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Mary Pickford  

 

SUDS

United Artists, 1920.  Directed by Jack Dillon.  Camera:  Charles Rosher.  With Mary Pickford, Albert Austin, Harold Goodwin, Rose Dione, Nadyne Montgomery, Darwin Karr, Hal Wilson.

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Amanda Afflick, a laundress with a romantic imagination, weaves a story about a shirt brought to the laundry eight months earlier by Horace Greensmith.  She tells her fellow workers that the shirt belongs to her fiancée, Sir Horace, to whom her father objected and expelled from their castle, but who will one day return.

While waiting for her lord, Amanda saves Lavender, the old laundry horse, from the glue factory and takes her home with her but is ousted the following morning by indignant tenants.  Luckily, Lady Burke, a philanthropist, comes to Lavender's aid by providing her a home on the Burke country estate.

Although the laundry driver Ben Pillsbury pines for Amanda, she ignores him, preferring to wait instead for Lord Horace.  When Greensmith finally arrives for his shirt, Amanda pleads with him to pretend that he is her lover and he agrees, but later, realizing how shabby she looks, he discards her.  He leaves Amanda, her romantic dreams shattered, sobbing, while Ben waits outside the laundry, disconsolate.

Notes
The film is Based on the play Op O' Me Thumb by Frederick Fenn and Richard Pryce (New York, February 6, 1905).

The working titles for the film were The Duchess of Suds and Op O' Me Thumb.  Three cameras were used in the shooting of this production, which was awarded the Board of Merit of the Motion Picture Theatrical Association's first seal of approval.  Contemporary sources state that the harsh conclusion generated such widespread criticism that a second, happy ending was filmed in which Amanda lives happily on Lady Burke's estate with Lavender and Ben.

American Film Institute Catalog

 
 
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