Mae Murray Double Feature: Mademoiselle Midnight (1924)(Silent) / A Mormon Maid (1917)(Silent)
Mae Murray Double Feature: Mademoiselle Midnight (1924)(Silent) / A Mormon Maid (1917)(Silent)
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Mademoiselle Midnight (1924): Renee Sorolla is a hedonistic young woman who calls herself "Mademoiselle Midnight". An unrepentant party girl, she borrows the name from her grandmother, a French courtesan who incurred the wrath of Napoleon himself. Renee considers leaving behind her reckless ways after meeting Jerry Brent, an idealistic American diplomat. Those dreams are dashed when her home is broken into by the bandit Joao, who kills Renee's father and forces her to marry him. Now Renee's only chance is to get a message to Jerry in America, who she prays still loves her. Mademoiselle Midnight was directed by Murray's then-husband, Robert Z. Leonard, and produced by the company the couple founded in 1921, Tiffany Pictures. After their divorce in 1925, Tiffany quickly went downhill, becoming known as a Poverty Row studio. Leonard went to work at MGM, where he directed classics like The Divorcee (1930) and The Great Ziegfeld (1936).
A Mormon Maid (1917): Dora is an innocent young girl who lives with her mother and father in the wilderness of Utah. When a rogue band of Indians attack their home, a pair of Mormon men who live nearby rescue the family. Brought to live in their colony, the Mormon leader, Darius Burr, takes an interest in Dora. Soon the virginal young woman is forced against her will to join Burr's flock of wives. Another collaboration by the husband-and-wife team, A Mormon Maid was intended by director Leonard to show the pros and cons of Mormonism. When the end result seemed more biased against, Paramount refused to release it, leaving it to be distributed by independent company Friedman Enterprises. Co-star Frank Borzage would become a director, best known for films such as 7th Heaven (1927) and Man's Castle (1933).
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