Vintage Movie Resources
Helen Gibson — The Girl with Nine Lives (1916) 🇺🇸
“As long as the fans want railroad pictures I’ll keep on taking risks playing in them.”
June Keith — The Flower Girl (1916) 🇺🇸
June the Flower Girl and how she became a Photoplayer
Chats with the Players — Raymond Gallagher, of the Universal Company (1915) 🇺🇸
Everybody loves Ray Gallagher!
Chats with the Players — Harry Beaumont, of the Edison Company (1915) 🇺🇸
“I’ve got to kill a fellow — that bald-headed chap over yonder — at ten-thirty”
Chats with the Players — Nicholas Dunaew, of the Vitagraph Company (1915) 🇺🇸
Nicholas Dunaew has taken up scenario writing in addition to his posing
Chats with the Players — William Garwood, of the Imp Company (1915) 🇺🇸
“It’s awful — scarcely a decent thing to wear. I must certainly strengthen my wardrobe”
Chats with the Players — Grace Cunard, of the Universal Company (1915) 🇺🇸
Grace Cunard does not possess anything nor do anything small
Chats with the Players — S. Rankin Drew, of the Vitagraph Company (1915) 🇺🇸
S. Rankin Drew is making an earnest effort to keep the famous family name well up in the world of art, not only by his work on the stage and in Motion Pictures, but also as a talented author
Marguerite Clark, The Girl That is Different (1915) 🇺🇸
“I had expected to do only a few pictures, but, much to my surprise, my first one met with success”
Chats with the Players — Henry King, of the Balboa Company (1915) 🇺🇸
One of the most reassuring things about Henry King’s work is that — sh-s-s-s-s-h! breathe it softly — he has steadily become more handsome
Chats with the Players — “The Rosemary of the Movies” (1915) 🇺🇸
A busy movie actress, such as Rosemary Theby, has just so many moments for a mere interview — and no more
Chats with the Players — Bliss Milford, of the Kinetophote Company (1915) 🇺🇸
“You ought to see me trying to be tragic in a serious piece! It makes a farce of it right away”
Chats with the Players — Herbert Prior, of the Edison Company (1915) 🇺🇸
“My highest ambition? To have enough money to retire and yet to beat the income tax”
“Broncho Billy” in Real Life (1912) 🇺🇸
if there’s any one thing Gilbert M. “Broncho Billy” Anderson believes in living up to, it is slogans
Sidney Drew — Film Humor More Than Making Funny Faces (1918) 🇺🇸
The human note, not monkey-shines, makes the strongest, most lasting appeal
The Celluloid Drama in Japan (1918) 🇺🇸
They do things differently in the Land of the Rising Sun
Elsie Ferguson — Advantages of the Screen Over the Stage (1918) 🇺🇸
A comparison and a prophecy with some comments by the way
Edna Goodrich — The Importance of Being Well-Dressed (1918) 🇺🇸
Some reasons why correct costuming is an aid to art
Shirley Mason — The Evolution of a Star (1918) 🇺🇸
How one ambitious little girl was made over for the movies
Dave Butler — Fat Boy, (Ring Bearer) — Tight Pants — (1919) 🇺🇸
David Butler is creating an unusual line of parts, all his own.
Texas Guinan — Guinan of the Guns (1919) 🇺🇸
Texas Guinan, having cut her teeth on a six-shooter, has quite naturally reverted to type.
Enid Markey — Re-discovering an ingénue (1919) 🇺🇸
Enid Markey is columbused in an entirely new role “Up in Mabel’s Room.”
Lila Leslie — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Lila Leslie, of the Lubin stock company at Philadelphia, is a native of Australia.
Arthur Hotaling — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Arthur D. Hotaling is an expert in all branches of motion picture manufacture.
