Vintage Movie Resources
Fay Tincher — “Is Polite Comedy Polite?” (1919) 🇺🇸
“Is polite comedy polite?” — asks Fay Tincher
David Powell — More About the Handsome Welshman (1919) 🇺🇸
More about David Powell, the handsome Welshman whom Photoplay Magazine once hailed as “the military heartbreaker.”
Tully Marshall — Everyone’s Ag’n Him! (1919) 🇺🇸
Tully Marshall robs poor old widow-ladies, forecloses mortgages, spanks babies, steals from banks — yet is altogether one of the most law-abiding citizens of California.
Wheeler Oakman — With the Big Show! (1918) 🇺🇸
Wheeler Oakman is in the all-star cast of the greatest picture ever made
Rhea Mitchell — The Lovely Riddle (1918) 🇺🇸
Jacques A. Berst — The Daddy of Them All (1918) 🇺🇸
“Lights! Camera! Quiet! Ready! Shoot!” (1918) 🇺🇸
H. O. Davis — “Stars or No Stars” — That Is the Question (1918) 🇺🇸
Mr. Davis believes that the public prefers a good story that’s starless, to a star that is storyless
George Beban — And George Did (1918) 🇺🇸
George Beban’s ascent to fame was neither sudden nor easy, and certainly not made more so by Father who had other prospects for George.
Herbert Brenon — The Man (1918) 🇺🇸
Lois Meredith — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Lois Meredith has proven her aptitude for picture work in a most conclusive manner
Digby Bell — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Ethel Barrymore — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Probably no actress in America has a greater following or is more generally loved by the American public than Ethel Barrymore
Riley Hatch — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸
Agnes Egan Cobb — Who’s Who in the Film Game (1913) 🇺🇸
Harry Northrup — Sans Grease Paint and Wig (1913) 🇺🇸
Mabel Trunnelle — Sans Grease Paint and Wig (1913) 🇺🇸
It was four o’clock and the One Hundred and Eightieth street entrance to the Bronx park; it should have been three fifty-five and the Two Hundred and Thirty-fifth street exit. That would have given me time to get to the Edison studio and Mabel Trunnelle at exactly four.
Adolph Zukor — Who’s Who in the Film Game (1913) 🇺🇸
Facts and fancies about a man you know or ought to know
Dorothy Dalton — Dorothy the Determined (1917) 🇺🇸
Robert G. Vignola — Photoplay Stars I Have Directed (1917) 🇺🇸
Clara Kimball Young — Sans Grease Paint and Wig (1914) 🇺🇸
“It will give me big opportunities,” said Clara Kimball Young, as she sat back in the big office chair near the window, that belonged to the desk near the door.