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The Half-Way Girl

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The Half-Way Girl
Lobby poster
Directed byJohn Francis Dillon
Screenplay byJoseph F. Poland
Earl Snell
Story byE. Lloyd Sheldon
Produced byEarl Hudson
StarringDoris Kenyon
Lloyd Hughes
CinematographyGeorge Folsey
Edited byMarion Fairfax
Production
company
Distributed byFirst National1
Release date
August 16, 1925
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent
English intertitles

The Half-Way Girl was a silent picture filmed around the Jersey Shore in 1925.[1]

Plot

Doris Kenyon plays Poppy La Rue, an actress who winds up stranded in Singapore when her theatrical troupe goes bust. She winds up in the Red-light district where she works as a "hostess" (generally a silent film euphemism for prostitute), where she meets Philip Douglas, a down-at-the-heels Brit (Lloyd Hughes).

While drunk, he kills a man in self-defense, and Poppy helps him to escape. Jardine (Sam Hardy), a plantation owner, is determined to have Poppy, and when she wants to escape from the Oriental underworld, he offers to help, provided she accompanies him to Penang. They board a ship. Douglas is also on board and when a fire breaks out in the hold, he rescues Poppy from Jardine's advances. They manage to get in a lifeboat just before the ship explodes, and are picked up by a passing vessel. Douglas' father (Hobart Bosworth) wants the couple to separate, but finally he accepts Poppy as his daughter-in-law.

The spectacular fire aboard an ocean liner was shot in color, and to make it even more exciting, a leopard also breaks free on the ship. The Corvallis, a 270-foot wooden-hulled freighter that was surplus from World War I, was purchased from the U.S. government by First National Pictures for a fraction of its original cost. First National Pictures bought it for the sole purpose of blowing it up in The Half-Way Girl.

In June 1925, under the supervision of the United States Coast Guard, the Corvallis was towed 45 miles offshore, loaded with dynamite, and blown up while the cameras rolled. After the explosion, the stern remained afloat and had to be sunk by the Coast Guard.

Cast and crew

  • Directed by: John Francis Dillon
  • Cinematography by: George J. Folsey (as George Folsey)
  • Film Editing by: Marion Fairfax
  • Art Direction by: Milton Menasco

Writing credits

Cast (in credits order)

Preservation status

This is a lost film with no archive holdings.[2][3]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ The film's distribution rights were transferred to Warner Bros. in 1928.

External links