Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueNora Mason becomes entangled in a family mix-up of murder and scandal that threatens to ruin her career and entire future; Unless the mother she does not know can find a way to save her.Nora Mason becomes entangled in a family mix-up of murder and scandal that threatens to ruin her career and entire future; Unless the mother she does not know can find a way to save her.Nora Mason becomes entangled in a family mix-up of murder and scandal that threatens to ruin her career and entire future; Unless the mother she does not know can find a way to save her.
William B. Davidson
- Gregory Jackson
- (as William Davidson)
Jean Laverty
- Carlotta Cortez
- (as Jean Bary)
Theresa Allen
- Maid
- (uncredited)
Allan Cavan
- Assistant Prosecutor
- (uncredited)
Dick Gordon
- Court Clerk
- (uncredited)
DeWitt Jennings
- Judge
- (uncredited)
Lillian Leighton
- Mrs. Murphy
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
In 1911, 17-year-old Elsie Ferguson gives up her daughter to an adoption agency. She is told she will never be able to find out where the baby goes to. We cut, and it's Miss Ferguson's office door. She's a lawyer now, fending off the amatory advances of John Halliday. She does agree to go to a night club with him. We cut to a night club, where Marian Nixon is in a spangly, short dress, sits at a table telling boyfriend Grant Withers she won't marry him. She then gets up and is the lead dancer in a well-shot chorus number.
Anyone who's seen these things is pretty sure how things are going to turn out in the end. The question is: how do we get there? We find out when Withers and Miss Nixon show up at Miss Ferguson's office. Will she defend the girl against the charge of murdering her father? By the end of this scene, Halliday shows up. He's the District Attorney, and he arrests Miss Nixon.
The rest of the movie is a courtroom drama. As usual, there's a considerable gap between what goes on in a real court room and what goes on here. As usual, Fred Kelsey shows up as a dumb cop, giving testimony. As usual, there's a Surprising Secret revealed, which will come as no surprise to the audience. And as usual, there's a reconciliation at the end which takes place way too fast and easily.
Miss Ferguson is pretty good in the scenes that make sense, with a realistic hauteur that might have provided her a good living in Agnes Moorhead-style roles, had she needed them. She didn't. She never made another.
Anyone who's seen these things is pretty sure how things are going to turn out in the end. The question is: how do we get there? We find out when Withers and Miss Nixon show up at Miss Ferguson's office. Will she defend the girl against the charge of murdering her father? By the end of this scene, Halliday shows up. He's the District Attorney, and he arrests Miss Nixon.
The rest of the movie is a courtroom drama. As usual, there's a considerable gap between what goes on in a real court room and what goes on here. As usual, Fred Kelsey shows up as a dumb cop, giving testimony. As usual, there's a Surprising Secret revealed, which will come as no surprise to the audience. And as usual, there's a reconciliation at the end which takes place way too fast and easily.
Miss Ferguson is pretty good in the scenes that make sense, with a realistic hauteur that might have provided her a good living in Agnes Moorhead-style roles, had she needed them. She didn't. She never made another.
SCARLET PAGES (First National Pictures, 1930) directed by Ray Enright, is not a newspaper story but more of a rise to success focusing on a woman with a past living very much in the present. Starring Elsie Ferguson (1883-1961), a prominent stage actress with some silent movies (1917-1925) to her name, SCARLET PAGES not only ranks the limited few to have survived intact but her only venture in a talkie.
Opening in 1911, the story deals with a 17-year-old girl (unseen) abandoning her illegitimate baby girl to the Good Samaritan Orphanage, giving up all legal rights to her child. Move forward 1930. Mary Bancroft (Elsie Ferguson), an accomplished attorney, thanks to the kindness of fellow lawyer John Remington (John Halliday). Mary refuses to marry John, who loves her, for reasons of her own. While dining together at the Golden Slipper Cabaret, Mary and John enjoy the song and dance performance by Nora Mason (Marian Nixon), a young girl engaged to Robert "Bob" Lawrence (Grant Withers). The following day, Mr. Barnes (Neely Edwards) brings forth a client to Mary's office who happens to be Robert Lawrence who wants her to take the case of Nora Mason, arrested the previous night for shooting her father, Henry Mason (Willard Mack). Gathering enough information from both Nora and her mother (Charlotte Walker), Mary agrees to take the case to court, believing Nora (a girl with an attitude) to be innocent and shielding somebody. Other members in the cast include Daisy Belmore (Isabel Kennedy); William B. Davidson (Gregory Jackson); Jean Bary (Carlotta Cortez) and Fred Kelsey (James Murphy).
What makes this rarely seen early talkie worth viewing is Elsie Ferguson. Her voice, diction and theater training were made for talkies, which makes it disappointing that she didn't star in other films during that period, whether they be remakes of her silent movies or screen adaptations to her famous plays. With the exception of her speaking voice, it's uncanny how much Marian Nixon resembles that of the youthful Myrna Loy (then under studio contract to Warner Brothers/First National Pictures). Aside from her slightly weak voice, she gets to sing and perform with the chorus to the catchy tune of "I'm Getting Somewhere." John Halliday, better known for father figure roles in later years, gives an extremely likable performance here. The courtroom scenes are well staged, mostly divided from scene to scene by newspaper headline clippings of the trial, with DeWitt Jennings as the presiding judge. Like many films from this era as testing ground for either silent screen or theatrically trained performers, SCARLET PAGES moves swiftly and gets to the point of purpose without losing the attention of its audience for most of its 63 minutes.
Available on DVD format, SCARLET PAGES turns up sparingly on cable television's Turner Classic Movies. Once seen scheduled in the TCM program guide, make it a point to see it or wait nearly a decade for it to be shown again, if ever. (***)
Opening in 1911, the story deals with a 17-year-old girl (unseen) abandoning her illegitimate baby girl to the Good Samaritan Orphanage, giving up all legal rights to her child. Move forward 1930. Mary Bancroft (Elsie Ferguson), an accomplished attorney, thanks to the kindness of fellow lawyer John Remington (John Halliday). Mary refuses to marry John, who loves her, for reasons of her own. While dining together at the Golden Slipper Cabaret, Mary and John enjoy the song and dance performance by Nora Mason (Marian Nixon), a young girl engaged to Robert "Bob" Lawrence (Grant Withers). The following day, Mr. Barnes (Neely Edwards) brings forth a client to Mary's office who happens to be Robert Lawrence who wants her to take the case of Nora Mason, arrested the previous night for shooting her father, Henry Mason (Willard Mack). Gathering enough information from both Nora and her mother (Charlotte Walker), Mary agrees to take the case to court, believing Nora (a girl with an attitude) to be innocent and shielding somebody. Other members in the cast include Daisy Belmore (Isabel Kennedy); William B. Davidson (Gregory Jackson); Jean Bary (Carlotta Cortez) and Fred Kelsey (James Murphy).
What makes this rarely seen early talkie worth viewing is Elsie Ferguson. Her voice, diction and theater training were made for talkies, which makes it disappointing that she didn't star in other films during that period, whether they be remakes of her silent movies or screen adaptations to her famous plays. With the exception of her speaking voice, it's uncanny how much Marian Nixon resembles that of the youthful Myrna Loy (then under studio contract to Warner Brothers/First National Pictures). Aside from her slightly weak voice, she gets to sing and perform with the chorus to the catchy tune of "I'm Getting Somewhere." John Halliday, better known for father figure roles in later years, gives an extremely likable performance here. The courtroom scenes are well staged, mostly divided from scene to scene by newspaper headline clippings of the trial, with DeWitt Jennings as the presiding judge. Like many films from this era as testing ground for either silent screen or theatrically trained performers, SCARLET PAGES moves swiftly and gets to the point of purpose without losing the attention of its audience for most of its 63 minutes.
Available on DVD format, SCARLET PAGES turns up sparingly on cable television's Turner Classic Movies. Once seen scheduled in the TCM program guide, make it a point to see it or wait nearly a decade for it to be shown again, if ever. (***)
Some Heavy Going Weigh this one Down as an Early Courtroom Talkie. There is a Pre-Code Subject (out of wedlock babies) and some Cabaret Skin at the Opening, but the Film Struggles to Maintain Interest and much of it is Stiff and Sulan.
Most of the Intrigue takes place Off Screen, like the Murder and the Fatherly Figure's Sexual Advances and Things are Restrained to Cross Examinations. There is a Late Revelation that Dominates the Third-Act that is not much of a Surprise Considering.
Could be an OK Time-Waster for those Interested in Early Sound Hollywood. The Jazzy Sequined Dance Numbers at the Beginning are Unfortunately the Movie's Only Highlight.
Most of the Intrigue takes place Off Screen, like the Murder and the Fatherly Figure's Sexual Advances and Things are Restrained to Cross Examinations. There is a Late Revelation that Dominates the Third-Act that is not much of a Surprise Considering.
Could be an OK Time-Waster for those Interested in Early Sound Hollywood. The Jazzy Sequined Dance Numbers at the Beginning are Unfortunately the Movie's Only Highlight.
is a stagy and unconvincing melodrama about an unwed mother, a sleazy murder, and (of course) redemption. Elsie Ferguson isn't bad though as the lawyer who learns a terrible secret while defending a showgirl of murder. The rest of the cast, however IS pretty bad: Marian Nixon, Grant Withers, John Halliday, etc. go through their paces without much to offer. Ferguson had been a big silent star playing upper-crust ladies in "weepies." This film was an attempt to revive her career (after 5 years), but it was just too late. Her speaking voice is fine, but the new medium of "talkies" and the new Depression-era sensibility made it clear it was time for Elsie Ferguson to retire from the screen.
I agree with both reviewers that Elsie Ferguson gave an excellent performance in this movie, and that the supporting cast was pretty bad, with one exception-John Halliday! John Halliday was too good an actor to ever give anything but an excellent performance! It is true that his role in this movie was very small, basically because it was Elsie Ferguson's movie, but he did an excellent job, anyway. The movie was a bit corny, and many people might find it quite old-fashioned, but I still would recommend it, solely because of the excellent performances by Elsie Ferguson and John Halliday! Even the bad supporting cast should not deter anyone from seeing this movie!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesElsie Ferguson's only talkie film.
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 6 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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