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Daughters of Today (1924 film)
1924 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Daughters of Today is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Rollin S. Sturgeon and starring Patsy Ruth Miller, Ralph Graves, and Edna Murphy.[1]
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Plot
As described in a film magazine review,[2] Lois Whittall's father Leigh is interested in a young blonde charmer. Lois and her college friends are out for a good time and en route pick up Mabel Vandegrift, a young country woman who was very strictly reared by her parents. Their gay roadside party is wound up by a moonlight bathing frolic. The young people are then scattered by outraged villagers and they are in an automobile accident. Lois and Mabel then become mixed up in a murder mystery. In the end, it all comes out alright and the two young women find happiness with their respective lovers.
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Cast
- Patsy Ruth Miller as Lois Whittall
- Ralph Graves as Ralph Adams
- Edna Murphy as Mabel Vandegrift
- Edward Hearn as Peter Farnham
- Philo McCullough as Reggy Adams
- George Nichols as Dirk Vandegrift
- Gertrude Claire as Ma Vandegrift
- Phillips Smalley as Leigh Whittall
- Zasu Pitts as Lorena
- Henry Hebert as Calnan (credited as H.J. Herbert)
- Fontaine La Rue as Mrs. Mantell
- Truman Van Dyke as Dick
- Dorothy Wood as Flo
- Marjorie Bonner as Maisie
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Production
Daughters of Today was originally developed by Irving Thalberg as a flapper film, but was assigned to be directed by Sturgeon when Thalberg left for MGM.[3][4]
Censorship
Films during that period were subject to censorship by state and city censor boards. The Board of Motion Picture Review of Worcester, Massachusetts, banned the showing of Daughters of Today.[5]
References
Bibliography
External links
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