The Woman Who Obeyed
1923 film
- 1923 (1923)
English intertitles
The Woman Who Obeyed is a 1923 British silent film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Stewart Rome, Hilda Bayley, and Peter Dear.
Premise
An overbearing husband separates his wife from her children but is reconciled to her after he has accidentally killed their son.[1]
Cast
- Hilda Bayley as Marion Dorchester
- Stewart Rome as Dorchester
- Henri de Vries as Captain Conway
- Valia as Mrs. Bruce Carrington
- Gerald Ames as Raymond Straithmore
- Ivo Dawson as Duke of Rexford
- Peter Dear as Bobbie Dorchester
- Nancy Price as Governess
References
- ^ BFI.org
External links
- The Woman Who Obeyed at IMDb
- The Woman Who Obeyed at BFI Film & TV Database
- v
- t
- e
The films of Sidney Morgan
- The Brass Bottle (1914)
- The World's Desire (1915)
- Iron Justice (1915)
- Light (1915)
- Our Boys (1915)
- What's Bred... Comes Out in the Flesh (1916)
- The Stolen Sacrifice (1916)
- The Charlatan (1916)
- Auld Lang Syne (1917)
- A Bid for Fortune (1917)
- Drink (1917)
- Derelicts (1917)
- Democracy (1918)
- Because (1918)
- Sweet and Twenty (1919)
- All Men Are Liars (1919)
- After Many Days (1919)
- Two Little Wooden Shoes (1920)
- The Woman of the Iron Bracelets (1920)
- The Scarlet Wooing (1920)
- The Children of Gibeon (1920)
- The Black Sheep (1920)
- Little Dorrit (1920)
- Lady Noggs (1920)
- By Berwin Banks (1920)
- A Man's Shadow (1920)
- Moth and Rust (1921)
- The Mayor of Casterbridge (1921)
- The Lilac Sunbonnet (1922)
- Fires of Innocence (1922)
- A Lowland Cinderella (1922)
- The Woman Who Obeyed (1923)
- Shadow of Egypt (1924)
- Miriam Rozella (1924)
- Bulldog Drummond's Third Round (1925)
- A Murderous Girl (1927)
- The Thoroughbred (1928)
- A Window in Piccadilly (1928)
- Her Reputation (1931)
- Contraband Love (1931)
- Mixed Doubles (1933)
- Chelsea Life (1933)
- Faces (1934)
- The Minstrel Boy (1937)
This article about a silent drama film is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article related to a British film of the 1920s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e