| Minnie | |
|---|---|
![]() Still with Leatrice Joy  | |
| Directed by | Marshall Neilan Frank Urson  | 
| Written by | Marshall Neilan (scenario) Frances Marion (titles)  | 
| Story by | George Patullo | 
| Produced by | Marshall Neilan | 
| Starring | Leatrice Joy | 
| Cinematography | David Kesson Karl Struss  | 
| Edited by | Daniel J. Gray | 
| Distributed by | Associated First National | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 70 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | Silent (English intertitles) | 
Minnie is a 1922 American silent comedy film starring Leatrice Joy and co-directed by Marshall Neilan and Frank Urson. Neilan also wrote and produced the film which was released by Associated First National Pictures (later First National Pictures).[1] It is not known whether the film currently survives,[1] which suggests that it is a lost film.
Plot
As described in a film publication, Minnie (Joy),[2] the homeliest girl in town, is devoted to her father (Barnum), a discouraged inventor who has been working on a wireless device. Subject to the sneers of her neighbors, Minnie "invents" a lover and sends herself letters and flowers. Her stepsister (Lynch) suspects the truth and threatens to expose her. Desperate, she claims an unidentified body at the morgue and tells a reporter (Moore) that this is her lover, unaware that the body is that of a Chinese man. The absent-minded reporter sees her heart and forgets about the big story. After further disappointments in the invention, Minnie's stepmother decides to leave her father. Her father then has a success and becomes rich. At a celebration, the stepsister and townspeople are surprised when a new couple appear, which turn out to be the former reporter and his lovely wife Minnie.
Cast
- Leatrice Joy as Minnie
 - Matt Moore as Newspaperman
 - George Barnum as Minnie's Father
 - Josephine Crowell as Stepmother
 - Helen Lynch as Stepsister
 - Raymond Griffith as Chewing Gum Salesman
 - Richard Wayne as Young Doctor
 - Tom Wilson as Boardinghouse Janitor
 - George Dromgold as Local Cut-Up
 
References
- 1 2 Progressive Silent Film List: Minnie at silentera.com
 - ↑ Pardy, George T., ed. (December 23, 1922). "Illustrated Screen Report: Minnie". Exhibitor's Trade Review. East Stroudsberg, Pennsylvania: Exhibitor's Trade Review, Inc. 13 (4): 216. Retrieved April 29, 2014.
 
External links
- Minnie at IMDb
 - Synopsis at AllMovie
 - Lantern slide (archived Wayback)
 
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