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Prunella (film)

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Prunella
Newspaper advertisement
Directed byMaurice Tourneur
Written byCharles Maigne
Based onPrunella, or, Love in a Dutch Garden
by Granville Barker and Laurence Housman
Produced byAdolph Zukor
Jesse Lasky
StarringMarguerite Clark
CinematographyJohn van den Broek
Distributed byFamous Players–Lasky
Release date
  • June 2, 1918 (1918-06-02)
Running time
50 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Prunella is a 1918 American silent romantic fantasy film directed by Maurice Tourneur. The film is based on the 1906 play Prunella, or, Love in a Dutch Garden by Laurence Housman and Harley Granville-Barker, and stars Marguerite Clark in the title role. Clark also starred in the 1913 Winthrop Ames produced Broadway stage production on which the film is based.[1] The majority of the film is considered lost, with only fragments still in existence.[2]

Plot

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As described in a film magazine,[3] Prunella (Clark), who lives in a garden with her three aunts Prim (Berwin), Prude (Harris) and Privacy (Cecil), is carefully guarded from the outside world until the day a troupe of travelling players comes to town. Pierrot (Raucourt), the leader, creeps into the garden and captivates Prunella's heart. She runs off with him and becomes his Pierrette. For two years they wander from country to country. Pierrot tires of his marriage vows and runs away. He finds what a miserable thing life is without her, and he returns to the Dutch gardens and finds her, is forgiven, and they live on, presumably in blissful happiness.

Cast

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Jules Raucourt as Pierrot

Critical appraisal

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Film biographer Paul O'Dell in his Griffith and the Rise of Hollywood (1970) commenting on Prunella:

According to literary critic Edward Wagenknecht, Marguerite Clark's best picture was probably Prunella, directed in 1918 by Maurice Tourneur. From the stills available the film looks fascinating, and one cannot agree more with Wagenknecht than there is "no motion picture at present unavailable to students of cinema which would be more important to recover."[4]

Screenwriter DeWitt Bodeen, also commenting on the still photographs from this lost film, reports that "Marguerite Clark's screen image was a compound of whimsicality and frail beauty."[4]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Waldman, Harry (2008). Maurice Tourneur: The Life and Films. McFarland. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-0-786-44085-6.
  2. ^ Neale, Steve, ed. (2012). Classical Hollywood Reader. Routledge. p. 65. ISBN 978-1-135-72007-0.
  3. ^ "Reviews: Prunella". Exhibitors Herald. 7 (1). New York City: Exhibitors Herald Company: 44. June 29, 1918.
  4. ^ a b O'Dell, 1970 p. 149

Sources

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  • O'Dell, Paul (1970). Griffith and the Rise of Hollywood (1970 ed.). New York: A. S. Barnes & Co. p. 163. ISBN 0-498-07718-7.
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