
Red, White and Blue Blood
Comedy
Overview
A hard-core socialite turns over a new leaf after spending time with a less fortunate family.
Top Cast


Francis X. Bushman
Francis X. Bushman
John Spaulding
Francis X. Bushman
John Spaulding


Beverly Bayne
Beverly Bayne
Helen Molloy-Smythe
Beverly Bayne
Helen Molloy-Smythe
Adella Barker
Adella Barker
Mrs. Molloy-Smythe
Adella Barker
Mrs. Molloy-Smythe


William H. Tooker
William H. Tooker
Patrick Spaulding
William H. Tooker
Patrick Spaulding
Duncan McRae
Duncan McRae
Count Jules Berratti
Duncan McRae
Count Jules Berratti
Cecil Fletcher
Cecil Fletcher
Bob Molloy-Smythe
Cecil Fletcher
Bob Molloy-Smythe
John Raymond
John Raymond
Light-Fingered Bertie
John Raymond
Light-Fingered Bertie
C.R. McKinney
C.R. McKinney
Charlie Jadwin
C.R. McKinney
Charlie Jadwin


Arthur Housman
Arthur Housman
Arthur Housman
Similar Movies

A clueless man finds a bomb on the street and keeps throwing it to the crowd around him. The sketch then moves with the clueless nerd getting involved in all sorts of troubles until he accidentally gets into a hideout from a terrorist group that will complicate things for him more than he ever hoped.

The Misleading Widow is a 1919 silent film comedy starring Billie Burke as Betty Taradine. It was based on the 1917 stage play Billeted by F. Tennyson Jesse and H.M. Harwood. The film was produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed through Paramount Pictures. It appears to be a lost film.
Anita and Marion realize that an abandoned baby they sneaked into an orphanage was kidnapped from a millionaire. For the reward, they proceed to break into the institution at night, dressed as men to beat curfew, to get the kid out again. This film survives only in very fragmentary form.

A lost film - Mary Gray, whose father manufactures cold cream, is engaged to sappy Horace Niles, the son of Hugo Niles, the elder Gray's most competitive rival in the cosmetics business. Chip Armstrong, a hot-shot public relations man, quits the employ of Hugo Niles and goes to work for Gray, persuading Mary to enter the Miss America contest at Atlantic City, with the intention of using her to endorse her father's cold cream should she win. Mary breaks her engagement with Horace. When it appears that she will win the contest, Hugo lures her home on the pretext that her father is ill, and she misses the contest. Chip and Mary return to Atlantic City, discovering that the new Miss America has told the world that she owes all her success to Gray's cold cream. On this note, Chip and Mary decide to get married.

Lizzie Stokes, an obscure and colorless actress, is elevated to stardom through publicity and better coaching from Daniel Hoffman, a theatrical producer. As Olga Rostova, an exotic Russian, she meets Norman Brooke, whose infatuation turns to love. Hoffman suggests that Norman could never care for Lizzie and proves his point. Heartbroken, Lizzie decides to see no more of him. On closing night, when he proposes to her in her dressing room and she refuses, Norman declares he must believe all the lurid details of her past; in desperation, she bares her true identity, only to find it is not her glamorous image but rather her real self that he loves.












