From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So Long Letty
Directed by Al Christie
Written by Scott Darling (scenario)
Based onSo Long Letty
by Oliver Morosco, Elmer Harris, and Earl Carroll [1]
Produced byAl Christie
Starring T. Roy Barnes
Walter Hiers
Grace Darmond
Colleen Moore
CinematographyAnton Nagy
Stephen Rounds
Music by James C. Bradford
Production
company
Christie Film Company
Distributed by Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation
Release date
  • October 20, 1920 (1920-10-20)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

So Long Letty is a 1920 silent American comedy film directed by Al Christie and starring Grace Darmond, T. Roy Barnes, and Colleen Moore. It was an adaptation of a 1916 popular stage comedy musical of the same name that starred Charlotte Greenwood. [2]

Plot

Harry Miller (Barnes) is a party boy who loves the cabaret scene and nights on the town while his wife Grace is a homebody, distressed by her husband's errant ways. Their neighbors are the opposite. Tommy Robbins ( Walter Hiers) likes domestic life and home cooking while his wife Letty (Darmond) is devoted to the wild life. Harry and Tommy hatch a plan to solve their problems; that they divorce their wives and swap. The wives overhear the plan and go along with the suggestion, though following a plan of their own. They suggest a week-long trial period of platonic marriage, during which the wives do all they can to make their new potential mates miserable. In the end the husbands are happy with the wives who they have married.

Cast

Production

The Christie Film Company purchased the rights to the play So Long Letty from Oliver Morosco for $40,000 (equivalent to $608,372 in 2023). [3]

Remake

The film was remade by Warner Bros. in 1929 under the same title. The 1929 version stars Charlotte Greenwood in the titular role. Greenwood was the star of the original 1916 Broadway play.

References

  1. ^ So Long Letty on the Internet Broadway Database
  2. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: So Long Letty at silentera.com
  3. ^ "So Long Letty". St. Joseph Gazette. March 28, 1920. p. 21. Archived from the original on November 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.

Bibliography

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So Long Letty
Directed by Al Christie
Written by Scott Darling (scenario)
Based onSo Long Letty
by Oliver Morosco, Elmer Harris, and Earl Carroll [1]
Produced byAl Christie
Starring T. Roy Barnes
Walter Hiers
Grace Darmond
Colleen Moore
CinematographyAnton Nagy
Stephen Rounds
Music by James C. Bradford
Production
company
Christie Film Company
Distributed by Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation
Release date
  • October 20, 1920 (1920-10-20)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

So Long Letty is a 1920 silent American comedy film directed by Al Christie and starring Grace Darmond, T. Roy Barnes, and Colleen Moore. It was an adaptation of a 1916 popular stage comedy musical of the same name that starred Charlotte Greenwood. [2]

Plot

Harry Miller (Barnes) is a party boy who loves the cabaret scene and nights on the town while his wife Grace is a homebody, distressed by her husband's errant ways. Their neighbors are the opposite. Tommy Robbins ( Walter Hiers) likes domestic life and home cooking while his wife Letty (Darmond) is devoted to the wild life. Harry and Tommy hatch a plan to solve their problems; that they divorce their wives and swap. The wives overhear the plan and go along with the suggestion, though following a plan of their own. They suggest a week-long trial period of platonic marriage, during which the wives do all they can to make their new potential mates miserable. In the end the husbands are happy with the wives who they have married.

Cast

Production

The Christie Film Company purchased the rights to the play So Long Letty from Oliver Morosco for $40,000 (equivalent to $608,372 in 2023). [3]

Remake

The film was remade by Warner Bros. in 1929 under the same title. The 1929 version stars Charlotte Greenwood in the titular role. Greenwood was the star of the original 1916 Broadway play.

References

  1. ^ So Long Letty on the Internet Broadway Database
  2. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: So Long Letty at silentera.com
  3. ^ "So Long Letty". St. Joseph Gazette. March 28, 1920. p. 21. Archived from the original on November 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.

Bibliography

External links



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