Vintage Movie Resources
Watch George Hackathorne (1923) 🇺🇸
He has made himself conspicuous in several character roles, and is about to step out as a featured player.
Seena Owen — A Picture Puzzle (1923)
Seena Owen is filmdom’s enigma, for she has succeeded in spite of her disregard of the popularity-building expedients that other players insist are necessary.
Maurice Tourneur — Cynic in the Soup (1923) 🇺🇸
Maurice Tourneur must feel awfully lonely in optimistic Los Angeles.
Mabel Normand — The Irrepressible One (1923) 🇺🇸
Fans are always clamoring to see more of Mabel Normand, and in that they are quite like her many acquaintances.
J. Gordon Edwards — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
When William Fox decided to become a film producer, he looked around for efficient helpers and in the manager, or producing director of his stock company, found the man who was to play a most important role in the history of Fox Films.
John Robertson — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
John Robertson, who has directed some of the best of American pictures, is a great enthusiast where England is concerned.
Herbert Brenon — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
Herbert Brenon holds the record for being the first director of American pictures of leading rank, who came from across the sea.
Elmer Clifton — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
Elmer Clifton has been in the picture game for nearly nine years, and has always been known as a clever director, but his association with D. W. Griffith made a great many people think that his cleverness was due largely to the latter fact.
James Cruze — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
From the hero of “The Million Dollar Mystery” to the director of a million-dollar movie is quite an accomplishment. And James Cruze, who put on “The Covered Wagon” for Paramount, made the step in a little less than ten years.
Frederic Sullivan-Londoner — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
This is the story of one of the many Englishmen who have made good in pictures and on the stage.
Rex Ingram — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
Rex Ingram was born in Dublin, educated at the University, and destined for the Bar. Unfortunately for his family’s happiness, he decided that his career was art, and so ran away and came to America.
Allan Dwan — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
Most of us would be content with one perfectly good vocation; Allan Dwan has at least three at his fingertips, not to mention five or six more at which he could probably make a living, if he had to do so.
Frank Lloyd — Directors I Have Met (1923) 🇬🇧
The first of a new series dealing with the personalities of the men behind the megaphone.
Victor Seastrom — New Hope for the American Photoplay (1923) 🇺🇸
Victor Seastrom talks about our Motion Pictures
Lloyd Hamilton — A Flyer in Art (1923) 🇺🇸
What happened to Lloyd Hamilton, he of the sad expression and the huge feet, in the presence of Art in the awfully refined Studio of Mr. Griffith.
The Tragedy of Mary Miles Minter (1923) 🇺🇸
The story of the screen child who wasn't allowed to grow up — until a murder lifted her from stunted youth to dazed womanhood.
Hidden Hands of Filmdom (1923) 🇺🇸
Who are the Silent Builders of the Big Screen Reputations?
William Selig — Col. Seligs Stories of Movie Life (1923) 🇺🇸
Reminiscence, Grave and Gay, of Twenty-Five Years on a Studio Lot.
