Misplaced Pages

Small Town Girl

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.
#220779

9-499: Small Town Girl may refer to: Film [ edit ] A Small Town Girl , a 1914 American silent drama film, considered to be lost, starring Lon Chaney Sr. Small Town Girl (1936 film) , an American romantic comedy starring Janet Gaynor, Robert Taylor, and James Stewart Small Town Girl (1953 film) , an American musical starring Jane Powell, Farley Granger, and Ann Miller Music [ edit ] Small Town Girl (album) ,

18-440: A 2006 album by Kellie Pickler, or the title song "Small Town Girl" (song) , a 1987 song by Steve Wariner "Small Town Girl", a song by Andy Bull "Small Town Girl", a song by Good Shoes from Think Before You Speak "Small Town Girl", a song by John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band from Tough All Over Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

27-456: A man out of him. He comes back to Ruth ready to accept his paternal responsibility, but she scorns him and refuses to even let him see their child. Moving Picture World wrote: "A three-reel number, written by Beatrice Van and produced by Allan Dwan. Pauline Bush is featured as a country girl lured to the city by a visiting stranger, who soon deserts her. He returns later, after the baby is born, but she spurns him and goes to her country lover. This

36-454: A prostitute, and Ruth starts to consider suicide; however, an elderly, childless couple take an interest in her and her baby. Ruth decides to write her uncle for help, and Dick intercepts the letter and sends her money. Her uncle soon after passes away, and Dick inherits the hotel. He searches for Ruth to bring her back home. Meanwhile, the Snob has gone West, where the rugged environment has made

45-408: Is appealingly acted and well photographed, the chief drawback being that all of the situations are very familiar. In a production of this length there should have been more novelty. At the same time the story is connected and well developed." Motion Picture News wrote: "This drama featuring Pauline Bush and Rupert Julian contains just a plain story and nothing of the impossible. Bit in its plainness it

54-601: The Opera (1925). Ruth's uncle is the proprietor of the only hotel in Maplehurst, a small rural town. When she was orphaned years earlier, she was adopted by her uncle. Dick, a young hotel clerk now loves her dearly. Ruth cares for Dick, but feels he is too rustic. One day, a slick young Snob from the East arrives in Maplehurst and Ruth is taken in by his flashy clothes and fast car. Dick is crushed when his sweetheart goes off with

63-448: The scoundrel. On one of her long drives with the snob, they stop at an inn, where he gets her drunk and takes advantage of her, impregnating her. When he moves back East, Ruth follows him, but he soon tires of her and throws her to the curb. She later gives birth to their child in a rundown big city boarding house, and the snob's family refuses to even see her when she goes to them for help. A local pimp (Lon Chaney) suggests that she become

72-519: The title Small Town Girl . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Small_Town_Girl&oldid=1075231426 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages A Small Town Girl A Small Town Girl (aka The Small Town Girl )

81-631: Was a 1914 American silent drama film directed by Allan Dwan and featuring Lon Chaney , Pauline Bush and Rupert Julian . The film is now considered to be lost . Some sources list this as a 1915 film, but the Blake book on Chaney says it was released specifically on Nov. 7, 1914. A still from the film exists that shows Lon Chaney as the Pimp, seated second from left. Chaney's co-star in this film, Rupert Julian , later directed him in The Phantom of

#220779