Her Story


1920

Film Details

Release Date
Jan 1920
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Samuelson Film Manufacturing Co.
Distribution Company
Second National Pictures Corp.; State Rights
Country
United States

Synopsis

Shocked by a newspaper account of an escaped convict being discovered in his wife Betty's room, steel magnate Ralph Ashlyn hears, at her request, the story of her past. Alone in Russia after her father, a ship captain, dies at sea, the young Betty marries Russian agent Oscar Kaplan and moves to New York with him. Soon Kaplan begins to treat Betty cruelly and abandons her after taking up a life of crime. Betty takes a job in a department store that leads her to employment as a governess for Ashlyn's little girl. She sorrowfully declines Ashlyn's proposals of marriage until she discovers that her marriage to Kaplan was a fraud, after which she is finally persuaded to marry Ashlyn and enjoys five years of happiness. On a visit to Sing Sing prison, Betty recognizes Kaplan, now a convict. Later that weekend, Kaplan escapes and attacks Betty in her room at the country home at which she is a guest. Saved by the police, who chase Kaplan away, Betty rushes to her husband to explain. As Betty finishes her story, Ashlyn takes her in his arms.

Film Details

Release Date
Jan 1920
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Samuelson Film Manufacturing Co.
Distribution Company
Second National Pictures Corp.; State Rights
Country
United States

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

British producer Samuelson made this film in America in the first half of 1920. It was released in England in mid-1920 but was probably not shown publicly in America until late 1921 or early 1922, when it was distributed by Second National. A mid-production trade article stated that Samuelson was directing the film, but a 1921 review lists Carrick as director, and several modern sources call Alexander Butler the director. A modern source states that the film was shot at Universal City. One contemporary trade article states that the film was adapted from a novel of the same name, but no evidence of the novel's existence has been discovered.