Forbidden Fruit is a 1921 American silent drama film directed by Cecil B. DeMille, and starring Agnes Ayres, Forrest Stanley, Clarence Burton, and Kathlyn Williams.[1] It is a remake of the 1915 film The Golden Chance, which was also directed by DeMille.[2]
Plot
Mrs. Mallory (Williams) persuades Mary Maddock (Ayres), her unhappily married seamstress, to take the place of an absent guest at her dinner party so that her husband can complete a business deal with Nelson Rogers (Stanley) rather than make his trip out West. Gorgeously gowned and very beautiful, Mary wins the heart of Nelson at the party, who asks her to marry him. Mary realizes what she is missing and remains faithful to her abusive and idle husband Steve Maddock (Burton), whom she supports. After a final insult from him (throwing a shoe at her bird that knocks the cage out a window to its death), she remains with the Mallorys, who need her for a weekend with Nelson. During that night she is awakened to find a burglar, her husband, stealing Mrs. Mallory's jewels. Steve escapes but Mary tells the Mallorys that the thief was her husband. She refuses the Mallorys' suggestion to divorce Steve who then attempts to blackmail Nelson for $10,000, which he plans to divide with a crooked partner (the butler of the Mallorys). In a fight over the money, the partner kills Steve, leaving Mary free to marry Nelson.[3]
Cast
- Agnes Ayres as Mary Maddock
- Clarence Burton as Steve Maddock
- Theodore Roberts as James Harrington Mallory
- Kathlyn Williams as Mrs. Mallory
- Forrest Stanley as Nelson Rogers
- Theodore Kosloff as Pietro Giuseppe
- Shannon Day as Nadia Craig
- Bertram Johns as John Craig
- Julia Faye as Maid
- William Boyd (uncredited)
Preservation
Prints of Forbidden Fruit are held by:
- George Eastman Museum,
- Library of Congress, on 35 mm film,
- Museum Of Modern Art,
- UCLA Film and Television Archive, and
- Gosfilmofond.[4]
References
- ^ "Forbidden Fruit". afi.com. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "Progressive Silent Film List: Forbidden Fruit". silentera.com. Retrieved June 21, 2008.
- ^ "Forbidden Fruit: Gorgeously Extravagant Production of Modern Cinderella Story". Film Daily. 15 (28). New York City: Wyd's Films and Film Folks, Inc.: 2 January 30, 1921. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
- ^ "American Silent Feature Film Database: Forbidden Fruit". Library of Congress. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
External links
Media related to Forbidden Fruit (1921 film) at Wikimedia Commons
The full text of Forbidden Fruit (film) at Wikisource
- Forbidden Fruit at IMDb
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