Laddie (1926 film)

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Laddie
Laddie1926.jpg
Poster
Directed by James Leo Meehan
assistant
Charles Kerr
Written by Jeanette Porter Meehan
Based onLaddie, A True Blue Story
by Gene Stratton Porter
Produced by Joseph P. Kennedy
Starring John Bowers (actor)
Cinematography Allen G. Siegler
Edited by George Hively
Distributed by Film Booking Offices of America
Release date
  • September 26, 1926 (1926-09-26) [1]
CountryUnited States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

Laddie is a 1926 American silent drama film directed by James Leo Meehan with John Bowers in the title role. It was based on Gene Stratton-Porter's novel, Laddie, A True Blue Story (1913).

Contents

Plot

Laddie, son of the Stantons, an Ohio pioneer family, falls in love with Pamela Pryor, daughter of a neighboring aristocratic English family, though the Pryors adopt a condescending attitude toward the Stanton family. Through the efforts of Little Sister, who knows of Laddie's love, the two secretly communicate, and Mr. Pryor takes a liking to Laddie when he tames a wild horse for him. Meanwhile, Shelley, a Stanton girl, falls in love with city lawyer Robert Paget; when he leaves her under mysterious circumstances, she returns home heartbroken. The Pryors, disgraced because of a false accusation against their son in England, are at length forced to accept Laddie. It develops that Paget is actually the banished son of the Pryors; after a strained crisis Pryor forgives his son, and Laddie and Pamela, Robert and Shelley, and the Stantons and the Pryors are happily united. [2]

Cast

Production

The title character of Laddie is modeled after Stratton-Porter's deceased older brother, Leander, to whom she gave the nickname of Laddie. Stratton-Porter's brother drowned in the Wabash River on July 6, 1872, when he was a teenager. As in Stratton-Porter's own family, Laddie is connected with the land and identifies with Stratton-Porter's father's vocation of farming. The novel on which the film is based was published in 1913. [3] [4]

Technical specifications

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References

  1. "Laddie: Detail View". American Film Institute. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
  2. "Laddie (1926) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies.
  3. Judith Reick Long (1990). Gene Stratton-Porter: Novelist and Naturalist. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. pp.  45. ISBN   0871950529.
  4. Pamela J. Bennett, ed. (September 1996). "Gene Stratton-Porter" (PDF). The Indiana Historian. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau: 3–4. Retrieved February 13, 2019.