and Frederick Burton) want to adopt a child from an orphanage, and their home, Green Gables, comes to be graced by the presence of Anne Shirley (Minter). In spite of her sweet looks, Anne has a penchant for landing herself in trouble, which gives the town gossip, Mrs. Pie (Leila Romer), a lot to talk about. When Anne grows up and her adopted family loses its money, she goes to work as a schoolteacher. While teaching, she is compelled to whip Mrs. Pie's boy, and later, when he falls off a hay wagon and breaks his arm, Anne gets the blame for the injury. But a minister who saw the fall clears it all up and saves Anne's hide. This picture was directed by William Desmond Taylor, whose unsolved murder in 1922 destroyed Minter's career. Even though the actress almost certainly had no involvement in his death, she was apparently one of the last people to see him alive. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Joan Hope (Mary Miles Minter) is the bored daughter of a chewing gum magnate. When her father goes away on business, she goes in search of some excitement. She takes a train ride during which she meets Kent Standish (Alan Forrest), an amateur detective. He is, in fact, searching for the passenger sitting next to Joan -- the "Countess of Crex" (Margaret Shelby, Minter's sister in real life). The Countess is really a notorious European thief, and has in her possession a stolen necklace. As a way to avoid detection, she convinces the naive Joan to exchange identities with her for a week. When they are exchanging purses and identification, somehow the box containing the necklace gets switched with Joan's box of chewing gum. Joan registers at the hotel where the Countess is supposed to be staying, and the other criminals who are there indicate to Joan that they want the necklace. Joan, of course, has no idea what they want. Meanwhile, Kent has followed her and he finds himself falling in love with her, even though he knows that the Countess is an evil woman who already has a husband. Eventually, Joan's father come to the hotel in search of Joan, the Countess comes looking for her necklace, and everything gets cleared up at the police station. Kent is happy to know that the girl he loves really is innocent, and single to boot. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Produced for the American Company in Santa Barbara, California, this quaint melodrama is one of only two or three Mary Miles Minter films to have survived. Minter was the breathtakingly beautiful but somewhat inert actress, whose name will forever be linked to that of murdered director William Desmond Taylor, with whom she was reportedly in love. Minter's Julia Deep, however, is surprisingly potent, and the actress is actually quite good as the supervisor of a department store's exchange department who falls in love with a handsome but irresponsible playboy (Allan Forrest). The girl's all consuming passion is so strong that it literally prevents the young man from committing suicide. It has long been accepted that Mary Miles Minter was forced out of films because of her connection with Desmond Taylor's 1922 murder; in reality, however, the likely reason for Mary's disappearance was probably that she had turned 21 and was thus free of her (stage) mother's iron grip. She herself once said that she was only in films for the money. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
One of the few surviving silent films of director Edward Sloman, The Ghost of Rosy Taylor contains one of the most powerful opening sequences in any picture. Two society ladies discuss their servants, with one of them recommending her new "hired girl" Rosie Taylor. The other lady reacts with shock and surprise, commenting that Rosie Taylor is dead. Deciding to investigate, the two dowagers venture into the home where "Rosie" is supposedly employed, only to be frightened out of their by a series of eerie "haunted house" noises (brilliant conveyed in entirely visual terms!) After this powerhouse prologue, the plot proper begins with a flashback, as heroine Rhoda (Mary Miles Minter), an American girl who has spent several years in Paris, returns to New York City without a penny to her name. She comes across a letter of recommendation for a cleaning woman named Rosy Taylor -- and, in dire need of money, decides to become Rosy Taylor herself, never realizing that the real Rosy has long since departed this earth. Rhoda's impulsive action completely changes not only her life, but the lives of everyone whom she meets. Despite the substandard quality of available prints, The Ghost of Rosy Taylor retains its original excellence and entertainment value. Curiously, director Sloman always considered the film to be one of his lesser efforts, citing his difficulties in extracting a convincing performance out of his 17-year-old star Mary Miles Minter. Evidently he succeeded, since Minter was far more believable here than in any of her other existing prints -- and whenever her performance falters, Sloman wisely cuts away to something else (in fact, the editing in this picture is fantastic, equalling and sometimes exceeding the best of D.W. Griffith). The Ghost of Rosy Taylor is currently available on video from a variety of reliable sources. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Beauty and the Rogue afforded Mary Miles Minter the opportunity to play a dual role, which delighted the actress' legions of fans and confounded her detractors, who felt that she didn't even have the talent to play one role. When her boyfriend gives her some valuable jewels as an engagement present, debutante Minter is convinced that he stole the gems. Actually, they are stolen, but the hero didn't know that when he purchased them. Her efforts to simultaneously prove her sweetheart's guilt and to clear his name require Minter to disguise herself as a boy, a neat trick considering the actress' dazzling beauty and "perfect" figure. Originally filmed under the title Mlle. Tiptoe, Beauty and the Rogue was one of ten 1918 releases directed by Henry King. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
A typical Cinderella story, Annie-For-Spite starred the American Company's answer to Mary Pickford, blond Mary Miles Minter, as a poor shop girl adopted by a wealthy widow (Gertrude le Brandt), who hopes to spite her greedy daughter-in-law (Eugenie Forde). Minter, of course, inherits the old woman and Eugenie sues and wins. The former shop girl, however, has the last laugh when the nasty woman's son (George Fisher) proposes marriage. Giving Minter the full Pickford treatment (except the salary, of course), American hired "Little Mary's" favorite director, James Kirkwood, to helm this film. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
Compiled by the National Association of the Motion Picture Industry and distributed to theaters across the United States, National Association's All-Star Picture, features selected scenes from various popular films, offering glimpses of many of the biggest stars of the day. Included are clips of Charlie Chaplin, Francis X. Bushman, Douglas Fairbanks, and many others. ~ All Movie Guide











