Eugene Pallette Movies
It's a source of amazement to those filmgoers born after 1915 -- which is to say, most of us in the early 21st century -- that rotund, frog-voiced, barrel-shaped Eugene Pallette started out in movies as a rough-and-tumble stuntman and graduated to romantic leading man, all in his first five years in pictures. Indeed, Pallette led enough differing career phases and pursued enough activities outside of performing to have made himself a good subject for an adventure story or a screen bio, à la Diamond Jim Brady, except that nobody would have believed it. He was born into an acting family in Winfield, KS, in the summer of 1889; his parents were performing together in a stage production of East Lynne when he came into the world. He grew up on the road, moving from town to town and never really putting down roots until he entered a military academy to complete high school -- which he apparently never quite managed to do.By his teens, Pallette, who was slender and athletic, was working as a jockey and had a winning record, too. Before long, he was part of a stage act involving riding, in a three-horse routine that proved extremely popular. He began acting on the stage as well, and was scraping out a living in the Midwest and West Coast, hoping to make it to New York. At one point, he was allowing a company manager in whose troupe he was working to pocket a major part of his earnings in anticipation of using the sum to finance a trip to New York, only to see the man abscond with the cash and leave him stranded.
Pallette turned to movies when he arrived in Los Angeles looking for stage work and found that there was nothing for him. He headed to a nearby studio, where he was told they were looking for riders and took a job as a stuntman for $1.50 a day. He quickly realized that there was a need -- and much more money offered -- for leading men, and he was able to put himself forward in that role. In a matter of a few days, Pallette had managed to make the jump from bit player to lead, and by 1914, he was working opposite the likes of Dorothy Gish. Such was his range that he was just as capable of playing convincingly menacing villains as romantic leads and dashing heroes. He was in D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation in a small role as a wounded soldier. That same year, he played starring roles in three movies by director Tod Browning -- The Spell of the Poppy, The Story of a Story, and The Highbinders -- as, respectively, a drug-addicted pianist, a writer struggling with his conscience, and an abusive Chinese husband of a white woman. In Griffith's Intolerance, he had a much bigger heroic part in that movie's French sequences, while in Going Straight, also made in 1916, he gave a memorable performance as a sadistic villain.
Pallette's career was interrupted by the American entry into the First World War, for which he joined the flying corps and served stateside. When he returned to acting in 1919, he discovered that he had to restart his career virtually from square one -- a new generation of leading men had come along during his two years away. He'd also begun putting on weight while in uniform and, with his now bland-seeming features, found that only supporting parts were open to him -- and that's what he got, including an important role in Douglas Fairbanks' 1921 adaptation of The Three Musketeers. For a time, he even gave up acting, pulling his available funds together and heading to the oil fields of Texas, where he made what was then a substantial fortune -- 140,000 dollars in less than a year -- only to see it disappear in a single bad investment. Pallette spent an extended period in seclusion, hospitalized with what would now be diagnosed as severe depression, and then turned back to acting. He reestablished himself during the late silent era in character roles, built on his newly rotund physique and a persona that was just as good at being comical as menacing.
Pallette signed with Hal Roach Studios in 1927, where work as a comedy foil was plentiful, and his notable two-reel appearances included the role of the insurance man in the Laurel and Hardy classic The Battle of the Century that same year. It was with the advent of the talkies, however, that he truly came into his own; his croaky but distinctive, frog-like voice -- acquired from time spent as a streetcar conductor calling off stops to his passengers -- completed a picture that made him one of the movies' most memorable, beloved, and highly paid character actors and even a character lead at times. Paramount kept Pallette especially busy, and among his more notable movies were The Virginian, playing "Honey" Wiggin, and The Canary Murder Case and The Greene Murder Case in the studio's Philo Vance series, in which he portrayed Det. Sgt. Heath. He became especially good at portraying excitable wealthy men and belligerent officials.
Pallette was a veritable fixture in Hollywood for the next decade and a half, playing prominent roles in every kind of movie from sophisticated screwball comedies such as My Man Godfrey (1936) to the relatively low-brow (but equally funny) Abbott & Costello vehicle It Ain't Hay, with digressions into Preston Sturges' unique brand of comedy (The Lady Eve), fantasy (The Ghost Goes West), musicals (The Gang's All Here, in which he also got to sing as part of the finale), and swashbucklers (The Adventures of Robin Hood). The latter, in which he portrayed Friar Tuck to Errol Flynn's Robin Hood, is probably the movie for which he is best remembered. He was earning more than 2,500 dollars a week and indulged himself freely in his main offscreen hobby: gourmet cooking. He was unique among Hollywood's acting community for having free round-the-clock access to the kitchen of The Ambassador Hotel. Not surprisingly, Pallette's girth increased dramatically between the late '20s and the mid-'40s -- his weight rising to well over 300 pounds -- but it all meant more work and higher fees, right until the middle of the 1940s. He was diagnosed with what he referred to as a throat problem then, and gave up acting. By then, he had a ranch in Oregon where he and his wife lived. Pallette was also extremely pessimistic about the future of the human race, was on record as believing that some catastrophe would wipe us out, and reportedly had stockpiled food and water in a survivalist frame of mind. He died of throat cancer in the late summer of 1954, at age 65. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Based on a 1921 story by Jackson Gregory, this silent Western starred Buck Jones as Montgomery Wilson Fitzsmith, a roaming cowboy who comes to the aid of a beleaguered group of Desert Valley ranchers who are fighting an unscrupulous capitalist, Jefferson Hoades (Malcolm Waite). Hoades has cornered the valley's costly water supply, but before Fitzsmith can join the side of the righteous, he most prove himself innocent of stealing a pie. With sheriff's deputy Eugene Pallette in hot pursuit, our hero encounters Mildred Dean (Virginia Brown Faire), whose father (J.W. Johnston), is put on trial for breaking the water pipeline. Fitzsmith gallops back to town and proves that the real culprit is Hoades. A chase ensues, and Fitzsmith bests the evil Hoades in a well-staged fistfight. Having signed with Fox in 1919, Buck Jones would become that studio's runner-up to the great Tom Mix. By the mid 1920s, Jones was almost rivaling Mix's popularity, having adopted a less flamboyant but still pleasing style of his own. Jones' stardom lasted until his tragic death in a Boston nightclub fire in 1942. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Buck Jones, Virginia Brown Faire, (more)
Clara Bow plays an inveterate flirt who impulsively marries much-older mountain man Ernest Torrence. When city lawyer Percy Marmont shows up on a camping trip, Bow can't help but lead the poor fellow on. He resists her advances, but finally succumbs, leading to disaster. Very typical of the silent films that catapulted jazz-baby Clara Bow to stardom in the late 1920s, Mantrap benefits immeasurably from Bow's boundless vivacity and from the breathtaking location photography by James Wong Howe. One nagging question: what does twentysomething Bow see in either of her superannuated leading men--particularly the cadaverous Percy Marmont? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ernest Torrence, Clara Bow, (more)
This drama was filmed on location in Alaska, including the largest fox farm in the Northwest (fur was very much in demand in this less-enlightened era). Sasha Larianoff (Lilyan Tashman) lives on Rocking Moon Island where she runs a blue fox farm with the help of Gary Tynan (John Bowers). Nash, a trader (Rockcliffe Fellows), has a mortgage on the farm, and Sasha is hoping to pay it off with the season's receipts. But then Sasha's fox pelts disappear, as does Gary. Nash, who is in love with Sasha himself, suggests that Gary is not the fine, upstanding man he appeared to be. This, of course, is untrue -- Gary has been trapped and tied up. He manages to escape and he locates the missing pelts in a cavern. The leader of the thieves is none other than Nash, and Gary defeats him in a fierce battle. He returns the pelts to Sasha and wins her love. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Yellowstone National Park was the setting for this delightful Tom Mix western that also featured a two-color Technicolor fiesta scene starring leading lady Olive Borden. Of mixed parentage (from Mexico and New England a title explains). Mix's Paul Wharton is paymaster of a railroad construction gang who will have nothing to do with his maternal heritage. That is, until he falls for the beautiful senorita Manuelita, whose honor is about to be violated by a gang of cutthroats. "In all, this is the best Mix western that has come along in some time," the trade-paper Variety acknowledged. Leading lady Borden found her career waning after the changeover to sound. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tom Mix, Olive Borden, (more)
This melodrama of the English upper class was independently made. Sir Melmoth Craven (Rockliffe Fellows) is running against John Orme (Robert Ames) for a seat in Parliament. Orme is an honest man, but Craven is on the shady side. For campaign money, he borrows money from an equally shady establishment called Gordon, Ltd. Orme's sweetheart, Margaret Garth (Vera Reynolds), becomes infatuated with Craven, much to the dismay of her mother, Enid (Dorothy Phillips). Mrs. Garth sits her daughter down and relates the story of how Craven had viciously mistreated her 20 years previously. Enid, it turns out, is actually the one behind Craven's loan, and she uses it to wreak revenge on him. Without warning, she calls in the loan and Craven kidnaps Margaret. Orme comes to her rescue and Craven is thrown in jail, his reputation irreparably destroyed. Margaret and Orme, meanwhile, are happily reunited. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Rockliffe Fellowes, Robert Ames, (more)
Veteran Western director William K. Howard does a solid job with this routine Zane Grey story. Jack Holt, Billie Dove, and Noah Beery Sr., who starred together in Wanderers of the Wasteland, appear together again. Madeline Hammond (Dove), the sister of ranchman Al Hammond (William Scott), arrives from the East. Gene Stewart, a rough and rowdy cowboy (Holt), convinces Madeline to marry him while he is on a drunken spree. Madeline sets out to reform him, and he sets out to rid their little section of the West of a band of outlaws. Stewart finds a formidable opponent in Brand, the bandit leader (Beery), who torments him, Madeline, and Hammond. Eventually the trio are rescued by a group of cowpunchers and Brand meets his end. This story was filmed twice more, in 1930 and 1940. Beery's son, Noah Beery Jr., had a supporting role in the 1940 version. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jack Holt, Billie Dove, (more)
Based on a 1910 novel by Hamlin Garland, Cavanagh, Forest Ranger; a Romance of the Mountain West, this silent Western from Vitagraph starred former child actress Helene Costello as Virginia Weatherford, a college graduate returning after ten years in the East to her home in Sulfur Springs. Virginia's mother, the owner of a rooming house (Eulalie Jensen), has turned hard and uncaring in her absence and the girl finds comfort in her friendship with Ross Cavanagh (Kenneth Harlan), a forest ranger. The latter runs afoul of cattle baron Sam Gregg (William Walling), who resents a new tax on cattle grazing on government land. When Gregg sends his henchmen to "persuade" Cavanagh to see things his way, the ranger is rescued in the nick of time by Virginia. After bringing Gregg and his men to justice, Cavanagh marries Virginia and they return East. Later in 1925, the old Vitagraph was sold lock, stock, and barrel to the upstart Warner Bros. and Helene Costello would star in that company's -- and America's -- first "all-talkie" melodrama, Lights of New York (1929), the gangster melodrama that introduced the expression of taking someone "for a ride." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Kenneth Harlan, Helene Costello, (more)
This is melodrama, not a horror film, and it's booze, not a full moon, that changes John Gilbert's character from man to beast. Gerald Stanley (Gilbert) is an English gentleman who is engaged to Beatrice Joyce (Alma Frances). But Stanley's personality changes whenever he drinks, and his brother--who also loves Beatrice--uses this to his advantage. After Stanley's latest blackout, his brother informs him that he (Stanley) killed Beatrice's brother. The horrified Stanley flees from England and goes to live in Quebec. The now sober Stanley stays away from liquor, until he receives word that Beatrice has married his brother. The news sends him on a drinking spree and once again he turns beastly. In a saloon he gets in a fight and kidnaps Elizabeth Gordon (Norma Shearer), a respectable young girl who has wandered off from her father during a trip through the woods. Stanley takes Elizabeth to his shack, where he tries to force himself on her. But his pursuers are closing in so he leaps in a canoe for a wild ride down the rapids. This sobers him up and, mortified by his actions, he apologizes profusely to Elizabeth. When she sees the real Stanley, she falls in love with him, and later on he receives word that Beatrice's brother was never killed. Shearer co-starred in this film on a loan-out from her regular studio, Metro. Although the picture wasn't very good, Gilbert caught the attention of Metro executive Irving Thalberg, who decided to sign him up when the studio combined forces with Goldwyn to form MGM. A few months later, Gilbert and Shearer would appear together again in the far superior He Who Gets Slapped. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- John Gilbert
Richard Armstrong (Reed Howe) has invented a carburetor that will enable his car to win a road race. Until that happens, however, he's working on a skyscraper being built by Robert Steele (Frank Beal). Armstrong falls for Steele's daughter, Doris (Alma Bennett), but her father won't hear of the match. His choice is Reynard Trask (William Bailey), who is posing as a broker, but is really an underworld leader. Steele finally tells Armstrong that if he comes up with five thousand dollars in 30 days, he will consider a match with Doris. Since that's the amount of the prize money for the race, Armstrong sees some hope. Just as he's about to end the race in first place, he gets sidetracked saving a child. Trask, meanwhile, convinces Doris that Armstrong is untrue and she agrees to marry him. Armstrong is able to unearth Trask's nefarious doings and rescues Doris at the altar. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
A trained seal stole the limelight in this silent farce produced by Thomas H. Ince. Sydney Chaplin, brother of Charlie, starred as newlywed Freddy Wetherill, whose child-bride, Hyla (Lucille Ricksen), sends him packing after a quarrel. Freddy takes up with Undine (Louise Fazenda), "The Diving Venus," and her performing seal, also named Freddy. Complications arise when a bill collector arrives armed with an attachment for the animal, and both Undine and her two Freddys flee to the estate of Cato Dodd (John Steppling), the uncle of the human Freddy. A dam breaks, the house floats down the river and Freddy the seal returns to his natural habitat. Amazingly, this silly farce was trotted out again in 1930, this time augmented with several talking sequences. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Louise Fazenda, Sidney Chaplin, (more)
There was nothing actors Lila Lee and James Kirkwood or writer C. Gardner Sullivan could do to bring new life to the tired old triangle theme of this comedy-drama. Lee plays Diana Moreland, whose husband, George (Kirkwood), has acquired a wandering eye. He is in the middle of an affair with Marilyn Foster (Margaret Livingston), and when Diana discovers it, she wants to divorce him. But for the sake of their child they decide to stay together and George promises to break things off with Marilyn. Marilyn, however, isn't having any and she soon has him back. Diana traces the two of them to a road house and joins their dinner accompanied by another man. She cheerfully invites Marilyn to come over for the weekend. When Marilyn arrives, Diana takes her and George out on a motor boat which she knows is unsafe. When the boat starts to sink, she calmly turns to her husband and tells him to choose which woman he will save. George chooses his wife, and another boat eventually comes and picks up the panicked Marilyn. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Lila Lee, James Kirkwood, (more)
Even though this Western used the convenient "dream" premise, it still managed to please audiences. Cowboy Tod Musgrave (Charles Jones, who hadn't yet added "Buck" to his stage name) and his pal Del Hawkins (Maurice Flynn) steal a ride on a train after being kicked out of a saloon. The conductor (George Siegmann) throws them off when he discovers they have no tickets, and the two men swear revenge. While waiting on a station bench for the train to return, Musgrave and Hawkins both fall asleep. The train arrives and Musgrave and Hawkins board it. As Musgrave is giving the conductor a sound thrashing, Hawkins robs the train. When Musgrave protests, Hawkins knocks him unconscious and plants some of the money on him. As a result, Musgrave is arrested as the thief and sentenced to prison. He proves to be a model inmate, helping to quell a riot, which earns him the admiration of Dorothy Owen, who is friends with the warden's daughter (Ruth Clifford). Through reading a newspaper, Musgrave finds out that Hawkins has bought a ranch and is engaged to Dorothy. He escapes from prison to warn Dorothy of Hawkins' true nature. She goes with him to a mountain cabin and Hawkins follows. The three of them are then buried in an avalanche. Hawkins confesses, and when the sheriff (Charles K. French) digs them out, Musgrave makes him go to prison in his place. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Charles "Buck" Jones, Maurice B. Flynn, (more)
Cowboy star Tom Mix takes a break from the far West to play a rancher headed for the far North in this action-adventure. Michael Dane (Mix) is headed for gold country to join his brother Peter (Eugene Pallette) and his partner, where they have struck it rich. On the boat he meets fetching Estelle MacDonald (Kathleen Key), the niece of the trading post's manager, Cameron MacDonald (Frank Campeau), and falls in love. When he arrives, he finds disaster has struck -- Peter has been murdered and his partner is sentenced to death for the crime. Dane is convinced that the partner is innocent and goes about searching for the real culprit -- who turns out to be MacDonald. When MacDonald is killed by his own trap, Estelle is left unprotected at the camp. Dane comes to her rescue, battles a pack of fierce wolves, and returns to the States with Estelle by his side. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tom Mix, Frank Campeau, (more)
Leading lady Lois Wilson considered this fine western her favorite of six films she starred in opposite virile leading man Richard Dix. (The others were The Call of the Canyon, 1923, Icebound, 1924, The Vanishing American, 1925, Let's Get Married, 1926, and the talkie Lovin' the Ladies, 1930.) Wilson had reached stardom as the girl in the first true western epic The Covered Wagon (1923), and To the Last Man was seen as a follow-up. She felt very comfortable opposite Dix, and their on-screen romance carried over into real life, at least until her family's disapproval, according to the actress, put a stop to the romance. The plot was the usual one about feuding ranchers and sheepherders, but Wilson and Dix's Romeo & Juliet-like quality made the film a box-office winner. An especially well-staged barroom-brawl only added to the film's popularity. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Richard Dix, Lois Wilson, (more)
This contrived and complicated tale of crooked politics would have been a poor vehicle for William Farnum if not for his stellar supporting cast. Although Sheriff Dick Leighton (Farnum) loves Jean Ainsworth (Lois Wilson), he is at odds with her father David Ainsworth (Robert McKim), a senator more interested in power than in honest government. When the guardian of Nora Foster (Alma Bennett) dies, the girl is left in Leighton's care, but she is murdered by Cass Blake (Fred Kohler). Blake is seriously wounded when he is captured by the sheriff's posse. In order to make Leighton look bad, Ainsworth sends a lynch mob after Blake, knowing that the sheriff will be compelled to protect him. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
The plot here, based on the novel, Judith of Blue Lake Ranch, by Jackson Gregory is typical Western fare -- an Easterner comes out West to manage a ranch and the old superintendent stirs up trouble. What makes it different is that the Easterner is a woman -- and the woman happens to be dramatic actress Pauline Frederick. She's New Yorker Judith Sanford who inherits a third of the ranch from her father, then buys another third. When superintendent Bayne Trevors (Charles Clary) won't follow her orders she fires him. Trevors holds a big grudge, and when the owner of the other third of the ranch, Pollock Hampton (Dave Winter), comes out, he wins him to his side. But Judith has a champion in foreman Bud Lee (the manly Tom Santschi) and he helps things go smoothly for her. Trevors, on the other hand, does everything he can to make it hard, including robbing her payroll carrier. When nothing works, he kidnaps her and convinces Hampton that the ranch should be sold in her absence. Lee does not believe their allegation that Judith is in San Francisco. He tracks down her whereabouts and rescues her, just in time to save the ranch and foil the conspirators. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Douglas Fairbanks' longest and most elaborate production up to 1921, The Three Musketeers was Fairbanks' first full-blown costume adventure (his modestly produced 1920 The Mark of Zorro was regarded as an extension of his breezy contemporary comedies). Fairbanks assumes the leading role of D'Artagnan, who after challenging musketeers Athos (Leon Barry), Porthos (George Siegmann) and Aramis (Eugene Pallette--yes, Eugene Pallette) to a duel, joins forces with them in opposition of the scheming Cardinal Richelieu(Nigel De Brulier). Plotting to discredit Queen Anne (Mary McLaren) in the eyes of her husband King Louis XIII (Adolphe Menjou) Richelieu dispatches Milady de Winter (Barbara La Marr) to pilfer the diamond brooch given by Anne to her British lover, the Duke of Buckingham (Thomas Holding). With the help of the lovely Constance (Marguerite de la Motte) D'Artagnan and the Musketeers race against time to retrieve the brooch and save their Queen. The film ends with D'Artagnan emerging victorious, a twinkle in his eye and a smile on his lips; the actual, darker denouement of Dumas' original Three Musketeers would be dramatized in the opening reels of Douglas Fairbanks' valedictory silent film, The Iron Mask (1929). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Douglas Fairbanks, Leon Bary, (more)
This drama, based on the play by Eugene Walter, begins in a rather novel way -- the two leads are shown watching a play, Paid in Full, which was also written by Walter! The play's storyline promotes wealth at any cost, and the couple, Bob and Jane Reynolds (Eugene Pallette, surprisingly young and slim, and Claire Whitney), take this philosophy to heart. Reynolds meets up with an old college pal, James Brand (Warburton Gamble), and together they cheat the government by selling it an inferior cement to use on a dam project and keeping the difference for themselves. Jane has no idea that she and Bob are living in luxury because of his dishonesty, until he tells her he has gotten embroiled in even more trouble. Among other things, he has forged a check in Brand's name, so Jane gets a check from Brand to clear him. But Reynolds thinks that Jane has dishonored herself to get it, and he kills Brand, and then himself. Jane is comforted by Dick Mead, a sympathetic reporter (Thomas W. Ross). This play was filmed once before, in 1915. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Eugene Pallette, Claire Whitney, (more)
For their screen debut, stage stars Mr. and Mrs. Carter DeHaven played Signor Monti and Blanche Hawkins in the bedroom farce that spawned all others, Twin Beds. The 1914 Margaret Mayo/Salisbury Field-penned play adapted well to motion pictures, even without the dialogue. Monti, a famed but henpecked singer, finds his neighbor Blanche worth noticing. This isn't missed by their spouses (Helen Raymond and William Desmond), who insist on moving to keep temptation at bay. Unfortunately both couples move to the same apartment building. One night Monti somehow manages to get out of the house and after a long night of cards and drinking, he comes home and falls into his twin bed. But when he wakes up he realizes it isn't his bed at all, but Mr. Hawkins'! The various hiding places Monti uses while trying to get out of Blanche's boudoir --the clothes hamper, wardrobe closet, etc. -- and into his own home soon became staples in subsequent farces. Twin Beds was remade in 1929 and 1942. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Angelica (Kathleen Kirkham) elopes with Reggie Irving (Eugene Pallette) under the false assumption that he's a worldly type of guy. But in reality, Reggie is completely unsophisticated. So as not to disappoint his new wife, he engages society writer Polly Hathaway (Ruth Stonehouse) to help him prove that he's a real ladies' man. Angelica, however, figures the whole thing out and a load of complications ensue. This bedroom farce was a successful stage play by Charles W. Bell and Mark Swan which did not translate to film particularly well. It was remade as a talkie in 1931 with Buster Keaton in the role of Reggie. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
The saga of Alias Jimmy Valentine began with the O. Henry story "A Retrieved Reformation". This surprise-ending tale was adapted into a stage play by Paul Armstrong, which subsequently was adapted to film several times, first in 1915 with Robert Warwick in the leading role. The 1920 version of Alias Jimmy Valentine casts Bert Lytell as a supposedly reformed safecracker who takes a bank job under an assumed name, planning to eventually knock over the vault. The love of a good woman (Vola Vale) leads Lytell to reform for real, but he must convince the detective who'd sent him up years earlier that he is not the notorious Jimmy Valentine. Lytell almost succeeds in his ruse, but is forced to call upon his safecracking skills when the boss' little daughter is accidentally locked in the vault. The detective witnesses this rescue and recognizes Lytell's singular technique (he can only crack a safe if he's blindfolded), but out of compassion decides not to blow the whistle. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Expert farceur Emmy Wehlen plays the title character in The Amateur Adventuress. A plain girl of modest means, Wehlen decides to pose as a notorious vamp. This gets her into society-and in a lot of hot water. All misunderstandings are forgotten in reel five, when she melts into the arms of leading man Allen Sears. An unexpectedly slim Eugene Pallette, here billed as Gene Pallette, plays a major role in this harmless froth. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Gerald Faulkner (Albert Ray) has a rich uncle (George Hernandez) who promises him a 100,000 dollars if he will marry within 48 hours. As he is engaged to chorus girl Carlotta LaMere (Leota Lorraine), that should be an easy task. But it turns out that she is involved with the uncle and would rather be with him and his millions than with Gerald and a measly hundred thou. All is not lost, however -- Gerald notices a cute stenographer in the office across the hall from his. He asks the girl, Norma Martin (Elinor Fair), to help him by participating in a mock wedding so that he can get the money. She agrees, but the fake minister they think they're using turns out to be real. The two are wedded in fact, but everything turns out all right because they discover they love each other after all. Meanwhile, Gerald's aunt (Lule Warrenton) sends Carlotta packing, and the uncle (who had been kidding about the money) coughs up the dough to his nephew. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Blanny Wheeler (May Allison) has a husband, Jack (Pell Trenton), who frequently neglects her to go play cards, while Laura Bartlett (Christine Mayo) makes it no secret that she finds her husband Billy (Eugene Pallette) terminally dull. One night, while Jack is at poker and Laura is off to the theater with an admirer, Blanny and Billy wind up spending the evening together. The two naive spouses decide to commiserate over cocktails and become falling-down drunk. When Jack and Laura return, they find their mates in a strangely compromising position, and this inspires them to be more well-behaved in the future. This picture was based on the highly successful stage farce by Avery Hopwood. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide









