Wikisource:WikiProject Film/Drafts/Archives/Stella Dallas (1925 film)
Appearance
User: PseudoSkull
File: Stella Dallas (1925).webm
Author: Henry King
Publisher: United Artists Productions
Year: 1925
PD: PD/US|1982
Note: An American silent drama film based on the [[Stella Dallas (Prouty)|novel of the same name]] by [[Author:Olive Higgins Prouty|Olive Higgins Prouty]].
Cat: Drama film, Films based on books
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00:02
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|SAMUEL GOLDWYN}}<br>{{xx-smaller|presents}}<br>{{larger|{{cursive|''The''}} {{uc|[[Author:Henry King|Henry King]]}}}}<br>PRODUCTION<br><br>{{xxxx-larger|{{sc|Stella Dallas}}}}<br><br>{{xx-smaller|WITH}}<br>{{x-smaller|RONALD COLMAN<br>BELLE BENNETT—ALICE JOYCE—JEAN HERSHOLT<br>LOIS MORAN—DOUGLAN FAIRBANKS, {{sc|Jr.}}<br><br>{{x-smaller|COPYRIGHT MCMXXVI BY SAMUEL GOLDWYN}}}}}}
}}
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00:12
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|Directed by}}<br>HENRY KING<br><br>{{smaller|Adapted for the screen by}}<br>FRANCES MARION}}
}}
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00:19
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|Produced by}}<br>SAMUEL GOLDWYN}}
}}
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00:25
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|Photographer}}<br>ARTHUR EDESON<br><br>{{smaller|Film Editor}}<br>STUART HEISLER<br><br>{{columns|
|col1={{smaller|Costumes by}}<br>SOPHIE WACHNER
|col2={{smaller|Art Director}}<br>ARTHUR STIBOLT
}}}}
}}
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00:34
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|Released by}}<br>UNITED ARTISTS<br>{{smaller|CORPORATION}}}}
}}
----
00:39
{{ft/s|{{c|{{lsp|0.5em|CAST}}}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Stephen Dallas|''Ronald Colman''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Helen Dane<br>Mrs. Morrison|''Alice Joyce''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Stella Martin<br>Stella Dallas|''Belle Bennett''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Laurel Dallas|''Lois Moran''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Ed Munn|''Jean Hersholt''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Richard {{SIC|Grosvenor|Grovesnor}}|''Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Stephen Dallas, Sr.|''Charles Lane''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Miss Philiburn|''Vera Lewis''}}
{{Dotted TOC line||Mrs. {{SIC|Grosvenor|Grovesnor}}|''Beatrix Prior''}}
}}
}}}}
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01:01
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|S}}pringtime, and her twin sister——Romance.}}
}}
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01:26
{{ft/s|
{{di|E}}ver since Stephen Dallas was ten and Helen Dane was seven, they had held their tryst at this swing between their two homes.
}}
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01:40
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Our engagement will make dad happy, Helen darling—he's been so worried lately."}}
}}
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02:14
{{ft/i|
{{c|NEW YORK{{gap|2em}}JOURNAL}}{{xxxx-larger|STEPHEN DALLAS<br>EMBEZZLER!}}
}}
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02:57
{{ft/s|
{{di|I}}n shame and disgrace Stephen Dallas turned from all that was dear to him, and hid in a small mill town where the wheels of life grind on relentlessly.
}}
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03:25
{{ft/i|
{{c|FORNIA<br>COTTON MILLS<br><br>{{smaller|LEGAL DEP'T.}}}}<br><br><br><br>{{smaller|STEPHEN DALLAS JR.}}
}}
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03:32
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{box|HELEN DANE BEAUTIFUL BRIDE}}}}
}}
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03:37
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|MRS. CORNELIUS MORRISON (nee Helen Dane)}}}}{{smaller|Following the ultra-fashionable wedding last evening of Miss Helen Dane to Mr. Cornelius Morrison, the happy couple sailed upon the Lagario for a leisurely trip through the West Indies.<br>They expect to be at home to their countless friends after June 15th. [...]}}
}}
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04:26
{{ft/s|
{{di|S}}ince childhood, Stella Martin schemed to rise above her sordid surroundings.
}}
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04:54
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Pa, who's that fellow? He always looks so lonesome. Why don't you ask him over sometime?"}}
}}
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05:08
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Swell chance you'd have gettin' him into ''this'' dump!"}}
}}
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05:49
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Stella! Coffee's boilin' over!"}}
}}
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06:30
{{ft/i|
{{c|Make Your Home a<br>LOVE NEST!}}<br>{{bc|width=25em|{{xx-smaller|MORNING GLORIES, your [...] colored messengers of [...] convert your [...] into a LOVERS' NOOK.}}}}<br>{{x-smaller|Feast your eyes upon the nodding blossoms in your own back yard. Inhale the perfume of Heaven's own [...].}}{{c|{{x-smaller|SEEDS... IN A PACKAGE}}}}
}}
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06:41
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|{{cursive|the best of all!}}}}}}
}}
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07:02
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|B}}y summer the vines had grown like a web over the porch of Stella's house—a clever little trap into which a lonely man wandered.}}
}}
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09:45
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|S}}tella seemed no burden in Stephen's arms that evening—but after their marriage the weight of her often lay heavily upon his heart.}}
}}
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10:23
{{ft/d|
{{c|"My precious little Laurel bud——"}}
}}
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11:06
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Oh, Stephen, I'm giving a swell tea today at the country club."}}
}}
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11:48
{{ft/d|
{{c|"—but, honey, you're such a big, important man that I can't be a little old wife poking along behind——"}}
}}
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12:25
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|A}}t the smart country club Stella Dallas was a noticeable figure.}}
}}
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13:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Yoo-hoo, Eddie.....Oh you Mr. Munn!"}}
}}
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13:28
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Come on over—and bring your horse!"}}
}}
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13:49
{{ft/d|
{{c|"You girls all know the riding-master?"}}
}}
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13:54
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Sure, I learned 'em all to ride."}}
}}
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14:07
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Say, brother, little Eddie Munn wants to buy a bottle of wine for the ladies."}}
}}
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14:20
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Have you seen this one? A little parlor trick that Eve tried on her Adam's apple."}}
}}
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15:08
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Stephen, our directors have rewarded your splendid work by appointing you chief of our legal department in New York."}}
}}
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15:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"This will be great news for my wife, sir. I'll hurry home and tell her!"}}
}}
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16:26
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Darned if the offspring ain't got another toofie!"}}
}}
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16:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Look, Stephen—Mr. Munn's here! He brought me home from the country club, and I've asked him to stay for supper."}}
}}
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18:08
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Well—like the roof says to the cyclone, I'm off now!"}}
}}
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18:27
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What do you mean by insulting Mr. Munn? He wants to be our friend, and you treat him like he was the measles."}}
}}
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18:40
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Let's not discuss that man again, Stella; I have been transferred to New York and we will leave just as soon as you are ready."}}
}}
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18:56
{{ft/d|
{{c|"—dragged off to New York, where I don't know anybody—well, I won't go—''I won't!''"}}
}}
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19:33
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Look here, Stella, I won't have my baby brought up in this sort of atmosphere——"}}
}}
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20:35
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Maybe I haven't been much of a mother, but I love my baby——and I'd die if she were taken away from me——"}}
}}
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20:52
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'm sorry, Stella, I won't take Laurel away from you. I ''must'' go to New York—when you are ready to come—I'll be waiting——"}}
}}
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21:14
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|Y}}ears pass swiftly—in a few days Laurel will be ten.}}
}}
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21:44
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Miss Philiburn walked home from school with me, mother."}}
}}
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22:09
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What I wish to say is not for Laurel's ears——"}}
}}
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22:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"In my school, Mrs. Dallas, I must be most careful—"}}
}}
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22:56
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Is there any truth in the rumor that you and Mr. Dallas may be divorced?"}}
}}
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23:10
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I should say not! My husband's business keeps him in New York——my friends and your school keep me here."}}
}}
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24:12
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mother, what did Miss Philiburn want?"}}
}}
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24:57
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Keep your shirt on, old girl——I'll be right up!"}}
}}
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25:29
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Always wanting everything so darn plain and simple—if you ain't the very spit of your father."}}
}}
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26:24
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Gee, Ed, you're certainly nutty about Lollie. Anybody would think that ''you'' were her father."}}
}}
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27:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Laurel is going to have a wonderful birthday party. I'm making her a dress and tomorrow I'm going to the city and {{SIC|buy|buying}} some beautiful favors."}}
}}
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27:34
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Why don't you spend some of the money the old man sends you, and stop killing yourself for that kid?"}}
}}
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27:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Back ache? Let old Doc Munn lay a gentle hand on you. Many's the horse I've saved—"}}
}}
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28:36
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What do you say if I go to the city with you?"}}
}}
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28:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Gee, Ed, that would be wonderful—I haven't seen a good show for ages."}}
}}
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29:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I know a swell chop suey joint—we'll paint the old town red!"}}
}}
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31:50
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|C}}hop-suey—Burlesque Show—Beer Garden—Stella and Ed missed nothing——}}
}}
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32:02
{{ft/i|
{{c|DRUGS}}
}}
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32:08
{{ft/s|
{{c|——Neither did the prying eyes of Miss Philiburn.}}
}}
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32:31
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|ROOMS{{gap|6em}}118}}}}
}}
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33:12
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|S}}tephen never knew that Helen was a widow, until——}}
}}
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34:00
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Those are my three fine sons, Stephen."}}
}}
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34:12
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'm in the proud parent class myself, Helen—I have a wonderful little girl——"}}
}}
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34:37
{{ft/s|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{cursive block/s}}
Dear Daddy
<br>
Mama is giving me a birthday-party, and all the girls of Miss Philiburn's school will be there. I wish my daddy could come.
<br>
Oodles of Love and a million x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
<br>
{{c|Laurel}}
{{cursive block/e}}
{{smaller block/e}}
}}
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34:56
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|L}}aurel is ten years old today.}}
}}
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36:26
{{ft/d|
{{c|"It's two o'clock. They'll be here any minute now."}}
}}
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39:09
{{ft/i|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{c|Miss Philiburn Select School for Girls}}
My dear Mrs. Dallas:
<br>
I regret having to take this severe measure, but I must discontinue your daughter's attendance at my school.
<br>
This will explain the children not coming to Laurel's party.
<br>
{{c|Sincerely,<br>{{cursive|Matilda A. Philiburn}}}}
{{smaller block/e}}
}}
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40:29
{{ft/d|
{{c|"We'll have our party anyway."}}
}}
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41:50
{{ft/i|
{{cursive block/s}}
To Laurel
{{c|with love}}
{{right|from Father}}
{{cursive block/e}}
}}
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42:48
{{ft/i|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{cursive block/s}}
Mama and I are having a happy birthday party.
{{cursive block/e}}
{{smaller block/e}}
}}
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42:53
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|MY DIARY}}}}
}}
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44:05
{{ft/i|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{cursive block/s}}
My little diary has been laid away for three years. I am thirteen now, old enough to really keep one.
{{cursive block/e}}
{{smaller block/e}}
}}
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44:17
{{ft/i|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{cursive block/s}}
Right after my birthday party we moved to the other side of town. I go to another school. On my last visit to father I met Mrs. Morrison. When I grow up I want to be just like her.
{{cursive block/e}}
{{smaller block/e}}
}}
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45:23
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'm never going to get old like some mothers do—but always keep young and real dressy so you'll be proud of me."}}
}}
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46:05
{{ft/d|
{{c|"You drunken loafer, I told you never to come here again!"}}
}}
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47:23
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Maybe—maybe he has come to stay."}}
}}
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48:24
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Is your trunk coming up later?"}}
}}
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48:45
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I was so lonely for you, Laurel, I had to come and steal you away for a week——"}}
}}
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49:32
{{ft/d|
{{c|"May I take Laurel to New York with me—for a visit?"}}
}}
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50:58
{{ft/d|
{{c|"We have always thought, Stephen, that perhaps you might come back to us."}}
}}
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51:09
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I guess it was my darn false pride that kept me away from you all these years, Stephen—is it too late?"}}
}}
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51:27
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Why, Stella, I never dreamed that you wanted me."}}
}}
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51:45
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Thought you'd put one over on me—pushing me out the back door when somebody came in the front!"}}
}}
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52:06
{{ft/d|
{{c|"How was I to know the old man had come home to roost!"}}
}}
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53:43
{{ft/s|
{{di|A}} curt letter from Stephen's lawyer brought Stella to the city.
}}
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54:03
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Divorce? But I don't want a divorce."}}
}}
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54:12
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Why should I give him a divorce——does he want to marry ''that'' Mrs. Morrison?"}}
}}
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54:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"If Mr. Dallas files suit, it will reveal a little escapade you have been hiding for years—"}}
}}
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54:57
{{ft/d|
{{c|"It's all a pack of lies about me and Ed Munn!"}}
}}
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55:08
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Damn you! I'm a lady—I am! Are you tryin' to insult me?"}}
}}
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55:21
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'll never give him a divorce! I'll fight—I'll fight!"}}
}}
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55:35
{{ft/s|
{{di|H}}ow big and empty the little flat seemed without Laurel.
}}
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56:37
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I guess I was afraid—that you were never coming home."}}
}}
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56:55
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Oh, mother, I had the best time! A whole week at Mrs. Morrison's——I wish you could know her——"}}
}}
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57:10
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|A}}s Laurel grew up, Stella always spent the summers at exclusive resorts where Laurel could meet, "nice young people".}}
}}
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58:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I must run up and see mother, first."}}
}}
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58:20
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What a pity your mother has been ill all the time you have been here."}}
}}
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58:56
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Tell your mother I am so glad she will be out in a few days. We're looking forward to meeting her."}}
}}
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59:18
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mother, isn't Laurel wonderful?"}}
}}
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59:38
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|{{rule|5em}}{{rule|5em}}[[Man and Superman|Man<br>and<br>Superman]]<br>By<br>[[Author:George Bernard Shaw|Bernard<br>Shaw]]{{rule|5em}}{{rule|5em}}}}}}
}}
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59:44
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{rule|6em}}{{larger|[[Tertium Organum|TERTIUM<br>ORGANUM]]}}{{rule|6em}}A·KEY·TO·THE<br>ENIGMAS·OF<br>THE·WORLD{{rule|6em}}}}
}}
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59:49
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Sounds like a stomach trouble."}}
}}
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59:56
{{ft/d|
{{c|"For a woman with all her money she's got rotten taste in books. And me dying for [[Author:Elinor Glyn|Elinor Glyn]]'s latest!"}}
}}
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1:00:13
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Now, darling, tell me every little thing you've done today."}}
}}
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1:00:24
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Richard Grovesnor and I—"}}
}}
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1:01:02
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Is my baby in love?"}}
}}
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1:01:18
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|D}}ays that flew on swallows' wings.}}
}}
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1:01:47
{{ft/d|
{{c|"A walk around the grounds will do you a world of good."}}
}}
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1:03:36
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Oh, look—that funny woman."}}
}}
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1:04:06
{{ft/d|
{{c|"There's that awful woman again—isn't she a freak!"}}
}}
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1:04:18
{{ft/d|
{{c|"She's a panic!"}}
}}
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1:04:54
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I've lost my wrist watch!"}}
}}
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1:05:59
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Good-bye—"}}
}}
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1:06:04
{{ft/d|
{{c|"—Good-bye—Richard."}}
}}
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1:06:10
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Don't forget, Laurel—every dance is with me tonight."}}
}}
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1:06:36
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mother, we're going home ''now!''"}}
}}
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1:06:40
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Why, Lollie, we can't—I'm all dressed up to go down and meet your swell friends!"}}
}}
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1:06:54
{{ft/d|
{{c|"The sleeper for the night train is ready at eight o'clock. ''We're going aboard early.''"}}
}}
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1:07:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I can't get it. When you are just stepping out into society with the kind of people you like——"}}
}}
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1:07:50
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'm on, Laurel—you've had a quarrel with ''your young man.''"}}
}}
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1:07:59
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mother—please don't say 'your young man.{{' "}}}}
}}
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1:08:40
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mrs. Dallas and her daughter have checked out."}}
}}
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1:09:52
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Wasn't that terrible about Laurel Dallas?"}}
}}
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1:10:09
{{ft/d|
{{c|"To think that dreadful creature we saw today is Laurel's mother!"}}
}}
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1:10:30
{{ft/d|
{{c|"A refined girl, too! Of course Richard Grovesnor would never marry her with ''that'' mother."}}
}}
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1:10:54
{{ft/d|
{{c|"A mother like that is a millstone around her neck. Poor little Laurel!"}}
}}
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1:12:15
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Mother, it's lonesome up there—I want to cuddle here with you."}}
}}
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1:12:47
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|A}} weight around her child's neck! A revelation that seared like a white hot iron—destroying pride, almost life itself—brought Stella to the home of "that Mrs. Morrison".}}
}}
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1:13:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I've just got to see Mrs. Morrison."}}
}}
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1:13:51
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Are you Mrs. Morrison?"}}
}}
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1:14:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'm Mrs. Stella Dallas."}}
}}
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1:14:26
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What I've got to say won't take a minute."}}
}}
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1:14:57
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I've come here to talk about Laurel—she's just crazy about you."}}
}}
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1:15:13
{{ft/d|
{{c|"What I want to know is: if I let Stephen divorce me, will you and him get married?"}}
}}
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1:15:26
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Yes—we would."}}
}}
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1:15:36
{{ft/d|
{{c|"And—what about Laurel—will ''you'' take her?"}}
}}
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1:15:52
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Why no, Mrs. Dallas—I couldn't rob a mother of her only little girl."}}
}}
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1:16:08
{{ft/d|
{{c|"But—you don't understand, Mrs. Morrison——"}}
}}
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1:16:20
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I've thought it all out. If you marry Stephen, your name will be Dallas too; and when Laurel gets married, the wedding invitations will read right."}}
}}
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1:16:47
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I'd like people to think she's yours. You're the kind of a mother she could be proud of; I—I ain't."}}
}}
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1:17:15
{{ft/d|
{{c|"She'll never be nobody with me shackled around one foot."}}
}}
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1:18:07
{{ft/d|
{{c|"You tell Stephen I am ready to get the divorce any day now."}}
}}
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1:18:26
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|A}}rm in arm, two mothers, united by an understanding beyond words, walked through the great house.}}
}}
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1:18:39
{{ft/d|
{{c|"This will be Laurel's room."}}
}}
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1:18:53
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Books! Laurel is just nutty about books!"}}
}}
----
1:19:36
{{ft/d|
{{c|"May I take one of the roses to remember the room by?"}}
}}
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1:20:53
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Stay as long as Mrs. Morrison——I mean Mrs. Dallas—wants you."}}
}}
----
1:21:31
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Write often, sweetheart—"}}
}}
----
1:21:38
{{ft/d|
{{c|"—wear that shiny silver dress tonight—I want to see you in my mind's eye when I'm thinking about you."}}
}}
----
1:21:59
{{ft/i|
{{c|WOMENS WASH ROOM}}
}}
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1:22:51
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Cheer up, Dearie——it all comes out in the wash."}}
}}
----
1:24:41
{{ft/d|
{{c|"You mean to say you have arranged—that I am to live here—always—away from my mother?"}}
}}
----
1:25:22
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Please understand that as long as my mother lives, I will ''never'' leave her."}}
}}
----
1:25:43
{{ft/d|
{{c|"It is your mother's own plan, dear: this home, this environment is her gift to you. She came to see me about it last July."}}
}}
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1:26:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Last July?"}}
}}
----
1:26:15
{{ft/d|
{{c|"She wasn't asleep on the train that night. Oh, my poor mother, my wonderful mother—and they called her 'that woman'—'that awful creature'—'that freak'!"}}
}}
----
1:26:43
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I am sorry, father, but I cannot accept my mother's gift——I'm going home to her now."}}
}}
----
1:27:01
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|T}}hrough the weary summer months that followed, Stella's heart cried out with pain, ''What can I do now to save her?''}}
}}
----
1:27:51
{{ft/i|
{{smaller block/s}}
{{cursive block/s}}
I sent back Richard's letter unopened today. I am so unhappy I wonder sometimes why I go on living. I try to keep from my poor, dear mother how much I love Richard.
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1:31:10
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|ED MUNN}}<br>{{cursive|110 Clay st.}}<br>{{xx-smaller|Grimes Livery Stable{{gap|3em}}Millhaven, Mass.}}}}
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1:31:38
{{ft/d|
{{c|"He ain't drew a sober breath for a month."}}
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1:32:39
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Ed, pull yourself together, we're going to get married."}}
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1:32:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Aw right—sure, Stell, old girl—how are yuh—sit down—"}}
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1:33:29
{{ft/d|
{{c|{{" '}}Sawright, Stell—I'll be awright t'morrow."}}
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1:33:59
{{ft/d|
{{c|"From an old admirer, darling."}}
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1:34:37
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Your new papa!"}}
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1:35:04
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Now listen here, young lady; regardless of what you say, ''I'm going to marry Ed Munn!''"}}
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1:36:47
{{ft/i|
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Dear Lollie—
<br>
When you read this I'll be Mrs. Ed Munn and on our way to Ed's new job in South America. You visit your father until we get back.
<br>
Leave the key under the mat.
{{right|offset=4em|Lovingly,}}
{{right|offset=2em|Mother}}
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1:38:30
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Stephen—that pitiful letter—couldn't you read between the lines?"}}
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1:38:50
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Helen dear, you see with the eyes of an angel."}}
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1:39:01
{{ft/d|
{{c|"No, Stephen—with the eyes of a mother."}}
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1:39:46
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{di|A}}utumn is here—people have returned to their city homes, but no one knows what has become of Stella Dallas.}}
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1:40:07
{{ft/i|
{{c|{{smaller|Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Dallas<br>request the honor of your presence<br>at the marriage of their daughter<br>Laurel<br>to<br>Mr. Richard Van Dyke Grovesnor<br>on the evening of Thursday}}}}
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1:40:20
{{ft/d|
{{c|"You'd better pull down the shade on that side window."}}
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1:40:46
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I told you that tonight the shade on this window was not to be drawn."}}
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1:41:44
{{ft/d|
{{c|"I didn't think my mother would really stay away. I thought she would read about the wedding and come home in time for it."}}
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1:45:29
{{ft/d|
{{c|"Yes, sir, I'm going. I was only seeing how pretty the young lady was."}}
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1:46:04
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{smaller|Released by}}<br>UNITED ARTISTS<br>{{smaller|CORPORATION}}}}
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1:46:09
{{ft/s|
{{c|{{larger|The End}}}}
}}