Everywoman (1919 film)
Everywoman | |
---|---|
Still with Violet Heming and Mildred Reardon | |
Directed by |
George Melford W. N. Sherer |
Produced by |
Adolph Zukor Jesse Lasky |
Written by |
Will M. Ritchey Walter Browne |
Based on |
Everywoman by Walter Browne |
Cinematography |
Paul Perry Loren Taylor |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 7 reels |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
Everywoman is a lost[1] 1919 American silent film allegory film directed by George Melford based on a 1911 play Everywoman by Walter Browne. Violet Heming appears as the title character supported by several Paramount character stars.[2]
Cast
- Theodore Roberts as Wealth
- Violet Heming as Everywoman
- Clara Horton as Youth
- Wanda Hawley as Beauty
- Margaret Loomis as Modesty
- Mildred Reardon as Conscience
- Edythe Chapman as Truth
- Bebe Daniels as Vice
- Monte Blue as Love
- Irving Cummings as Passion
- James Neill as Nobody
- Raymond Hatton as Flattery
- Lucien Littlefield as Lord Witness
- Noah Beery as Bluff
- Jay Dwiggins as Stuff
- Tully Marshall as Puff
- Robert Brower as Age
- Charles Stanton Ogle as Time
- Fred Huntley as Dissipation
- Clarence Geldart as Auctioneer
See also
- Experience (1921)
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Everywoman (1919 film). |
- Everywoman at the Internet Movie Database
- synopsis at AllMovie
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