Lovey Mary

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Lovey Mary
Lovey Mary.jpg
Poster
Directed by King Baggot
Written by Agnes Christine Johnston
Charles Maigne
George Marion, Jr. (titles)
Based on Lovey Mary (novel)
by Alice Hegan Rice [1]
Starring Bessie Love
William Haines
Mary Alden
Cinematography Ira H. Morgan
Edited byFrank Davis
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • June 26, 1926 (1926-06-26)(U.S.)
Running time
7 reels; 6,167 feet [2]
CountryUnited States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

Lovey Mary is a 1926 American comedy-drama film directed by King Baggot, with Bessie Love in the title role. It is based on the 1903 novel of the same name by Alice Hegan Rice, a sequel to Rice's Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. [3] It was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Contents

The film survives, but is incomplete. [4]

Plot

Lovey Mary (Love) runs away from an orphanage with Tommy (Combs) so that he will not have to return to his bad mother. Lovey and Tommy stay at the home of Miss Hazey (Ogden), who is about to marry a man whom she knows only from correspondence.

Billy Wiggs (Haines) lives next door, and Lovey works with his sisters in a factory to earn money for herself and Tommy. On the day of Miss Hazey's wedding, her fiancee recognizes Lovey from the orphanage and reveals her true identity. Lovey and Billy plan to marry and adopt Tommy. [5] [6]

Cast

Production

To help her decide whether to participate in the film, MGM lent Bessie Love a copy of the novel Lovey Mary by Alice Hegan Rice in 1925—then-valued at $25 (equivalent to $390in 2021). Love never returned the book. [7]

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Lovey Mary is a 1903 novel by American writer Alice Hegan Rice, which is a sequel to her 1901 novel Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. It is about an orphaned girl named Lovey Mary who runs away from her orphanage and is taken in by a woman named Mrs. Wiggs in an area of urbanized Kentucky known as the Cabbage Patch, an area which was inspired by Rice's personal experiences growing up in Kentucky. The novel is largely dramatic, however it features comic relief through jokes and sarcasm among those that Lovey Mary meets in the Cabbage Patch.

References

  1. Rice, Alice Hegan (1903). Lovey Mary. New York, NY: The Century Co. LCCN   03005787. OCLC   669917717.
  2. "Star, Story Type, Review and Footage Here; Short Subjects Separated from Features". Moving Picture World. November 13, 1926. p. 111.
  3. Bennett, Carl (July 18, 2015). "Progressive Silent Film List: Lovey Mary". Silent Era.
  4. "American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: Lovey Mary / King Baggot". Library of Congress.
  5. Munden, Kenneth W., ed. (1971). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films 1921–1930 . New York: R.R. Bowker Company. pp.  464–5. OCLC   664500075.
  6. Motion Picture News Booking Guide. October 1926. p.  36.
  7. Love, Bessie (February 6, 1970). "The Readers' Corner". The Christian Science Monitor . p. 12.