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Lettie Ford (left) and King Baggot (center).
Photograph: Silent Era image collection.
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Half a Rogue
(1916) United States of America
B&W : Five reels
Directed by Henry Otto
Cast: King Baggot [Richard Warrington], Lettie Ford [Anna Warrington, his aunt], Clara Beyers [Katherine Challoner], Joseph Castallanos [John Bennington], Mathilde Brundage [Mrs. Bennington], Edna Hunter [Pattie Bennington], Howard Crampton [Daniel McQuade], Henry Otto [ex-Senator Henderson], [?] Bennett Molter?
The Universal Film Manufacturing Company, Incorporated, production; distributed by The Universal Film Manufacturing Company, Incorporated [Red Feather Photoplays]. / Scenario by Henry Otto, from the novel Half a Rogue by Harold MacGrath (Harold McGrath). Assistant director, [?] Bennett Molter? / © 2 May 1916 by The Universal Film Manufacturing Company, Incorporated [LP8207]. Released 22 May 1916. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format. / Some location photography was taken in Savannah, Georgia.
Drama: Romance.
Synopsis: [?] [From The Moving Picture World]? Dick Warrington, a successful New York dramatist, receives a visit in his apartments from Katherine Challoner, an actress whom he has “made.” She shows him her engagement ring and tells him that she is soon to be married, as the stage never really fascinated her, but she refuses to tell the name of the man she is to marry. As Kate is about to leave the butler announces another caller and Dick requests her to remain in order to meet John Bennington, as he and John are great chums. Kate protests that her presence in his room so late at night might cause embarrassment and leaves to enter the butler’s pantry. John finds a pair of white gloves which Kate has left behind her. He put them in his pocket surreptitiously. The two men sit down to smoke and chat, and John tells Dick that he is going to be married, and wishes him to act as his best man, but must withhold the name of his fiancée for the present. After John’s departure Kate comes out of the pantry and Dick helps her to look for her gloves. Kate tells him that John Bennington is the man she is to marry, and that he bought the gloves for her that very morning. Failing to find her gloves, and realizing that Bennington had probably taken them away with him, Kate falls in a faint. The next morning Dick escorts Kate out of the apartment. The janitor sees them enter a cab and drive off, fully aware that the actress has spent the night in Warrington’s flat. Some days after Dick returns to his native town, Herculaneum. John Bennington’s marriage to the actress, Kat Challoner, has caused considerable gossip in Herculaneum. One of the scandal mongers says, “That actress and Richard Warrington have been very intimate, and you know Warrington’s reputation.” The honeymooners return a day sooner than expected. Shortly after their arrival Dick meets Senator Henderson, the boss of the Republican party, who tells him that he wants him to run for mayor of the town at the fall election. McQuade, the boss of the local Democrats, is determined that Mayor Donnelly must have another term. At the Republican convention Warrington is nominated for mayor. After Dick’s nomination McQuade sends Bolles, one of his henchmen, to New York to dig up some “dope” on Warrington’s metropolitan career. A month later Bolles returns from New York and informs McQuade that he got what he went after, as the janitor he interviewed there had told him about Kate passing the night with Richard Warrington in his apartment. McQuade keeps this information as a trump card until the night before election. Then he goes to the editor of the local Democratic paper, which he controls, and forces him to publish this bit of scandal in the election day issue. Pattie Bennington’s sister reads the scandal and rushes to the conservatory to find her mother and Kate. When Kate reads the article she becomes excited. Dick, who has meanwhile read the attack on him, comes over and meets Kate in the parlor. Dick tells her that John must be made acquainted with the truth. Kate protests, fearing that it will cause her to lose her husband’s love, but Dick throws open the parlor doors and, as John enters, shows him the article. After reading the scandalous attack carefully, John, who is a large-minded man, emphatically declares that he does not believe it. Then, pulling out Kate’s white gloves from his pocket, he turns to her and adds: “Even with this evidence I never doubted you.” Dick rushes to McQuade’s office and insists on knowing who is responsible for the scandal. Bolles comes forward and says that he unearthed it in New York. Dick promptly knocks him down and says defiantly: “Miss Challoner did remain in my apartment one night, but there was a nurse and doctor in attendance until I escorted her home next morning.” After Dick has returned to his library he learns that Donnelly, his opponent, has the plurality vote in nine districts. Later Pattie phones to the editor of the Republican paper and is told that Warrington has the plurality of over 700 in fifteen districts heard from so far, which assures his election. Pattie then calls up Dick and informs him that he is elected. Dick embraces Pattie and they walk, hand in hand, down the path as the scene fades out.
Synopsis: Synopsis available in AFI-F1 n. F1.1746.
Survival status: (unknown)
Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].
Keywords: Accusations (False) - Fainting - Fights - Mayors - Newspapers - Politics: Campaigns, Candidates, Democrats, Elections, Nominations, Republicans - Theatre: Actors, Playwrights - USA: Georgia (Savannah), New York (New York)
Listing updated: 24 October 2022.
References: AFI-F1 n. F1.1746; Hirschhorn-Universal p. 23 : Website-IMDb.
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