Blind Man's Holiday


1917

Film Details

Release Date
Sep 1917
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Broadway Star Features Co.
Distribution Company
General Film Co.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the short story "Blind Man's Holiday" by O. Henry in Ainslee's Magazine (Dec 1905).

Technical Specs

Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Film Length
4 reels

Synopsis

John Lorison, self-exiled to New Orleans, meets Norah Greenway in a cheap restaurant. They soon become friends, but each night, Norah inexplicably leaves John at 8 o'clock at the same corner. One night, Lorison realizes that he is no longer willing to be left on the corner of life alone and, dreading her reaction, he tells Norah that he loves her but that his past is marred by a charge of theft and that he dare not ask an untarnished woman to marry him. Norah eases his mind by disclosing that the crime of theft also lurks in her past. The night of their marriage at Father Rogan's house, Norah asks Lorison to leave her at the corner for one last time. His suspicions aroused, Lorison interrogates the priest who takes him to Norah's home where the new husband is confronted with a little child who tells him that the girl has promised that this is the last night she is going to stay out. These circumstances lead Lorison to believe that his wife is a street walker until the priest takes him to the dressmaking shop in which Norah has been laboring day and night in order to earn enough money so that she might brighten the life of her little brother. Father Rogan then explains that Norah had told a beautiful, desperate lie.

Film Details

Release Date
Sep 1917
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Broadway Star Features Co.
Distribution Company
General Film Co.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the short story "Blind Man's Holiday" by O. Henry in Ainslee's Magazine (Dec 1905).

Technical Specs

Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Film Length
4 reels

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

This was the second of the four reel O. Henry features released through General as a departure from the many two-reel subjects produced from O. Henry's repertoire.