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The White Moth

United States

1924

70 Min
Black and White
1.33:1
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Maurice Tourneur

PROD M.C. Levee

SCR Izola Forrester, Albert S. Le Vino

DP Arthur L. Todd

CAST Barbara La Marr, Conway Tearle, Charles de Rochefort, Ben Lyon, Edna Murphy, Josie Sedgwick, Kathleen Kirkham, William Orlamond

ED Frank Lawrence

PROD DES Jack Okey

Synopsis

Douglas Vantine (Ben Lyon), who is engaged to Gwen, a society girl, is infatuated with The White Moth (Barbara La Marr), and gives her an expensive automobile. His brother, Robert, who speaks of the Moth as a “gold-digger,” flirts with this dancer to save his brother from marrying her. Then to prove her fickleness, Robert telephones to the White Moth and permits his brother to listen to the endearments addressed to Robert. Here one sees the dancer in her bath tub, reaching nonchalantly for the convenient telephone receiver. She expresses her great affection for Robert. Still he is not satisfied, and he finally prevails upon the Moth to go to New York, and, without telling her, he leaves on the same steamship. They are married in New York—all this to save his brother! —NYtimes

Director

Original

Maurice Tourneur

Maurice Tourneur, the film director and screenwriter, was born Maurice Thomas in the Parisian suburb of Belleville, France on February 2, 1873, the son of a jewelry merchant. Thomas was trained and employed as a graphic designer and a magazine illustrator as a young man. After serving in the French artillery in Northern Africa, he became an assistant to sculptor Auguste Rodin and later to muralist Puvis de Chavannes, before deciding to change his life along with the changing century and make a new life in the theater.

Tourneur’s younger siblings were part of the theatrical establishment, his sister an actress and his brother a theater manager, so it was not as preposterous a shift in avocation as it might seem. After haunting the theaters of Paris, paying for cheap seats to soak up as much theater as he could, Tourneur became an actor in 1900 with a small troupe on the outskirts of Paris. His salary was ninety francs a month, approximately fifteen American dollars. Now a professional… read more

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