Misplaced Pages

At Bay

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

At Bay is a 1915 American silent drama film directed by George Fitzmaurice and starring Florence Reed . It is based on a 1913 Broadway play, At Bay , by George Scarborough and produced by the Shuberts . On stage, Reed's starring part was played by Chrystal Herne .

#430569

7-413: The play was adapted for the screen by Ouida Bergère . With no prints of At Bay located in any film archives, it is considered a lost film . This 1910s drama film-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Ouida Berg%C3%A8re Ouida Bergère (born Eunie Branch ; December 14, 1886 – November 29, 1974) was an American screenwriter and actress. Eunie Branch

14-597: Is listed in the census with her parents in Little Rock, Arkansas as Eula Burgess. Her marital status then was recorded as divorced and occupation, actress. In January of that year she appeared as Ouida Bergère playing the stenographer in the play Via Wireless and was one of few cast members to receive positive reviews in the production. Bergère began her career as an actress. Playwright Winchell Smith gave her her first role, but she eventually abandoned her stage career and turned her attention to writing. She wrote for

21-523: The New York Herald and for various magazines, and wrote the stories for silent film productions. She wrote most of the stories for the films of Elsie Ferguson , and many for Mae Murray , including On With the Dance . She also wrote for Pola Negri , Corinne Griffith , Bert Lytell , and Betty Compson , many of which were directed by her second husband George Fitzmaurice . In 1920, she wrote

28-889: The Hall Caine novel, directed by her husband George Fitzmaurice , and released by the Samuel Goldwyn Company . The film enlisted the assistance of the Fascists , and of Mussolini , with the help of the American ambassador in Rome. The film included a scene in which Mussolini appeared writing a letter and summoning a man to post it. 10,000 Blackshirts appeared in the Coliseum scenes for the film. After her marriage to actor Basil Rathbone on April 18, 1926, Bergère gave up her film work to assist him in his work and in

35-486: The management of his business affairs. Their first child died in infancy in 1928. They adopted a daughter named Cynthia Rathbone (1939–1969), and raised Ouida's niece, Ouida Branch, who married David Bruce Huxley, brother of Julian Huxley , Aldous Huxley , and Andrew Huxley . Bergere died about two weeks shy of her 88th birthday at Roosevelt Hospital in New York from complications after falling and breaking her hip. She

42-524: The screen version of Peter Ibbetson , starring Elsie Ferguson and Wallace Reid . During this time, she met Basil Rathbone , who was playing the lead role in the stage production of the play, and they eventually married in 1926. As well as the United States, Bergère worked on films in England, France and Italy. While in Rome, she wrote a screenplay titled The Eternal City (1923), based on

49-527: Was born in Madrid, Spain, the daughter of Stephen W. and Ida Branch, both natives of Tennessee. Her early years were spent in Madrid, Paris and England. She came to the U.S. at eight years of age. Her father was a merchant who later worked as a railroad timekeeper . By the time of the taking of the 1900 Federal Census she was living with her brother's family in Searcy, Arkansas as Eunie Branch. A decade later she

#430569