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Lois Weber

Florence Lois Weber (June 13, 1879 – November 13, 1939) was an American silent film director, screenwriter, producer and actress. She is identified in some historical references as among "the most important and prolific film directors in the era of silent films".[1][2] Film historian Anthony Slide has also asserted, "Along with D. W. Griffith, Weber was the American cinema's first genuine auteur, a filmmaker involved in all aspects of production and one who utilized the motion picture to put across her own ideas and philosophies".[3]

Lois Weber
Weber in 1916
Born
Florence Lois Weber

(1879-06-13)June 13, 1879
DiedNovember 13, 1939(1939-11-13) (aged 60)
Occupation(s)Film director, film producer, screenwriter, actress
Spouses
(m. 1904; div. 1922)
Harry Gantz
(m. 1926; div. 1935)
AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame – Motion Picture
6518 Hollywood Blvd

Weber produced a body of work which has been compared to Griffith's in both quantity and quality[4] and brought to the screen her concerns for humanity and social justice in an estimated 200 to 400 films,[1][5] of which as few as twenty have been preserved.[6][7] She has been credited by IMDb with directing 135 films, writing 114, and acting in 100.[8] Weber was "one of the first directors to come to the attention of the censors in Hollywood's early years".[9]

Weber has been credited with pioneering the use of the split screen technique to show simultaneous action in her 1913 film Suspense.[10] In collaboration with her first husband, Phillips Smalley, in 1913 Weber was "one of the first directors to experiment with sound", making the first sound films in the United States.[11][12] She was also the first American woman to direct a full-length feature film when she and Smalley directed The Merchant of Venice in 1914,[13] and in 1917 the first American woman director to own her own film studio.[14]

During the war years, Weber "achieved tremendous success by combining a canny commercial sense with a rare vision of cinema as a moral tool".[15] At her zenith, "few men, before or since, have retained such absolute control over the films they have directed—and certainly no women directors have achieved the all-embracing, powerful status once held by Lois Weber".[16] By 1920, Weber was considered the "premier woman director of the screen and author and producer of the biggest money making features in the history of the film business".[14]

Among Weber's notable films are: the controversial Hypocrites, which featured the first non-pornography full-frontal female nude scene, in 1915; the 1916 film Where Are My Children?, which discussed abortion and birth control and was added to the National Film Registry in 1993; her adaptation of Edgar Rice Burrough's Tarzan of the Apes novel for the very first Tarzan of the Apes film, in 1918; The Blot (1921) is also generally considered one of her finest works.[17]

Weber is credited with discovering, mentoring, or making stars of several women actors, including Mary MacLaren,[18]Mildred Harris, Claire Windsor,[19]Esther Ralston,[20]Billie Dove,[21]Ella Hall, Cleo Ridgely,[22] and Anita Stewart,[23] and with discovering and inspiring screenwriter Frances Marion. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Weber was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 8, 1960.

Early life edit

Florence Lois Weber was born on June 13, 1879,[24][25][26] in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania,[27] the second of three children of Mary Matilda Snaman[28][29][30] and George Weber,[31] an upholster and decorator[32] who had spent several years in missionary street work.[33] She was the younger sister of Elizabeth Snaman Weber Jay[34][35][36][37] and older sister of Ethel Weber Howland,[38][24][25][39] who later appeared in two of Weber's films in 1916[40] and married assistant director Louis A. Howland.

The Webers were a devout middle class Christian family of Pennsylvania German ancestry.[41][42][43]

 
Lois Weber at the piano (1912)

Weber was considered a child prodigy[44] and an excellent pianist.[45] As a girl, music was her passion, and her most treasured possession was a baby grand piano.[46] Weber left home and lived in poverty while working as a street-corner evangelist and social activist for two years with the evangelical Church Army Workers, an organization similar to the Salvation Army, preaching and singing hymns on street corners and singing and playing the organ in rescue missions in red-light districts in Pittsburgh and New York,[13][33] until the Church Army Workers disbanded in 1900.[47]

In June 1900, Weber was almost 21 and living with her parents and two sisters at 1717 Fremont Street, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, where she was a music student.[48] By April 1903, Weber was performing as a soprano singer and pianist.[49] She toured the United States as a concert pianist[50] until her final performance in Charleston, South Carolina, a year later.[42][44][51][52] After a piano key broke during a recital,[53][14] Weber retired from the concert stage, having lost her nerve to play in public.[14][54][55][56]

Theater career edit

Frustrated by the futility of one-on-one conversions, and following the advice of an uncle in Chicago,[33] Weber decided to take up acting about 1904, and moved to New York City, where she took some singing lessons. Weber later explained her motivation: "As I was convinced the theatrical profession needed a missionary, he suggested that the best way to reach them was to become one of them so I went on the stage filled with a great desire to convert my fellowman".[14]

 
Wendell Phillips Smalley in 1915

For five years Weber was a repertory and stock actress. After short stint as a soubrette in the farce comedy "Zig-Zag" for a Chicago-based touring company, Weber resigned as it "proved too superficial for her altruistic aims".[57][58] In 1904, Weber joined the road company of "Why Girls Leave Home",[47] where she became "a musical comedy prima donna and melodrama heroine".[59] Weber received "promising reviews" for her performance;[60] for example, The Boston Globe wrote in September 1904 that she "sang two very pretty songs very effectively and won considerable applause".[61]

The troupe's leading man and manager was Wendell Phillips Smalley (1865–1939), a grandson of Oliver Wendell Holmes, and the elder son of New York Tribune war and foreign correspondent George Washburn Smalley (1833-1916)[62][63] and Phoebe Garnaut Phillips (1841-1923),[64][65] the adopted daughter of abolitionist Wendell Phillips.[66][67]

Smalley, who had attended Balliol College, Oxford and was a graduate of Harvard University, had been a lawyer in New York for seven years, and as a stage actor made his professional stage debut in August 1901 in Manhattan.[68] He appeared in productions of Harrison Grey Fiske, Minnie Maddern Fiske, and Raymond Hitchcock.[69][70] After a brief acquaintance, just before her 25th birthday, Weber and Smalley, aged 38, married on April 29, 1904, in Chicago, Illinois.[71]

After initially touring separately from her husband, and then accompanying him on his tours, about 1906 Weber left her career in the theater and became a homemaker in New York.[13][72] During this period Weber wrote freelance moving picture scenarios.[60]

Film career edit

In 1908, Weber was hired by American Gaumont Chronophones, which produced phonoscènes,[73] initially as a singer of songs recorded for the chronophone.[74] Both Herbert Blaché and his wife, Alice Guy, later claimed to have given Weber her start in the movie industry.[73][75][74]

At the end of the 1908 theatrical season, Smalley joined Weber at Gaumont.[60] Soon Weber was writing scripts, and in 1908 Weber began directing English language phonoscènes at the Gaumont Studio in Flushing, New York.[15][76] In 1910, Weber and Smalley decided to pursue a career in the infant motion picture industry. For the next five years, they worked and were credited as The Smalleys (but typically Weber received sole writing credit) on dozens of shorts and features for small production companies like Gaumont, the New York Motion Picture Co., Reliance Studio, the Rex Motion Picture Company, and Bosworth,[15][77] where Weber wrote scenarios and subtitles, acted, directed, designed sets and costumes, edited films, and even developed negatives. Weber took two years off her birth date when she signed her first movie contract.[14]

Weber and Smalley had a daughter, Phoebe (named after Smalley's mother), who was born on October 29, 1910, but died in infancy.[78]

Rex Motion Picture Company edit

 
A Heroine of '76, Rex Motion Picture Company ad in Moving Picture News, 1911

By 1911, Weber and Smalley were working for William Swanson's Rex Motion Picture Company, based at 573–579 11th Avenue, New York City.[79] While at Rex, Weber gained her reputation as "a serious social uplifter and as the leading partner in the Weber-Smalley unit."[60] In 1911, Weber acted in and directed her first silent short film, A Heroine of '76, sharing the directorial duties with Smalley and Edwin S. Porter.[80] At the time of Rex's merger with five other studios to form the Universal Film Manufacturing Company on April 30, 1912, Weber and Smalley were the "prima facie heads of Rex",[81][82][83] and had relocated to Los Angeles.[60]

Rex continued as a subsidiary of Universal, with Weber and Smalley running it,[32] making one two-reel film each week,[60] until they left Rex in September 1912.[84]Carl Laemmle startled the film industry with his use of and advocacy for women directors and producers, including Weber, Ida May Park and Cleo Madison.[85] In the autumn of 1913,[86] shortly after the incorporation of Universal City,[87] Weber was elected its first mayor in a close contest that required a recount,[32][88][89][90] and Laura Oakley as police chief.[91] At the time, Universal's publicity department claimed Universal City was "the only municipality in the world that possesses an entire outfit of women officials".[87]

External videos
 
  MoMA Celebrates 1913: Lois Weber and Phillips Smalley's Suspense, Museum of Modern Art

In March 1913, Weber starred in the first English language version of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, which was produced for the New York Motion Picture Co., directed by Smalley from an adaptation by Weber, and featuring Wallace Reid as Dorian Gray.[92]

In 1913, Weber and Smalley collaborated in directing a ten-minute thriller, Suspense, based on the play Au Telephone by André de Lorde, which had been filmed in 1908 as Heard over the 'Phone by Edwin S. Porter.[93] Adapted by Weber, it used multiple images and mirror shots to tell of a woman (Weber) threatened by a burglar (Sam Kaufman).[94]

Weber is credited with pioneering the use of the split screen technique to show simultaneous action in this film,[10] but the "oft-mentioned triptych shots had already been used in the Danish "The White Slave Trade" films (Den hvide slavehandel) (1910), and for telephone conversations."[95] According to Tom Gunning,[96][97] Professor Emeritus in the Department of Cinema and Media at the University of Chicago, and author of D. W. Griffith and the Origins of American Narrative Film, "No film made before WWI shows a stronger command of film style than Suspense [which] outdoes even Griffith for emotionally involved filmmaking".[98]Suspense was released on July 6, 1913.[95]

 
Poster for The Jew's Christmas (1913)

In late 1913, Weber and Smalley made The Jew's Christmas, a three-reel silent film that dramatizes the conflict between traditional Jewish values and American customs and values,[99] illustrating the challenges of cultural assimilation, especially the generational conflict over interfaith marriage and the second generation's abandonment of the faith and customs of their ancestors.[100] In "the earliest portrayal of a rabbi in an American film",[101]The Jew's Christmas told the story of an orthodox rabbi (Smalley) who ostracizes his daughter (Weber) for marrying a gentile, but is reconciled twelve years later on Christmas Eve when he meets an impoverished small child, who turns out to be his granddaughter.[102] Endeavoring to combat racial discrimination and antisemitism, the film aims to show that love is stronger than any religious ties,[103] and that "the tie of blood overbears the pride and prejudice of religion".[104][105] In its assertion of "Melting-pot idealism" by its approval of intermarriage between people of different religions,[106] the film was considered controversial at the time of its release[104][107] on December 18, 1913.[13]

 
L to R: Phillips Smalley as Shylock and Weber as Portia in The Merchant of Venice (1914)

In 1914, a year in which she directed 27 movies, Weber became "one of the first directors to come to the attention of the censors".[9] That year, Weber co-directed an adaptation of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice with Smalley, who also played Shylock. making her the first American woman to direct a feature-length film in the United States,[108][109] and the first person who "directed the first feature-length Shakespearean comedy".[110] In February 1914, Universal released the four-reel Rex silent film[111] which was also adapted by Weber and Smalley,[112] and was also produced, directed, and starred Weber as Portia, and Smalley as Shylock. The film featured Douglas Gerrard, Rupert Julian, and Jeanie MacPherson, who would play a major role in cinema as Cecil B. DeMille's favorite screenwriter.[113]

A "prominent rabbi in Chicago strongly objected on the grounds that the play 'more than any other book, more than any other influence in the history of the world, is responsible for the world-wide prejudice against the Jews'",[114] but the film was praised at the time as "a supreme adaptation of Shakespeare".[115] Robert Hamilton Ball considered the film "careful, respectful, dignified, but lacking in passion and poetry", which he attributes to the difficulty it had satisfying the censor, and because the film was a special release rather than a release on the regular programme, exhibitors had to pay extra for it, which may have contributed to its swift demise.[114] The Merchant of Venice is now considered a lost film.[116]

One film that illustrates the paradoxical nature of Weber's role and films was her 1914 film The Spider and Her Web, where she advocates both modesty and maternalism. In this film, Weber plays "The Spider", a vamp living the "ultra-modern high life" who seduces and ruins intellectual men until frightened into adopting an orphan baby, which results in the salvation of the lead character through motherhood.[117]

Bosworth edit

As Universal was reluctant to make feature-length films,[117] in the summer of 1914 Weber was persuaded to move to the Bosworth company by Julia Crawford Ivers, the first woman general manager of a film studio,[6][32][14] to take over the production duties from Hobart Bosworth[118] on a $50,000 a year contract, making her "the best known, most respected and highest-paid" of the dozen or so women directors in Hollywood at that time.[14]

In 1914, Bertha Smith estimated Weber's audience at five to six million a week.[119] In fact, by 1915 Weber was as famous as D.W. Griffith and Cecil B. de Mille.[6] While at Bosworth, Weber and Smalley made six features and one short, The Traitor.[120]

 
Weber in Hypocrites (1915)

"Energized by evangelistic zeal and social conscience",[121] from early in her career Weber saw movies as "a vehicle for evangelism",[72] and "an opportunity to preach to the masses",[122] and to encourage her audience to be involved in progressive causes.[72]

In a 1914 interview Weber declared: "In moving pictures I have found my life's work. I find at once an outlet for my emotions and my ideals. I can preach to my heart's content, and with the opportunity to write the play, act the leading role, and direct the entire production, if my message fails to reach someone, I can blame only myself."[123] As many of Weber's films focused on a moral topic, she "was often mistaken as a Christian fundamentalist, but she was more of a libertarian, opposing censorship and the death penalty and championing birth control. The need for a strong, loving and nurturing home was clearly promoted as well and if there was a single maxim that underlay each film it was that selfishness and egocentricity erode the individual and community".[14]

Although not a practicing Christian Scientist,[124] Weber attended the Christian Science church regularly, according to Adela Rogers St. Johns,[125] and, in at least two of her films, Jewel (1915) and its remake, A Chapter in Her Life (1923), Christian Science plays a prominent role.[120][126] Weber's impeccable reputation and "impressive middle-class credentials" allowed her considerable artistic freedom in her presentation of controversial issues.[127]

 
Margaret Edwards as "Naked Truth"
in Hypocrites (1915)

In 1914, Weber made her first major feature,[117] a controversial version of Hypocrites, a four-reel allegorical drama shot at Universal City[120] which she wrote, directed and produced, addressing social themes and moral lessons considered daring for the time. Hypocrites included the first film full-frontal female nudity, inspired by Jules Joseph Lefebvre's 1870 allegorical painting La Vérité,[128] with truth portrayed in the ghostly figure of the Naked Truth, literally shown by an unidentified nude woman (Margaret Edwards).[129][130]

Margaret Sinclair Edwards (born 1877, New York City – died January 14, 1929, New York City), known on the stage as "Daisy Sinclair", appeared with the theatrical companies of Edward Harrigan, Eddie Foy, and Gus Edwards, among others. Her husband, John Edwards, an invalid, died the same year she did (1929). She appeared as Marguerite Edwards in A Physical Culture Romance in 1914, and in Weber's Sunshine Molly in 1915.[131][132][133][134] Although the nudity was tastefully done[135] (it was passed by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures after a two-month delay),[136] it was still banned in Ohio; caused riots in New York; and James Michael Curley, the mayor of Boston,[137] demanded that every frame displaying the naked figure of Truth be hand-painted to clothe the then unidentified actress.[138]

Hypocrites was released finally by Bosworth on January 15, 1915,[139] and premiered at Manhattan's prestigious Longacre Theatre,[136] and was "celebrated as a cultural, artistic, and moral landmark for the film industry",[117] and "praised for its use of multiple exposures and complex film editing".[140] While its negative cost was $18,000, it earned $119,000 in sales in the United States alone and made Weber "a household name".[136] In a 1917 interview, Weber denied the film was indecent and defended the film: "Hypocrites is not a slap at any church or creed – it is a slap at hypocrites, and its effectiveness is shown by the outcry amongst those it hits hardest, to have the film stopped".[141]

Universal edit

"Lois Weber had worked with her own [production] unit at Universal City, and had rapidly achieved prominence as the top director on that enormous lot. Her films tackled such controversial issues as birth control, divorce, and abortion, and while raising storms of controversy and censorship, pulled millions of dollars into Universal’s coffers. By 1917 she had the power to demand that the company sponsor a private studio for her—Sunset Boulevard Studio—Weber controlled every aspect of production herself, even acting in them when the time allowed..."—Film historian Richard Koszarski in Hollywood Directors: 1914-1940 (1976)[142]

In April 1915, Weber and Smalley left Bosworth when the founder left the company due to ill health.[14] After being promised they could make feature-length films by Carl Laemmle, they returned to Universal Pictures.[143] Weber's first movie for Universal was Scandal, in which both Weber and Smalley starred, that featured the consequences of gossip mongering.[122]

In 1916, Weber directed 10 feature-length films for release by Universal, nine of which she also wrote, and she also became Universal Studios' highest-paid director, earning $5,000 a week.[6] She "enjoyed complete freedom in overseeing most stages of the film-making process – choice of stories and actors, writing of scripts (which she invariably did herself), as well as direction".[144] Universal head Carl Laemmle, "who was known more for his frugality and cunning business sense than philanthropy", said of Weber: "I would trust Miss Weber with any sum of money that she needed to make any picture that she wanted to make. I would be sure that she would bring it back."[145] Also in 1916, Weber became the first and only woman inducted into the Motion Picture Directors Association.

In 1916, Weber explained her philosophy of directing films: "I'll never be convinced that the general public does not want serious entertainment rather than frivolous", and "A real director should be absolute. He (or she in this case) alone knows the effects he wants to produce, and he alone should have authority in the arrangement, cutting, titling or anything else that may seem necessary to do to the finished product. What other artist has his work interfered with by someone else?... We ought to realize that the work of a picture director, worthy of a name, is creative".[3]

Bluebird Photoplays edit

 
The Eye of God, "one of a baker's dozen of films co-directed in 1916 by the husband-and-wife team of Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber".[146]

In February 1916, Weber and Smalley were transferred to Universal's Bluebird Photoplays brand, where they made a dozen features,[120] including The Dumb Girl of Portici (also known as Pavlowa), adapted by Weber from Daniel Auber's 1828 opera La muette de Portici,[147] Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova's only screen appearance,[148] which was directed to Pavlova's satisfaction by Weber.[13] The film also starred Rupert Julian as Masaniello.[149] Released to popular acclaim, it premiered on April 3, 1916, at the Globe Theatre in Manhattan.[150]

Hoping to "become the editorial page of the studio",[120] and to "provoke a middle-class sense of responsibility for those less fortunate than themselves, and to stimulate moral reforms",[151] Weber specialized in making films that stressed both high quality and moral rectitude, including films of the "burning social and moral issues of the day",[144] among them such controversial themes as abortion, eugenics, and birth control in Where Are My Children? (1916),[74] influenced by the trial of Charles Stielow, an innocent man who was almost executed, opposition to capital punishment based on circumstantial evidence in The People vs. John Doe;[152] and alcoholism and opium addiction in Hop, the Devil's Brew, which were all successful at the box office,[144] but, while embraced by reformers in the film industry, "drew the ire of the conservatives".[153] Despite the predominance of strong women in her films, in 1916 Weber disassociated herself from the women's suffrage movement.[154]

 
Newspaper advertisement for Where Are My Children? (1916)

In Where Are My Children? (working title: The Illborn), which was released on April 16, 1916, Weber advocates social purity, birth control, and eugenics to prevent the "deterioration of the race" and the "proliferation of the lower classes", and makes "an indirect case for birth control or perhaps even for legalized, and safe, abortions".[155] The film starred Tyrone Power Sr. and his then-wife Helen Riaume; future star Mary MacLaren made her debut. It also makes use of several trick photography scenes, with an emphasis on multiple exposures to convey information or emotions visually. As a recurring motif, every time a character becomes pregnant, a child's face is double exposed over their shoulder.[citation needed]

In March 1916, the National Board of Review expressed disapproval of the film for showings to mixed audiences, but later approved it for adult showings.[156] It was banned in Pennsylvania on the grounds that it "tended to debase or corrupt morals", but Universal won a case in Brooklyn, New York, in 1916 to show the film after the district attorney filed suit against the theater manager and the Universal exchange president.[156] Controversy, the threat of censorship, and the banning of Where Are My Children? in some locations helped fuel the box office success of the film, estimated to have grossed in excess of $3 million,[157] in an era where ticket prices were less than 50c each,[13] and "rocketed Weber's name to larger audiences, bigger box-office returns, and an even higher annual income".[158] The film spread Weber's fame internationally. For example, Kevin Brownlow indicates that this film attracted 30,000 in Preston, Lancashire, 40,000 in Bradford, Yorkshire, and 100,000 in two weeks in Sydney.[159] In 2000, the Library of Congress Motion Picture Conservation Center copyrighted a preservation print reconstructed from several incomplete prints.[160]

 
Mary MacLaren in Shoes (1916)

Shoes, a "sociological" film released in June 1916 that Weber directed for the Bluebird Photoplays, was based on Stella Wynne Herron's short story of the same name, which had been published in Collier's magazine earlier that year. Herron took inspiration from noted social reformer Jane Addams's 1912 book A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil.[161] The nonfiction book depicts the struggles of working-class women for consumer goods and upward mobility and their dubious sexual activities, including prostitution.[74][162] Starring Mary Maclaren as Eva Meyer, a poverty-stricken shopgirl who supports her family of five, who needs to replace her only pair of shoes, and is so desperate that she sells her virginity for a new pair,[163] it proved to be the most booked Bluebird production of 1916.[162] A version restored digitally from three extant fragments by EYE Film Institute Netherlands,[164] made its debut in North America in July 2011.[165]

A scene from the restored "Shoes" showing architect John B. Parkinson's 1910 design for Pershing Square in Downtown Los Angeles has been used by the grassroots Pershing Square Restoration Society in promoting their campaign to restore the historic park.[166]

 
Coming attraction card for The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1917)

After another significant censorship battle, and a vigorous publicity campaign by Universal, on May 13, 1917, Universal released The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, "one of the most forceful films ever made in support of legalizing birth control", a follow-up to the previous year's top money-maker for Universal, Where Are My Children? Directed by Weber and Smalley based on their original script, it starred Smalley and Weber, in her last screen appearance, as a doctor's wife arrested and imprisoned for illegally disseminating family planning information.[167] Influenced by the recent trial and imprisonment of pioneer birth control advocate Margaret Sanger,[74] the film drew explicitly on her headline-generating activism.[167]

The film was released only weeks after Sanger's own film, Birth Control, was banned under a 1915 ruling of the United States Supreme Court that films "did not constitute free speech",[168] and the ruling of the New York Court of Appeals that a film on family planning may be censored "in the interest of morality, decency, and public safety and welfare". Sensitive to the opinions of local communities, and hoping to avoid powerful censorship boards in the northeast and midwest, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle was distributed primarily in the southern and western regions of the United States, with the result that it did not attain the record-breaking attendance set by Where Are My Children? the previous year.[167] When The Hand That Rocks the Cradle opened at Clune's Auditorium in Los Angeles in June 1917, Weber appeared on stage, bitterly denouncing attempts to alter or suppress her film. While The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is now lost, the surviving script and accompanying marketing materials make it clear that Weber mounted an unstinting argument in favor of "voluntary motherhood".[167]

Lois Weber Productions edit

 
Lois Weber Productions promo

In June 1917 Weber became the first American female director to establish and run her own movie studio[14] when she formed her own production company, Lois Weber Productions,[169] with the financial assistance of Universal.[32] She leased a self-contained estate, and had offices, dressing rooms, scenic and property rooms, and a 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) shooting stage constructed.[170][171][172] Smalley was made studio manager, and the Smalleys made their home on the studio lot[14] at 1550 N. Sierra Bonita Avenue.[173]

According to film historian Shelley Stamp, while Weber and Smalley were often co-credited as directors, it was "the wife who clearly had the artistic vision to drive the business partnership forward".[172] By this time, Weber's "idealized collaborative marriage" with Smalley had begun to show signs of deterioration, which was accelerated by the increased focus of critics and journalists on Weber as the dominant filmmaker, at the expense of Smalley, after 1916,[174] and Weber increasingly took credit for her contributions after 1917.[15] However, as early as 1913, some saw Weber as the "fertile brain" in the partnership, with Smalley seen as an indolent womanizer "who chased every woman on the lot", which resulted in arguments and shouting matches.[117]

Weber consciously resisted the industry's movement toward assembly-line-style studio film making. "By concentrating on only one production at a time, and mobilizing her entire workforce around that effort, Weber aimed for quality film making rather than efficient bookkeeping". Weber's independence allowed her to shoot her films in sequence, as she preferred (rather than out of order to suit production schedules).[172] William D. Routt indicates that "Lois Weber Productions were a good investment, cost-effective. The company made movies cheaply: in later years at least shooting on location even for interiors, using a small cast, working fast. Its somewhat sensational topics and titles guaranteed at least a modest box office return, and at times may have done much better than that."[83]

Karen Mahar attributes the success of Weber's films of the 1910s to their representation of "the generational conflict of the era" between the traditional view of women and that of the freedoms of the emerging "New Woman and the emergent consumer culture".[117] Mahar argues that "Weber's life was an expression of this generational divide: she was a stage performer and a Church Army Worker, a filmmaker and a middle-class matron, a childless advocate of birth control who 'radiates domesticity'". While Weber was clearly a New Woman by virtue of her career, she was also publicly identified as the wife and collaborator of her first husband.[117]

Shelley Stamp argues that Weber's "image was instrumental in defining both her particular place in film-making practices, and women's roles within early Hollywood generally", and that her "wifely, bourgeois persona, relatively conservative and staid, mirrored the film industry's idealized conception of its new customers: white, married, middle-class women perceived to be arbiters of taste in their communities".[175] While Weber's beliefs reflected modern values, as did her career as a filmmaker that was atypical for women of her era, she had "internalized much of what the Victorians deemed proper behavior for women", and there are "strong elements of the Victorian code of womanhood in her films".[176] The Smalleys exemplified and promoted the Victorian ideal of marriage as companionship and a partnership.[176]

From 1917 Weber was active in supporting the newly established Hollywood Studio Club, a residence for struggling would-be starlets.[177] After the United States entered World War I, Weber served on the board of the Motion Picture War Service Association, headed by D. W. Griffith and including Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, William S. Hart, Cecil B. DeMille, and William Desmond Taylor. The Association raised funds for the construction of a thousand-bed hospital.[178]

In 1918, the Fox Film Corporation hired Weber to direct Queen of the Seas,[179] in which Annette Kellerman swam and dove naked. However, she was replaced eventually by John G. Adolfi.[180] In September 1918, Weber broke her left arm in two places when she slipped on the floor and fell in Barker Brothers,[181] a downtown Los Angeles furniture store, forcing her to be hospitalized in the California Hospital.[182][183][184] Weber's arm was still causing her trouble seven months later.[185]

Anita Stewart Productions edit

Despite continuing to work at Universal, and renting out her studio to other independent producers, including Marshall Neilan, Weber found it difficult to pay the bills and to find the capital to finance her own productions.[14] By December 1918, Weber had left Universal, and signed a contract with Louis B. Mayer to direct Anita Stewart for $3,500 a week.[186][187] In a letter to Weber, Mayer proclaimed: "My unchanging policy will be great star, great director, great play, great cast. You are authorized to get these without stint or limit. Spare nothing, neither expense, time, or effort. Results only are what I'm after."[188] Weber made two films with Stewart as the lead: A Midnight Romance and Mary Regan, both released in 1919 to mixed reviews.[189]

Famous Players–Lasky edit

Needing finances, in July 1919 Weber signed a contract with Famous Players–Lasky to direct five films to be distributed through Paramount-Artcraft for $50,000 each,[14][157][190][191] plus one-third of the profits,[192] and guaranteed first-run bookings in Paramount theaters.[189] By January 1920, Smalley and Weber purchased a two-level home at 1917 N. Ivar Avenue, Hollywood,[193][194] later the home of Preston Sturges in the 1940s.[195]

In October 1920, Weber purchased the studio facilities at 4634 Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles, near Sunset Boulevard, which she had been leasing for the previous three years.[196][197][198]

By February 1921, Weber was at the zenith of her career,[199] regarded "as fearless in the production of her pictures as she once was in her struggle for a living, and her indubitable position is that of one of the best directors of the screen."[46] One newspaper wrote, "Lois Weber is not only the foremost woman director – she's the whole works", and attributed her success to having "a feminine touch lacking in most man-made films".[200] In an effort to protect the American film industry, by 1921 Weber advocated the prohibition of the importation of all European films into the United States.[201] In May 1921, Weber anticipated the possibility of both color and "three-dimensional films".[202]

Following "the cinematic rumination on modern marriage begun by Cecil B. DeMille"[203] and like other post-war filmmakers, Weber turned her attention toward marriage and domestic life to honor her deal with Famous Players–Lasky with such melodramas as To Please One Woman, What's Worth While? Too Wise Wives, and What Do Men Want?[189][203] However, as the United States entered the Jazz Age in the 1920s, Weber came to be seen as passé, in part because of her "propensity for didacticism"[204] but also because her "values became increasingly archaic; her moralising, propagandistic tone was unsuited to the era of the 'flapper' girl and a hedonism that seemed all the more urgent".[205]

By this time her "morally upright films bored modern audiences", her crusading was unwanted, and her views were considered "quaint".[206] Her fall from favor was also due to her inability or unwillingness to adapt to changing audience tastes,[14] and "her refusal to feature big-name stars or to glamorize consumerist excess in her films."[207]

After an advance screening in February 1921, Paramount executives decided not to distribute the fourth film in their arrangement with Weber, What Do Men Want?[207] a domestic melodrama about a philandering husband and a faithful wife[189] (Claire Windsor), and to cancel their arrangement with Weber to distribute her films.[32]

After making 13 films,[208] by April 1921, Lois Weber Productions collapsed, and Weber was forced to release all her contracted staff, with the exception of two novice actors.[209] While she would direct a few other movies, effectively her career as a Hollywood director was over.[206]

F.B. Warren Corporation edit

 
Lois Weber Productions ad (1921)

After reading the articles "Impoverished College Teaching" and "Boycotting the Ministry" in the April 30, 1921, issue of Literary Digest about the underpayment of educators and clergy, Weber, with scenarist Marion Orth, crafted a melodramatic narrative to bring the issue to life in The Blot.[210] Starring Claire Windsor and Louis Calhern,[211]The Blot was her masterpiece,[72] her most successful film from this period[212] and probably Weber's best-known film today.[207] The film "rejects the values of capitalist America that measures the value of people in wealth and property" by depicting the compromises and choices impoverished women are forced to make to achieve social mobility and financial security.[212] It "condemns capitalistic materialism and linked consumerism with sexual exploitation",[157] and addresses class, money, and ethnicity.[213] "Weber's basically Christian ethos shines clearly through this plot: the text disapproves of both the new consumerist immigrant class, and the old aristocratic one".[205] Despite xenophobic assumptions,[214] Weber advocates learning, asceticism, and service to the needy.[205]

According to film historian Kevin Brownlow in The Blot, "Weber's technique is reminiscent of that of William C. deMille, with its quietness, in its use of detail, and its emphasis on naturalism. Weber used the same method of direction, too, filming in continuity."[215] To tell with maximum realism this story of a college professor's family – hardworking but with only a meager income – Weber filmed in real houses, using a special lighting rig, and gave supporting roles to non-actors.[216] To emphasize this film was a woman-centered narrative, in a "radical departure from Hollywood practice", Weber used point-of-view cutting from the perspective of the professor's wife.[4] Weber also used extreme close-ups and an ambiguous ending, that Richard Combs describes The Blot as "so un-Griffithian as to seem almost modernistically open-ended", while others see it as almost surreal, declaring it "the Los Olvidados of the literally down at heel middle class".[4]

Due to the collapse of her distribution deal with Paramount, Weber was forced to distribute The Blot through the F.B. Warren Corporation, a newly formed small independent company that would also distribute a film each by Canadian women producers Nell Shipman and May Tully, later in 1921.[207] The Blot was released on September 4, 1921, but was not well-received critically and did little box office, and vanished after its run. After The Blot, Weber's films did not make money at the box office.[217] For decades, The Blot was considered a lost film, until it was rediscovered by the American Film Institute in 1975 and was reconstituted and restored by Robert Gitt of the UCLA Film & Television Archive in 1986 from an incomplete negative and an incomplete print.[210][215] The Blot was then produced for video by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill of Photoplay Productions, and released on home video and DVD.[210]

As part of the deal to distribute The Blot, F.B. Warren also released What Do Men Want?[218][219] After the film's premiere at Manhattan's Lyric Theatre on November 13, 1921, The New York Times, while praising Weber for her casting and the technical aspects of the film, and also the performance of Claire Windsor, dismissed the film as a "simplified sermon" that provided "pat answers" which ignored "the real facts of life", which it considers "incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial".[220]

Soon after the New York City premiere of The Blot, and in an attempt to salvage their troubled marriage, Weber and Smalley sailed for Europe[221] with Weber's sister and brother-in-law, Ethel and Louis A. Howland. They ultimately traveled for six months through Europe, Egypt, China, and India.[222] In late December 1921, they were in Rome, with plans to travel to the Orient.[223]

Weber and Smalley returned to the United States on April 7, 1922.[224] On June 24, 1922, Weber obtained a divorce secretly from Smalley,[225][226] who was described as both alcoholic and abusive,[227] but kept him as a friend and companion.[14] Their divorce was made public on January 12, 1923, by the Los Angeles Examiner.[225]

Universal edit

 
Lois Weber (1922)
American Caramel Fancy Borders
Movie Card

Upon her return to Hollywood, Weber found an "'industry in transition', evident in the fact that Erich von Stroheim was out of favor, D. W. Griffith was gradually more marginalized, and Rex Ingram, like von Stroheim, could not adapt to production changes demanded by the consolidated studios." As Shelley Stamp explains, "In an age of studio conglomeration and vertical integration, few independents could survive, a reality that hit women particularly hard: both Alice Guy-Blaché and Nell Shipman closed their production companies during this period as well. Will Hays, newly installed at the MPPDA, was also beginning to assert greater control over studio releases."[228][222]

In November 1922, Weber returned to Universal,[14][222] where she directed A Chapter in Her Life,[229] based on the 1903 novel Jewel: A Chapter in her Life by Clara Louise Burnham,[230] and a remake of a 1915 film called Jewel, which she had directed previously with Smalley. A Chapter in Her Life was part of "a slate of literary adaptations Universal released that year, headlined by Lon Chaney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame and marketed under the tag line "Great Pictures made from Great Books with Great Exploitation Tieups."[228] The film starring Claude Gillingwater was released on September 17, 1923.[230][231]

However, according to Stamp, "Without a chain of theaters under its control, like emerging studio giants MGM and Paramount, Universal now occupied a significantly different market position than it had during the height of Weber's career there in the mid-1910s. With the bulk of urban, first-run theaters closed to Universal, the studio now relied on independent theaters mainly located in small towns and rural areas. Nor was the studio home to the female directing talent it had once been—Weber was now on her own."[228] Consequently, Universal's trade ads made a clear pitch to small-town exhibitors, offering them "quality" pictures at reasonable prices, providing access to first-run pictures many studios reserved for their large urban venues. A Chapter in Her Life is available on home video and DVD from Nostalgia.[232]

Hiatus edit

While Weber was praised for her direction in A Chapter in Her Life, "critics felt the film's subject matter – a young girl whose love and faith transform the troubled adults in her life – was ultimately out of step with the times. Film Daily dubbed the material 'old fashioned', with other critics objecting to the film's 'Pollyanna' themes."[228] Weber subsequently left Universal, vowing not to produce any films for a while, intending to write plays and a novel instead. She traveled to Europe again and spent time at the Colorado summer home of her friend, novelist Margaretta Tuttle, who had written the novel Feet of Clay (later made into a 1924 film by Cecil B. deMille), saying she would remain on vacation until the censors "came to their senses".[228]

At the time, Weber complained of both the control exerted by consolidated studios, as well as the ever more strenuous censorship of the Hays Code: "I have received many offers, but in each case I'm hampered with too many conditions. ... The producers select the stories, select the cast, tell you how much you can pay for a picture and how long you can have to make it in. All this could be borne. But when they tell you that they also will cut your picture, that is too much."[233][228][222]

The trade journal Film Mercury declared that "it would be interesting to know why [Weber] has made no films in the past year or so," noting that "it is almost a crime for such wonderful director material to be lying idle while third-raters flood the screen with junk."[234] After suffering a nervous collapse in 1923, Weber made no movies until 1925.[32] During this period, when Weber ostensibly "retired from public life", it was rumored that Weber had attempted suicide and had entered a mental facility to treat her mental depression.[235]

By the end of January 1925, Weber announced her engagement to Captain Harry Gantz (born in Deadwood, South Dakota, on September 4, 1887; died August 11, 1949, in Cairns, Queensland, Australia),[236][237][238][239] a retired army officer who had served as a second lieutenant in the Philippine Constabulary from 1907 to 1911,[240] then as a second lieutenant in company C of the 23rd Infantry from 1912 to 1915.[241]

In October 1914, Gantz transferred from the 23rd Infantry to the Aviation Section, U.S. Signal Corps, and became a pioneer aviator during the Pancho Villa Expedition, making him an early bird of aviation. On September 1, 1915, Gantz married Beatrice Wooster Miller. At the time of his engagement to Weber, Gantz was a wealthy orange rancher and the owner of the 140-acre El Dorado Ranch in Fullerton, California.[242][243][244] Gantz is credited with bringing Weber "out of a retirement which was more nearly a despondent withdrawal from public life".[226] However, Anthony Slide indicates that Gantz was "something of an opportunist, who persuaded Weber to marry him — and co-incidentally let him manage her considerable fortune."[245]

Universal edit

In January 1925, Weber returned once again to Universal, hired by Carl Laemmle to take charge of all story development for a $5 million production initiative based around the adaptation of popular novels.[222][246] Universal released one major big-budget film each year, including The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1923) and The Phantom of the Opera (1925),[247] both starring Lon Chaney Sr. After two unsuccessful previews, in 1925 Weber and Maurice Pivar were assigned to re-edit The Phantom of the Opera before its ultimate release in September 1925.[248] Another novel which Universal decided to film was Uncle Tom's Cabin, for which Weber completed an adaptation for a film to be directed in 1926 by Harry A. Pollard,[249] who had starred as Uncle Tom in a 1913 version and was, by 1923, Universal's leading director, with nine consecutive hits.[247]

In 1926, Weber signed a new distribution deal with Universal, making her "one of the highest paid women in the business".[229] One of her first "comeback" movies was The Marriage Clause, which Weber adapted from the short story "Technic" by Dana Burnet in The Saturday Evening Post of May 16, 1925.[250] It starred Francis X. Bushman and brought contract player Billie Dove to international prominence.[229][251] It was released on September 12, 1926.

By June 1926, Weber was signed to direct Sensation Seekers, a romantic drama based on Ernest Pascal's novel Egypt,[252] that also starred Billie Dove. However, just before her wedding, Weber replaced Pollard as director of Uncle Tom's Cabin,[253] as he had been hospitalized in Manhattan with blood poisoning and a shattered jaw[254][255] caused by the "maltreatment" of a tooth infection by a New York dentist.[256] Weber ceased work on Sensation Seekers and was willing to interrupt her honeymoon to travel to Louisiana to direct the location scenes for Uncle Tom's Cabin.[257]

On June 15, the Los Angeles Times reported Gantz had obtained a license to marry Weber.[258] On June 30, 1926, a justice of the peace married the couple in a ceremony at Enchanted Hill, the home of screenwriter Frances Marion in Santa Ana, California.[14][259] At their wedding, Weber reduced her age by nine years to 38 to match her new husband.[260] In 1927, Smalley married music teacher Phyllis Lorraine Ephlin.[261][262][263]

After five months during which his life was in serious jeopardy,[264] and six jaw operations,[255] Pollard emerged from hospital "disfigured for life, but undaunted, ready once more to resume his megaphone".[256] Weber was no longer required for Uncle Tom's Cabin.[265] Weber returned to direct Sensation Seekers, which was released on March 20, 1927.[266]

United Artists edit

In November 1926, Weber joined United Artists to direct a comedy film called Topsy and Eva based on a popular play of that name written by Catherine Chisholm Cushing,[267] featuring the Duncan Sisters in blackface.[268][269]

Weber had adapted from the original novel when she was attached to the Universal version of Uncle Tom's Cabin. She attempted to make another serious adaptation, but the studio decided that it should be a comedy rather than a drama. After some shooting by Weber, she thought some of the scenes to be shot were insulting to African Americans, including such "racist humor as a stork dropping a black baby into a trash can".[13] Topsy and Eva was reassigned to Del Lord to direct, with some additional scenes by D.W. Griffith.[270]

By 1927, Weber advised young women to avoid filmmaking careers.[271] In 1927 DeMille Pictures signed Weber to direct her final silent movie, The Angel of Broadway, which featured Leatrice Joy,[272][273] released on October 3, 1927.[274]

However, the advent of sound technology and the demise of silent movies, coupled with some negative reviews and poor box office receipts, ended Weber's comeback in 1927.[14] For example, Variety believed The Angel of Broadway's sentimentality would appeal to the masses, but not to sophisticated urban audiences: "For New York this title is a dud, but in the hinterland it may well be esteemed box office. Pathe has, in fact, a very good commercial property for the territory west of Hoboken".[275]

Nadir edit

By February 1927, Weber owned and operated Lois Weber's Garden Village at 4633 Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles.[276] In the late 1920s, Weber and Gantz sub-divided the El Rancho ranch, creating the upscale "Brookdale Heights" (now at West Brookfield Place), Fullerton, with the 300–400 residential lots advertised for $1,500 to $3,000 each, and houses priced at $8,000 to $9,000 each. On another part of their acreage, the Gantzes built a Spanish-style residence with a tower retreat for Weber at 225 W. Union Ave.[277]

When Weber was asked in April 1928 when she might direct again, she replied "when I find a producer who thinks I have intelligence enough to be let alone and go ahead with my own unit."[278] Five years elapsed before Weber got the opportunity again. While Weber and Gantz appeared to be enjoying domestic harmony in March 1930,[279] soon afterward Weber was separated from Gantz and was living with her mother and nephew in Los Angeles.[280] In 1931, Gantz sold the El Dorado ranch to C. Stanley Chapman, the son of Charles C. Chapman.[281] By 1932, Weber was still separated from Gantz and was managing an apartment building in Fullerton, California.

In February 1932, Universal released a condensed version of Shoes called The Unshod Maiden,[282] complete with satirical narration.[283]

Final comeback edit

Through the intervention of Frances Marion, by early June 1932 Weber was hired by United Artists as a script doctor[14] to work on Cynara[284] with Marion.[285]

In February 1933, Universal signed Weber to scout for new talent and to direct screen tests.[22][32][286] Within weeks, Weber had interviewed 250 girls and young women from dramatic schools.[287]

In 1933, Universal offered Weber another directing contract, assigning her to Edna Ferber's Glamour,[288] but she was removed from the project abruptly and it was transferred to a reluctant William Wyler.[289]

Weber and Gantz spent five weeks on location in Kauai, Hawaii, from August 24, 1933,[290][291] as she had been hired by the Seven Seas Corporation to direct Virginia Cherrill (then the fiancée of Cary Grant)[292] and Mona Maris in Cane Fire,[293] a tale of racial prejudice and miscegenation on a Hawaiian sugar plantation.[294] Made on a low budget on the plantations of the Kekaha Sugar Company and the Waimea Sugar Company and at Alexander McBryde's Lawai Kai estate,[295] it was the first film shot on the island of Kauai. It was released as White Heat[296] by the Pinnacle Production Company on June 15, 1934, to limited "commercial and critical success",[297] with Weber quoted as saying at the time that the film "was not a hit but will not lose any money".[298]

White Heat proved to be her final film, and her only talkie. It was shown on television on Friday, June 21, 1940, on NBC's station W2XBS, but is now considered a lost film.[299]

Later years and death edit

Weber and Gantz divorced about 1935.[226][300]

In November 1939, Weber was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital in critical condition, suffering from a stomach ailment that had afflicted her for years.[301][14] She died almost two weeks later on Monday, November 13, 1939, destitute,[297] from a bleeding ulcer. She was 60 years old. Her younger sister, Ethel Howland, and friends Frances Marion and Veda Terry, were at her bedside.[14]

Her death was largely overlooked, with her Variety obituary only two brief paragraphs long[14][302] and a brief mention in the Los Angeles Examiner.[303]Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper contributed a more substantial tribute in the Los Angeles Times.[304]

On Friday, November 17, 1939, more than 300 people attended Weber's funeral,[305][306] which was paid for by Frances Marion.[14][297] After the funeral, Weber was cremated at the Los Angeles Crematory[307] and the location of her remains is unknown.[305][306]

Weber wrote a memoir, The End of the Circle, which was to have been published shortly before her death[308] but ultimately was not, despite the efforts of her sister, Ethel Howland, and was later stolen in the 1970s.[3] For her contribution to the motion picture industry, on February 8, 1960, Weber was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6518 Hollywood Blvd.[309]

Legacy edit

The Buffalo Dreams Fantastic Film Festival gives out the Lois Weber Award in her honor since 2017.[310]

A one-woman play, Tea with Lois, is based on Weber's talks at the Hollywood Studio Club. Written, produced and directed by Susan Kurtz, it was recorded and shown at the 53rd Cinecon Film Festival in 2017.[311][312]

The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission installed a Lois Weber historical marker in front of the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny.[313]

Executive produced and hosted by Elizabeth Banks, directed by Svetlana Cvetko, Yours Sincerely, Lois Weber, a 6-minute documentary, which won best documentary at the 2017 LA Shorts International Film Festival, told through the fictionalized character of a young magazine photographer who hopes to impress Weber, examines Lois Weber's career, for I’ll Take You There, a Hollywood-themed novel by Wally Lamb, first released as an iOS app for Metabook.[314][315][316][317][318][319][320][321]

On April 13, 2022 the American Film Institute announced a new initiative concerning short films from the silent and early sound film eras: the project was named "Behind the Veil" after a lost 1914 film by Weber.[322][323]

Selected filmography edit

Year Title Act­ress Wri­ter Pro­ducer Direc­tor Role Notes
1911 A Heroine of '76 Yes Yes The Tavern Keeper's Daughter Co-directed with Edwin S. Porter and Phillips Smalley
The Heiress Yes Yes Mrs. Browne – the Heiress Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
The Realization Yes Yes Mrs. Kendall
On the Brink Yes Yes Yes Tess – a Girl of the Village Co-directed with Edwin S. Porter
Fate Yes Yes Flora Brown Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
A Breach of Faith Yes Yes
The Martyr Yes Yes Yes The Wife and Mother
1912 Angels Unaware Yes Yes The Wife
The Fine Feathers Yes Yes Yes The Artist's Model
The Bargain Yes Yes May Shirwood
The Final Pardon Yes Yes Yes The Singer
Eyes That See Not Yes Yes Yes The Millionaire's Wife
The Price of Peace Yes Yes Yes
The Power of Thought Yes Yes Yes Lois – The Maid
The Greater Love Yes Yes The Invalid Wife
The Troubadour's Triumph Yes Yes
The Greater Christian Yes Yes Helen Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
An Old Fashioned Girl Yes Yes Yes The Old Fashioned Girl
A Japanese Idyll Yes Yes
Faraway Fields Yes Yes Yes The Ambitious Older Sister
Leaves in the Storm Yes Yes The Wife
1913 The Jew's Christmas Yes Yes Yes Leah – Isaac's Daughter Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Suspense Yes Yes Yes The Wife
His Brand Yes Yes Yes The Wife
The Female of the Species Yes Yes Yes The Gypsy – the Bad (good) Woman Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
How Men Propose Yes Yes Yes The Maid
1914 A Fool and His Money Yes Yes Yes Helen Hogg – the Daughter of the House Co-written and directed with Phillips Smalley
The Leper's Coat Yes Yes Yes The Wife Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
The Merchant of Venice Yes Yes Yes Paria Based on the play by William Shakespeare
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Behind the Veil Yes Yes Yes Lois – the Mother Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
False Colors Yes Yes Mrs. Moore / daughter Flo
The Career of Waterloo Peterson Yes Yes Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Traitor Yes Yes
The Opened Shutters Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise Burnham
1915 It's No Laughing Matter Yes Yes Yes Co-produced with Phillips Smalley
Hypocrites Yes Yes Yes
Sunshine Molly Yes Yes Yes Yes Sunshine Molly Story by Alice von Saxmar
Co-produced with Phillips Smalley
Captain Courtesy Yes Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Scandal Yes Yes Yes Daisy Dean
A Cigarette, That's All Yes Yes Story by Helena Phillips Evans
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Jewel Yes Yes Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise Burnham
Co-produced and directed with Phillips Smalley
1916 Discontent Yes Yes Co-directed with Allen G. Siegler
The Dumb Girl of Portici Yes Yes Yes Based on the opera by Daniel Auber, Germain Delavigne and Eugène Scribe
Co-produced with Phillips Smalley and Carl Laemmle
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Hop, The Devil's Brew Yes Yes Yes Lydia Jansen Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
John Needham's Double Yes Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
The Flirt Yes Yes Based on a novel by Booth Tarkington
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Where Are My Children? Yes Yes Yes Story by Lucy Payton and Franklyn Hall
Co-written, produced, and directed with Phillips Smalley
The Eye of God Yes Yes Yes Ana Lost film
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Shoes Yes Yes Yes Based on a novel by Jane Addams
Story by Stella Wynne Herron
Co-produced with Phillips Smalley
Saving the Family Name Yes Yes Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Idle Wives Yes Yes Yes Anne Wall Based on a novel by James Oppenheim
Co-written and directed with Phillips Smalley
Wanted: A Home Yes Yes Yes Co-produced and directed with Phillips Smalley
The People vs. John Doe Yes Yes Yes
The Rock of Riches Yes Yes Yes
1917 Alone in the World Yes
The Mysterious Mrs. Musslewhite Yes Yes Based on a short story by Thomas Edgelow
Even As You and I Yes
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle Yes Yes Yes Yes Mrs. Broome Co-written, produced and directed by Phillips Smalley
The Price of a Good Time Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion Orth
Co-produced and directed with Phillips Smalley
1918 Tarzan of the Apes Yes Based on the novel by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Co-written with Fred Miller
The Doctor and the Woman Yes Yes Lost film
Based on the novel by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Co-written and directed with Phillips Smalley
For Husbands Only Yes Yes Yes Story by Gladys Bronwyn Stern
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
Borrowed Clothes Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion Orth
Co-produced with Phillips Smalley
1919 When a Girl Loves Yes Yes Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
A Midnight Romance Yes Yes Story by Marion Orth
Mary Regan Yes Yes Story by Leroy Scott
Home Yes Yes
Forbidden Yes Yes Lost film
Story by E.V. Durling
Co-directed with Phillips Smalley
1920 To Please One Woman Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion Orth
1921 What's Worth While? Yes Yes Yes
Too Wise Wives Yes Yes Yes Story co-written by Marion Orth
The Blot Yes Yes Yes Scenario by Marion Orth
What Do Men Want? Yes Yes Yes
1923 A Chapter in Her Life Yes Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise Burnham
Co-written with Doris Schroeder
1926 The Marriage Clause Yes Yes Based on a story by Dana Burnet
1927 Sensation Seekers Yes Yes Based on a story by Ernest Pascal
The Angel of Broadway Yes
1934 White Heat Yes Yes Co-written with James Bodrero

Further reading edit

  • Acker, Ally. Reel Women: Pioneers of the Cinema 1896–present. New York, 1991.
  • Foster, Gwendolyn Audrey. Women Film Directors: An International Bio-critical Dictionary. Westport, CT; London, 1995.
  • Hutchinson, Pamela. Lois Weber: "It is Good to be a Director", Criterion, 2021
  • Koszarski, Richard. 1976. Hollywood Directors: 1914-1940. Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Catalog Number: 76-9262.
  • Lowe, Denise. An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Women in Early American films, 1895–1930. Routledge, 2005.
  • Norden, Martin F. The Birth Control Films of Margaret Sanger and Lois Weber. (forthcoming).
  • Norden, Martin F. Lois Weber: Interviews. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 2019. ISBN 1628464747
  • Pendergast, Tom and Sara Pendergast, eds. International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, Vol. 2: Directors. Detroit, MI: 2000.
  • Slide, Anthony. Lois Weber: The Director Who Lost Her Way in History. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996.
  • Stamp, Shelley. "'Exit Flapper, Enter Woman,' or Lois Weber in Jazz Age Hollywood". Framework (Fall 2010).
  • Stamp, Shelley. Lois Weber in Early Hollywood. University of California Press, May 2015. ISBN 9780520284463
  • curator: Shelley Stamp; producer: Bret Wood; executive producer: Illeana Douglas (2018). Pioneers: First Women Filmmakers (boxset). New York, NY: Kino Classics; Library of Congress. Blu-ray DVD book OCLC 1077206039 OCLC 1100589636 OCLC 1206364129[324][325]
    • Pages 52–57 provide overviews and details of several films Lois Weber and Phillips Smalley co-created between 1911 and 1921. These restored films are featured on disc three.
  • Tibbetts, John C. and James M. Welsh. The Encyclopedia of Filmmakers. Vol. Two. New York, NY: 2002.
  • Unterburger, Amy L., ed. Women Filmmakers & Their Films. Detroit, MI; New York; and London, 1998.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lois Weber (1881–1939)", Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages (2007), Dictionary of Women Worldwide.
  2. ^ Routt, William D. (March 2001). . Screening the Past (12): 1. Archived from the original on May 4, 2013. Retrieved April 17, 2022. Lois Weber, writer of cinema
  3. ^ a b c Anthony Slide, The Silent Feminists, pp. 29, 151.
  4. ^ a b c Jennifer Parchesky, "Lois Weber's 'The Blot': Rewriting Melodrama, Reproducing the Middle Class", Cinema Journal 39:1 (Autumn, 1999):23.
  5. ^ Her first husband, Phillips Smalley indicates they collaborated on 350 films. See Terry Ramsaye, ed., "Phillips Smalley", Motion Picture Almanac, Vol. 38 (Quigley Publications, 1929): 56.
  6. ^ a b c d Linda Seger, When Women Call the Shots: The Developing Power and Influence of Women in Television and Film (iUniverse, 2003): 8.
  7. ^ One source estimates that fewer than fifty of Weber's films survive. See Annette Kuhn and Susannah Radstone, The Women's Companion to International Film (University of California Press, 1994): 418.
  8. ^ Lois Weber filmography
  9. ^ a b Aubrey Malone, Censoring Hollywood: Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor (McFarland, 2011): 7.
  10. ^ a b Julie Talen, "'24': Split Screen's Big Comeback", Salon.com (May 15, 2002).
  11. ^ Women Behind the Camera: Women as Directors May 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Louella O. Brown, "Pathe, F.B.O., Radio Victor Merge Stirs Movieland", Rochester Evening Journal and the Post Express (December 27, 1928): 22.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Lisa Singh, The Silenced Woman of Silent Films: Why Lois Weber Has Not Been Rediscovered March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, michelebeverly.com; accessed December 19, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Cari Beauchamp, Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Powerful Women of Early Hollywood (University of California Press, 1998): 35-36, 41, 112, 149, 193, 282-83, 346.
  15. ^ a b c d Richard Koszarski, An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915–1928 (University of California Press, 1994): 223.
  16. ^ Anthony Slide, in Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, "Early Women Filmakers as Social Arbiters", Troping the Body: Gender, Etiquette, and Performance (SIU Press, 2000): 110.
  17. ^ Dargis, Manohla (December 15, 2016). "Lois Weber, Eloquent Filmmaker of the Silent Screen". The New York Times.
  18. ^ Charlie Keil and Shelley Stamp, American Cinema's Transitional Era: Audiences, Institutions, Practices (University of California Press, 2004): 338.
  19. ^ Terry Ramsaye, ed, Motion Picture Almanac, Vol. 38 (Quigley Publications, 1929): 34.
  20. ^ Esther Ralston, "How I Broke into the Movies", St. Joseph Gazette (November 30, 1930):7A.
  21. ^ Vicki Callahan, Reclaiming the Archive: Feminism and Film History (Wayne State University Press, 2010): 131.
  22. ^ a b Harrison Carroll, "The Film Shop", Tyrone Daily Herald (Tyrone, PA: February 4, 1933): 4.
  23. ^ "Lois Weber, Director of Moving Pictures; Helped Anita Stewart and Other Stars to Win Success", The New York Times (November 14, 1939): 23:2.
  24. ^ a b United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls. Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Allegheny Ward 2, Allegheny, Pennsylvania; Roll: T623_1355; Page: 1A; Enumeration District: 17.
  25. ^ a b Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Source Citation: Year: 1880; Census Place: Allegheny, Allegheny, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1086; Family History Film: 1255086; Page: 339B; Enumeration District: 13; Image: 0686
  26. ^ Many sources indicate erroneously that Weber was born either in 1881, e.g. Eugene Michael Vazzana's Silent Film Necrology: Births and Deaths of Over 9000 Performers, Directors, Producers, and Other Filmmakers of the Silent Era, Through 1993 (McFarland, 1995): 350.
    Other sources indicate 1882, e.g. "Lois Weber", Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia, ed. Philip C. Dimare (ABC-CLIO, 2011): 850.
    One source even indicates she was born in 1886, e.g. American Women: The Official Who's Who Among the Women of the Nation, Vol. 3., ed. Durward Howes (Richard Blank Pub. Co., 1939): 319.
  27. ^ since 1907 Pittsburgh's Northside neighborhood
  28. ^ born Mathilda Schneeman in March 1854 in Reserve Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania; died 1935 in Miami, Florida
  29. ^ Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. Original data: 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d. Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Reserve, Allegheny, Pennsylvania; Roll: M653_1066; Page: 1014; Image: 175; Family History Library Film: 805066.
  30. ^ Ancestry.com. Florida Death Index, 1877–1998 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. Original data: State of Florida. Florida Death Index, 1877–1998. Florida: Florida Department of Health, Office of Vital Records, 1998.
  31. ^ born June 1855; died about 1910
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h "Lois Weber", Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia (January 1, 2002):, highbeam.com; accessed December 19, 2016.
  33. ^ a b c Routt, William D. (March 2001). . Screening the Past (12): 4. Archived from the original on June 20, 2002. Retrieved April 17, 2022. Lois Weber, writing exigence
  34. ^ born April 9, 1877, in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania; died February 26, 1966, in Florida
  35. ^ Elizabeth Snaman Weber
  36. ^ "Y-Singers Give Second Concert", Miami News-Metropolis (February 22, 1924): 11.
  37. ^ Ancestry.com. Florida Death Index, 1877–1998 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
  38. ^ born July 3, 1887, in Pennsylvania
  39. ^ Tenth census of the state of Florida, 1935; (Microfilm series S 5, 30 reels); Record Group 001021; State Library and Archives of Florida, Tallahassee, Florida.
  40. ^ Ethel Weber, aka Ethel Howland profile, imdb.com; accessed December 19, 2016.
  41. ^ Karen Ward Mahar, Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood (JHU Press, 2008): 89.
  42. ^ a b Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez, California and Californians, Vol. 4, ed. Rockwell Dennis Hunt (The Lewis publishing company, 1930): 176.
  43. ^ [1]"Born Florence Lois Weber on June 13, 1879, in Allegheny City (annexed in 1907 officially as the North Side, Pittsburgh), Pennsylvania, Lois Weber was the second daughter of George and Mary Matilda (née Snaman) Weber. George's parents, Salesius Weber and Elizabeth Koch Weber arrived by 1854 from Germany."
  44. ^ a b Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, Women Film Directors: An International Bio-critical Dictionary (Greenwood Publishing Group, 1995):365.
  45. ^ Famous American Women: A Biographical Dictionary from Colonial Times to the Present, ed. Robert McHenry (Courier Dover Publications, 1980): 432.
  46. ^ a b Carolyn Lowrey, The First One Hundred Noted Men and Women of the Screen (Moffat, Yard and company, 1920): 190.
  47. ^ a b Daniel Eagan, America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010): 50.
  48. ^ Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls. Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Allegheny Ward 2, Allegheny, Pennsylvania; Roll: T623_1355; Page: 1A; Enumeration District: 17.
  49. ^ "Society", The Fort Wayne Daily News (Fort Wayne, IN: April 25, 1903):6.
  50. ^ with a harpist named Mrs Apt Thomas
  51. ^ New Observations, Vols. 18–21 (New Observations Publications Inc.): 2.
  52. ^ Sir Henry Joseph Wood, My Life of Music (Ayer Publishing, 1946): 74, 113.
  53. ^ "Gives Up Piano To Become Movie Star", Berkeley Daily Gazette (December 9, 1927): 2.
  54. ^ Weber described the incident that precipitated her retirement: "Just as I started to play a black key came off in my hand. I kept forgetting that the key was not there, and reaching for it. The incident broke my nerve. I could not finish and I never appeared on the concert stage again. It is my belief that when that key came off in my hand, a certain phase of my development came to an end."
  55. ^ Lois Weber, in Elizabeth Peltret, "On the Lot with Lois Weber" Photoplay (October 1917).
  56. ^ "Lois Weber, Director, Owes Career to Broken Piano Key", Hartford Courant (October 17, 1926).
  57. ^ Louise Heck-Rabi, Women Filmmakers: A Critical Reception (Scarecrow Press, 1984): 54.
  58. ^ Gerald Bordman and Richard Norton, American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle, 4th ed. (Oxford University Press, 2010): 109, 115.
  59. ^ "A Perpetual Leading Lady", Sunset 32 (Passenger Dept., Southern Pacific Co., 1914): 634.
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  61. ^ Boston Globe (September 27, 1904), in Louise Heck-Rabi, Women Filmmakers: A Critical Reception (Scarecrow Press, 1984): 54.
  62. ^ George Washburn Smalley, from Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, ed. James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. 6 vols. (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887–1889).
  63. ^ Terry L. Jones, Historical Dictionary of the Civil War, 2 vols. (Scarecrow Press, 2002): 1303.
  64. ^ Joseph James Mathews, George W. Smalley, Forty Years a Foreign Correspondent (North Carolina Press, 1973): 77.
  65. ^ Smalley was married December 25, 1862, to Phoebe Garnaut. They had five children: Eleanor; Phillips, who studied law at Harvard from 1887-89; Evelyn (born April 1869); Ida (born November 1873); and Emerson. See Obituary Record of the Graduates of the Undergraduate Schools, Deceased 1860–70—1950/51, Vol 11: 1915–1920. (New Haven, CT: Yale University, August 1920): 17; and Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls. Year: 1900; Census Place: Manhattan, New York City; Roll: T623_1114; Page: 5A; Enumeration District: 743.
  66. ^ Anthony Slide, Early Women Directors (Da Capo Press, 1984): 36.
  67. ^ Oscar Sherwin, Prophet of Liberty: The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips (New York: Brookman Associates, 1958): 305.
  68. ^ "Theatrical Gossip", The New York Times (August 24, 1901).
  69. ^ Phillips Smalley Internet Broadway Database
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  71. ^ Ancestry.com. Cook County, Illinois, Marriages Index, 1871–1920 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011. Original data: "Illinois, Cook County Marriages, 1871–1920". Index. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2010. Illinois Department of Public Health records. "Marriage Records, 1871–present." Division of Vital Records, Springfield, Illinois. FHL Film Number: 1030368.
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  73. ^ a b Alison McMahan, Alice Guy Blaché: Lost Visionary of the Cinema (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2002): 71.
  74. ^ a b c d e Jennifer M. Bean and Diane Negra, A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema (Duke University Press, 2002): 46-48, 270, 167-69, 271–86.
  75. ^ Alice Guy, The Memoirs of Alice Guy Blaché, trans. Roberta Blaché, and ed. Anthony Slide. @nd ed. (Scarecrow Press, 1996): 79.
  76. ^ Alison McMahan, Alice Guy Blaché: Lost Visionary of the Cinema (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2002): xx, xxvi.
  77. ^ Motion Picture Studio Directory (1919): 204.
  78. ^ Durward Howes, ed., "Weber, Lois", in American Women: The Official Who's Who Among the Women of the Nation, Vol. 2 (Richard Blank Pub. Co., 1937).
  79. ^ Moving Picture World 8:6 (February 11, 1911): 283.
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  82. ^ Routt, William D. . routt.net.s3-website-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com. Archived from the original on July 11, 2019. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
  83. ^ a b Routt, William D. (March 2001). . Screening the Past (12): 3. Archived from the original on March 20, 2002. Retrieved April 17, 2022. Lois Weber, writer of cinema
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  90. ^ Vicki Callahan, Reclaiming the Archive: Feminism and Film History (Wayne State University Press, 2010): 132.
  91. ^ Gertrude Price, "Only Movie Players Live in this Town", Toledo News-Bee (January 6, 1914): 13.
  92. ^ E.J. Fleming, Wallace Reid: The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol (McFarland, 2007): 57.
  93. ^ Charles Musser, Before the Nickelodeon: Edwin S. Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company (University of California Press, 1991): 424.
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  122. ^ a b Daniel Eagan, America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010): 51.
  123. ^ Lois Weber, in Richard Koszarski, An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915–1928 (University of California Press, 1994): 223.
  124. ^ cf. "Women, Religion, and American Film", Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America, Vol. 1, eds. Rosemary Skinner Keller, Rosemary Radford Ruether, and Marie Cantlon (Indiana University Press, 2006): 1011.
  125. ^ Anthony Slide, Early Women Directors (Da Capo Press, 1984): pp. 34, 41.
  126. ^ Anthony Slide, "Christianity Hollywood Style: Reverend Neal Dodd", Silent Topics: Essays on Undocumented Areas of Silent Film (Scarecrow Press, 2005): 31.
  127. ^ Karen Ward Mahar, Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood (JHU Press, 2008): 140.
  128. ^ Karen Ward Mahar, Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood (JHU Press, 2008): 93-94.
  129. ^ Initially the actress portraying "Naked Truth" is unidentified. Anthony Slide indicates "Naked Truth" bears a physical resemblance to Weber herself, which led some to speculate it was Weber; however, contemporary sources indicate it was an actress named Margaret Edwards.
    For example, Ruth Waterbury, Photoplay: The Aristocrat of Motion Picture Magazines, Vol. 8 Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company, 1915: 105 and "Coming", The Daily Republican (Cape Girardeau, MO, August 9, 1915): 4
  130. ^ For a summary of the discussion, see Anthony Slide, Early Women Directors (Da Capo Press, 1984): 38, and Louise Heck-Rabi, Women Filmmakers: A Critical Reception (Scarecrow Press, 1984): 56.
  131. ^ Margaret Edwards profile/filmography, IMDb.com; accessed December 19, 2016.
  132. ^ See Daisy Sinclair (Mrs. Margaret Edwards) obituary, Variety (January 16, 1929). She is buried at the Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York, with her husband, actor John Edwards (born John Marnell; May 22, 1868, Natick, Massachusetts – died October 16, 1929, New York City). See "John Edwards", Variety (October 23, 1929): AS 355; "John Edwards, Actor", The New York Times (October 17, 1929)
    Eugene Michael Vazzana, Silent Film Necrology, 2nd ed. (McFarland, 2001): 153
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  137. ^ Gerald Leinwand, Mackerels in the Moonlight: Four Corrupt American Mayors (McFarland, 2004): 209–10.
  138. ^ "No Naked 'Truth'; Boston's Mayor Insists Upon Draping Truth in Bosworth's 'Hypocrites'", New York Dramatic Mirror (April 14, 1915): 24:4.
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  141. ^ Lois Weber, "HYPOCRITES", Marlborough Express (Marlborough, New Zealand: June 18, 1917): 8.
  142. ^ Koszarski, 1976 p. 49.
  143. ^ "Smalleys Back with Universal", Moving Picture World (USA) (April 3, 1915): 76.
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  154. ^ Ally Acker, "Women behind the Camera: Feminists or Filmmakers?", Agenda 14 (1992):42.
  155. ^ E. Ann Kaplan, Motherhood and Representation: The Mother in Popular Culture and Melodrama (Routledge, 1992): 133.
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External links edit

lois, weber, florence, june, 1879, november, 1939, american, silent, film, director, screenwriter, producer, actress, identified, some, historical, references, among, most, important, prolific, film, directors, silent, films, film, historian, anthony, slide, a. Florence Lois Weber June 13 1879 November 13 1939 was an American silent film director screenwriter producer and actress She is identified in some historical references as among the most important and prolific film directors in the era of silent films 1 2 Film historian Anthony Slide has also asserted Along with D W Griffith Weber was the American cinema s first genuine auteur a filmmaker involved in all aspects of production and one who utilized the motion picture to put across her own ideas and philosophies 3 Lois WeberWeber in 1916BornFlorence Lois Weber 1879 06 13 June 13 1879Allegheny City Pennsylvania U S DiedNovember 13 1939 1939 11 13 aged 60 Hollywood California U S Occupation s Film director film producer screenwriter actressSpousesPhillips Smalley m 1904 div 1922 wbr Harry Gantz m 1926 div 1935 wbr AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame Motion Picture6518 Hollywood BlvdWeber produced a body of work which has been compared to Griffith s in both quantity and quality 4 and brought to the screen her concerns for humanity and social justice in an estimated 200 to 400 films 1 5 of which as few as twenty have been preserved 6 7 She has been credited by IMDb with directing 135 films writing 114 and acting in 100 8 Weber was one of the first directors to come to the attention of the censors in Hollywood s early years 9 Weber has been credited with pioneering the use of the split screen technique to show simultaneous action in her 1913 film Suspense 10 In collaboration with her first husband Phillips Smalley in 1913 Weber was one of the first directors to experiment with sound making the first sound films in the United States 11 12 She was also the first American woman to direct a full length feature film when she and Smalley directed The Merchant of Venice in 1914 13 and in 1917 the first American woman director to own her own film studio 14 During the war years Weber achieved tremendous success by combining a canny commercial sense with a rare vision of cinema as a moral tool 15 At her zenith few men before or since have retained such absolute control over the films they have directed and certainly no women directors have achieved the all embracing powerful status once held by Lois Weber 16 By 1920 Weber was considered the premier woman director of the screen and author and producer of the biggest money making features in the history of the film business 14 Among Weber s notable films are the controversial Hypocrites which featured the first non pornography full frontal female nude scene in 1915 the 1916 film Where Are My Children which discussed abortion and birth control and was added to the National Film Registry in 1993 her adaptation of Edgar Rice Burrough s Tarzan of the Apes novel for the very first Tarzan of the Apes film in 1918 The Blot 1921 is also generally considered one of her finest works 17 Weber is credited with discovering mentoring or making stars of several women actors including Mary MacLaren 18 Mildred Harris Claire Windsor 19 Esther Ralston 20 Billie Dove 21 Ella Hall Cleo Ridgely 22 and Anita Stewart 23 and with discovering and inspiring screenwriter Frances Marion For her contribution to the motion picture industry Weber was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 8 1960 Contents 1 Early life 2 Theater career 3 Film career 3 1 Rex Motion Picture Company 3 2 Bosworth 3 3 Universal 3 3 1 Bluebird Photoplays 3 4 Lois Weber Productions 3 4 1 Anita Stewart Productions 3 4 2 Famous Players Lasky 3 4 3 F B Warren Corporation 3 5 Universal 3 6 Hiatus 3 7 Universal 3 8 United Artists 3 9 Nadir 3 10 Final comeback 4 Later years and death 5 Legacy 6 Selected filmography 7 Further reading 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editFlorence Lois Weber was born on June 13 1879 24 25 26 in Allegheny City Pennsylvania 27 the second of three children of Mary Matilda Snaman 28 29 30 and George Weber 31 an upholster and decorator 32 who had spent several years in missionary street work 33 She was the younger sister of Elizabeth Snaman Weber Jay 34 35 36 37 and older sister of Ethel Weber Howland 38 24 25 39 who later appeared in two of Weber s films in 1916 40 and married assistant director Louis A Howland The Webers were a devout middle class Christian family of Pennsylvania German ancestry 41 42 43 nbsp Lois Weber at the piano 1912 Weber was considered a child prodigy 44 and an excellent pianist 45 As a girl music was her passion and her most treasured possession was a baby grand piano 46 Weber left home and lived in poverty while working as a street corner evangelist and social activist for two years with the evangelical Church Army Workers an organization similar to the Salvation Army preaching and singing hymns on street corners and singing and playing the organ in rescue missions in red light districts in Pittsburgh and New York 13 33 until the Church Army Workers disbanded in 1900 47 In June 1900 Weber was almost 21 and living with her parents and two sisters at 1717 Fremont Street Allegheny Pennsylvania where she was a music student 48 By April 1903 Weber was performing as a soprano singer and pianist 49 She toured the United States as a concert pianist 50 until her final performance in Charleston South Carolina a year later 42 44 51 52 After a piano key broke during a recital 53 14 Weber retired from the concert stage having lost her nerve to play in public 14 54 55 56 Theater career editFrustrated by the futility of one on one conversions and following the advice of an uncle in Chicago 33 Weber decided to take up acting about 1904 and moved to New York City where she took some singing lessons Weber later explained her motivation As I was convinced the theatrical profession needed a missionary he suggested that the best way to reach them was to become one of them so I went on the stage filled with a great desire to convert my fellowman 14 nbsp Wendell Phillips Smalley in 1915For five years Weber was a repertory and stock actress After short stint as a soubrette in the farce comedy Zig Zag for a Chicago based touring company Weber resigned as it proved too superficial for her altruistic aims 57 58 In 1904 Weber joined the road company of Why Girls Leave Home 47 where she became a musical comedy prima donna and melodrama heroine 59 Weber received promising reviews for her performance 60 for example The Boston Globe wrote in September 1904 that she sang two very pretty songs very effectively and won considerable applause 61 The troupe s leading man and manager was Wendell Phillips Smalley 1865 1939 a grandson of Oliver Wendell Holmes and the elder son of New York Tribune war and foreign correspondent George Washburn Smalley 1833 1916 62 63 and Phoebe Garnaut Phillips 1841 1923 64 65 the adopted daughter of abolitionist Wendell Phillips 66 67 Smalley who had attended Balliol College Oxford and was a graduate of Harvard University had been a lawyer in New York for seven years and as a stage actor made his professional stage debut in August 1901 in Manhattan 68 He appeared in productions of Harrison Grey Fiske Minnie Maddern Fiske and Raymond Hitchcock 69 70 After a brief acquaintance just before her 25th birthday Weber and Smalley aged 38 married on April 29 1904 in Chicago Illinois 71 After initially touring separately from her husband and then accompanying him on his tours about 1906 Weber left her career in the theater and became a homemaker in New York 13 72 During this period Weber wrote freelance moving picture scenarios 60 Film career editIn 1908 Weber was hired by American Gaumont Chronophones which produced phonoscenes 73 initially as a singer of songs recorded for the chronophone 74 Both Herbert Blache and his wife Alice Guy later claimed to have given Weber her start in the movie industry 73 75 74 At the end of the 1908 theatrical season Smalley joined Weber at Gaumont 60 Soon Weber was writing scripts and in 1908 Weber began directing English language phonoscenes at the Gaumont Studio in Flushing New York 15 76 In 1910 Weber and Smalley decided to pursue a career in the infant motion picture industry For the next five years they worked and were credited as The Smalleys but typically Weber received sole writing credit on dozens of shorts and features for small production companies like Gaumont the New York Motion Picture Co Reliance Studio the Rex Motion Picture Company and Bosworth 15 77 where Weber wrote scenarios and subtitles acted directed designed sets and costumes edited films and even developed negatives Weber took two years off her birth date when she signed her first movie contract 14 Weber and Smalley had a daughter Phoebe named after Smalley s mother who was born on October 29 1910 but died in infancy 78 Rex Motion Picture Company edit nbsp A Heroine of 76 Rex Motion Picture Company ad in Moving Picture News 1911By 1911 Weber and Smalley were working for William Swanson s Rex Motion Picture Company based at 573 579 11th Avenue New York City 79 While at Rex Weber gained her reputation as a serious social uplifter and as the leading partner in the Weber Smalley unit 60 In 1911 Weber acted in and directed her first silent short film A Heroine of 76 sharing the directorial duties with Smalley and Edwin S Porter 80 At the time of Rex s merger with five other studios to form the Universal Film Manufacturing Company on April 30 1912 Weber and Smalley were the prima facie heads of Rex 81 82 83 and had relocated to Los Angeles 60 Rex continued as a subsidiary of Universal with Weber and Smalley running it 32 making one two reel film each week 60 until they left Rex in September 1912 84 Carl Laemmle startled the film industry with his use of and advocacy for women directors and producers including Weber Ida May Park and Cleo Madison 85 In the autumn of 1913 86 shortly after the incorporation of Universal City 87 Weber was elected its first mayor in a close contest that required a recount 32 88 89 90 and Laura Oakley as police chief 91 At the time Universal s publicity department claimed Universal City was the only municipality in the world that possesses an entire outfit of women officials 87 External videos nbsp nbsp MoMA Celebrates 1913 Lois Weber and Phillips Smalley s Suspense Museum of Modern ArtIn March 1913 Weber starred in the first English language version of Oscar Wilde s The Picture of Dorian Gray which was produced for the New York Motion Picture Co directed by Smalley from an adaptation by Weber and featuring Wallace Reid as Dorian Gray 92 In 1913 Weber and Smalley collaborated in directing a ten minute thriller Suspense based on the play Au Telephone by Andre de Lorde which had been filmed in 1908 as Heard over the Phone by Edwin S Porter 93 Adapted by Weber it used multiple images and mirror shots to tell of a woman Weber threatened by a burglar Sam Kaufman 94 Weber is credited with pioneering the use of the split screen technique to show simultaneous action in this film 10 but the oft mentioned triptych shots had already been used in the Danish The White Slave Trade films Den hvide slavehandel 1910 and for telephone conversations 95 According to Tom Gunning 96 97 Professor Emeritus in the Department of Cinema and Media at the University of Chicago and author of D W Griffith and the Origins of American Narrative Film No film made before WWI shows a stronger command of film style than Suspense which outdoes even Griffith for emotionally involved filmmaking 98 Suspense was released on July 6 1913 95 nbsp Poster for The Jew s Christmas 1913 In late 1913 Weber and Smalley made The Jew s Christmas a three reel silent film that dramatizes the conflict between traditional Jewish values and American customs and values 99 illustrating the challenges of cultural assimilation especially the generational conflict over interfaith marriage and the second generation s abandonment of the faith and customs of their ancestors 100 In the earliest portrayal of a rabbi in an American film 101 The Jew s Christmas told the story of an orthodox rabbi Smalley who ostracizes his daughter Weber for marrying a gentile but is reconciled twelve years later on Christmas Eve when he meets an impoverished small child who turns out to be his granddaughter 102 Endeavoring to combat racial discrimination and antisemitism the film aims to show that love is stronger than any religious ties 103 and that the tie of blood overbears the pride and prejudice of religion 104 105 In its assertion of Melting pot idealism by its approval of intermarriage between people of different religions 106 the film was considered controversial at the time of its release 104 107 on December 18 1913 13 nbsp L to R Phillips Smalley as Shylock and Weber as Portia in The Merchant of Venice 1914 In 1914 a year in which she directed 27 movies Weber became one of the first directors to come to the attention of the censors 9 That year Weber co directed an adaptation of Shakespeare s The Merchant of Venice with Smalley who also played Shylock making her the first American woman to direct a feature length film in the United States 108 109 and the first person who directed the first feature length Shakespearean comedy 110 In February 1914 Universal released the four reel Rex silent film 111 which was also adapted by Weber and Smalley 112 and was also produced directed and starred Weber as Portia and Smalley as Shylock The film featured Douglas Gerrard Rupert Julian and Jeanie MacPherson who would play a major role in cinema as Cecil B DeMille s favorite screenwriter 113 A prominent rabbi in Chicago strongly objected on the grounds that the play more than any other book more than any other influence in the history of the world is responsible for the world wide prejudice against the Jews 114 but the film was praised at the time as a supreme adaptation of Shakespeare 115 Robert Hamilton Ball considered the film careful respectful dignified but lacking in passion and poetry which he attributes to the difficulty it had satisfying the censor and because the film was a special release rather than a release on the regular programme exhibitors had to pay extra for it which may have contributed to its swift demise 114 The Merchant of Venice is now considered a lost film 116 One film that illustrates the paradoxical nature of Weber s role and films was her 1914 film The Spider and Her Web where she advocates both modesty and maternalism In this film Weber plays The Spider a vamp living the ultra modern high life who seduces and ruins intellectual men until frightened into adopting an orphan baby which results in the salvation of the lead character through motherhood 117 Bosworth edit As Universal was reluctant to make feature length films 117 in the summer of 1914 Weber was persuaded to move to the Bosworth company by Julia Crawford Ivers the first woman general manager of a film studio 6 32 14 to take over the production duties from Hobart Bosworth 118 on a 50 000 a year contract making her the best known most respected and highest paid of the dozen or so women directors in Hollywood at that time 14 In 1914 Bertha Smith estimated Weber s audience at five to six million a week 119 In fact by 1915 Weber was as famous as D W Griffith and Cecil B de Mille 6 While at Bosworth Weber and Smalley made six features and one short The Traitor 120 nbsp Weber in Hypocrites 1915 Energized by evangelistic zeal and social conscience 121 from early in her career Weber saw movies as a vehicle for evangelism 72 and an opportunity to preach to the masses 122 and to encourage her audience to be involved in progressive causes 72 In a 1914 interview Weber declared In moving pictures I have found my life s work I find at once an outlet for my emotions and my ideals I can preach to my heart s content and with the opportunity to write the play act the leading role and direct the entire production if my message fails to reach someone I can blame only myself 123 As many of Weber s films focused on a moral topic she was often mistaken as a Christian fundamentalist but she was more of a libertarian opposing censorship and the death penalty and championing birth control The need for a strong loving and nurturing home was clearly promoted as well and if there was a single maxim that underlay each film it was that selfishness and egocentricity erode the individual and community 14 Although not a practicing Christian Scientist 124 Weber attended the Christian Science church regularly according to Adela Rogers St Johns 125 and in at least two of her films Jewel 1915 and its remake A Chapter in Her Life 1923 Christian Science plays a prominent role 120 126 Weber s impeccable reputation and impressive middle class credentials allowed her considerable artistic freedom in her presentation of controversial issues 127 nbsp Margaret Edwards as Naked Truth in Hypocrites 1915 In 1914 Weber made her first major feature 117 a controversial version of Hypocrites a four reel allegorical drama shot at Universal City 120 which she wrote directed and produced addressing social themes and moral lessons considered daring for the time Hypocrites included the first film full frontal female nudity inspired by Jules Joseph Lefebvre s 1870 allegorical painting La Verite 128 with truth portrayed in the ghostly figure of the Naked Truth literally shown by an unidentified nude woman Margaret Edwards 129 130 Margaret Sinclair Edwards born 1877 New York City died January 14 1929 New York City known on the stage as Daisy Sinclair appeared with the theatrical companies of Edward Harrigan Eddie Foy and Gus Edwards among others Her husband John Edwards an invalid died the same year she did 1929 She appeared as Marguerite Edwards in A Physical Culture Romance in 1914 and in Weber s Sunshine Molly in 1915 131 132 133 134 Although the nudity was tastefully done 135 it was passed by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures after a two month delay 136 it was still banned in Ohio caused riots in New York and James Michael Curley the mayor of Boston 137 demanded that every frame displaying the naked figure of Truth be hand painted to clothe the then unidentified actress 138 Hypocrites was released finally by Bosworth on January 15 1915 139 and premiered at Manhattan s prestigious Longacre Theatre 136 and was celebrated as a cultural artistic and moral landmark for the film industry 117 and praised for its use of multiple exposures and complex film editing 140 While its negative cost was 18 000 it earned 119 000 in sales in the United States alone and made Weber a household name 136 In a 1917 interview Weber denied the film was indecent and defended the film Hypocrites is not a slap at any church or creed it is a slap at hypocrites and its effectiveness is shown by the outcry amongst those it hits hardest to have the film stopped 141 Universal edit Lois Weber had worked with her own production unit at Universal City and had rapidly achieved prominence as the top director on that enormous lot Her films tackled such controversial issues as birth control divorce and abortion and while raising storms of controversy and censorship pulled millions of dollars into Universal s coffers By 1917 she had the power to demand that the company sponsor a private studio for her Sunset Boulevard Studio Weber controlled every aspect of production herself even acting in them when the time allowed Film historian Richard Koszarski in Hollywood Directors 1914 1940 1976 142 In April 1915 Weber and Smalley left Bosworth when the founder left the company due to ill health 14 After being promised they could make feature length films by Carl Laemmle they returned to Universal Pictures 143 Weber s first movie for Universal was Scandal in which both Weber and Smalley starred that featured the consequences of gossip mongering 122 In 1916 Weber directed 10 feature length films for release by Universal nine of which she also wrote and she also became Universal Studios highest paid director earning 5 000 a week 6 She enjoyed complete freedom in overseeing most stages of the film making process choice of stories and actors writing of scripts which she invariably did herself as well as direction 144 Universal head Carl Laemmle who was known more for his frugality and cunning business sense than philanthropy said of Weber I would trust Miss Weber with any sum of money that she needed to make any picture that she wanted to make I would be sure that she would bring it back 145 Also in 1916 Weber became the first and only woman inducted into the Motion Picture Directors Association In 1916 Weber explained her philosophy of directing films I ll never be convinced that the general public does not want serious entertainment rather than frivolous and A real director should be absolute He or she in this case alone knows the effects he wants to produce and he alone should have authority in the arrangement cutting titling or anything else that may seem necessary to do to the finished product What other artist has his work interfered with by someone else We ought to realize that the work of a picture director worthy of a name is creative 3 Bluebird Photoplays edit nbsp The Eye of God one of a baker s dozen of films co directed in 1916 by the husband and wife team of Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber 146 In February 1916 Weber and Smalley were transferred to Universal s Bluebird Photoplays brand where they made a dozen features 120 including The Dumb Girl of Portici also known as Pavlowa adapted by Weber from Daniel Auber s 1828 opera La muette de Portici 147 Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova s only screen appearance 148 which was directed to Pavlova s satisfaction by Weber 13 The film also starred Rupert Julian as Masaniello 149 Released to popular acclaim it premiered on April 3 1916 at the Globe Theatre in Manhattan 150 Hoping to become the editorial page of the studio 120 and to provoke a middle class sense of responsibility for those less fortunate than themselves and to stimulate moral reforms 151 Weber specialized in making films that stressed both high quality and moral rectitude including films of the burning social and moral issues of the day 144 among them such controversial themes as abortion eugenics and birth control in Where Are My Children 1916 74 influenced by the trial of Charles Stielow an innocent man who was almost executed opposition to capital punishment based on circumstantial evidence in The People vs John Doe 152 and alcoholism and opium addiction in Hop the Devil s Brew which were all successful at the box office 144 but while embraced by reformers in the film industry drew the ire of the conservatives 153 Despite the predominance of strong women in her films in 1916 Weber disassociated herself from the women s suffrage movement 154 nbsp Newspaper advertisement for Where Are My Children 1916 In Where Are My Children working title The Illborn which was released on April 16 1916 Weber advocates social purity birth control and eugenics to prevent the deterioration of the race and the proliferation of the lower classes and makes an indirect case for birth control or perhaps even for legalized and safe abortions 155 The film starred Tyrone Power Sr and his then wife Helen Riaume future star Mary MacLaren made her debut It also makes use of several trick photography scenes with an emphasis on multiple exposures to convey information or emotions visually As a recurring motif every time a character becomes pregnant a child s face is double exposed over their shoulder citation needed In March 1916 the National Board of Review expressed disapproval of the film for showings to mixed audiences but later approved it for adult showings 156 It was banned in Pennsylvania on the grounds that it tended to debase or corrupt morals but Universal won a case in Brooklyn New York in 1916 to show the film after the district attorney filed suit against the theater manager and the Universal exchange president 156 Controversy the threat of censorship and the banning of Where Are My Children in some locations helped fuel the box office success of the film estimated to have grossed in excess of 3 million 157 in an era where ticket prices were less than 50c each 13 and rocketed Weber s name to larger audiences bigger box office returns and an even higher annual income 158 The film spread Weber s fame internationally For example Kevin Brownlow indicates that this film attracted 30 000 in Preston Lancashire 40 000 in Bradford Yorkshire and 100 000 in two weeks in Sydney 159 In 2000 the Library of Congress Motion Picture Conservation Center copyrighted a preservation print reconstructed from several incomplete prints 160 nbsp Mary MacLaren in Shoes 1916 Shoes a sociological film released in June 1916 that Weber directed for the Bluebird Photoplays was based on Stella Wynne Herron s short story of the same name which had been published in Collier s magazine earlier that year Herron took inspiration from noted social reformer Jane Addams s 1912 book A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil 161 The nonfiction book depicts the struggles of working class women for consumer goods and upward mobility and their dubious sexual activities including prostitution 74 162 Starring Mary Maclaren as Eva Meyer a poverty stricken shopgirl who supports her family of five who needs to replace her only pair of shoes and is so desperate that she sells her virginity for a new pair 163 it proved to be the most booked Bluebird production of 1916 162 A version restored digitally from three extant fragments by EYE Film Institute Netherlands 164 made its debut in North America in July 2011 165 A scene from the restored Shoes showing architect John B Parkinson s 1910 design for Pershing Square in Downtown Los Angeles has been used by the grassroots Pershing Square Restoration Society in promoting their campaign to restore the historic park 166 nbsp Coming attraction card for The Hand That Rocks the Cradle 1917 After another significant censorship battle and a vigorous publicity campaign by Universal on May 13 1917 Universal released The Hand That Rocks the Cradle one of the most forceful films ever made in support of legalizing birth control a follow up to the previous year s top money maker for Universal Where Are My Children Directed by Weber and Smalley based on their original script it starred Smalley and Weber in her last screen appearance as a doctor s wife arrested and imprisoned for illegally disseminating family planning information 167 Influenced by the recent trial and imprisonment of pioneer birth control advocate Margaret Sanger 74 the film drew explicitly on her headline generating activism 167 The film was released only weeks after Sanger s own film Birth Control was banned under a 1915 ruling of the United States Supreme Court that films did not constitute free speech 168 and the ruling of the New York Court of Appeals that a film on family planning may be censored in the interest of morality decency and public safety and welfare Sensitive to the opinions of local communities and hoping to avoid powerful censorship boards in the northeast and midwest The Hand That Rocks the Cradle was distributed primarily in the southern and western regions of the United States with the result that it did not attain the record breaking attendance set by Where Are My Children the previous year 167 When The Hand That Rocks the Cradle opened at Clune s Auditorium in Los Angeles in June 1917 Weber appeared on stage bitterly denouncing attempts to alter or suppress her film While The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is now lost the surviving script and accompanying marketing materials make it clear that Weber mounted an unstinting argument in favor of voluntary motherhood 167 Lois Weber Productions edit nbsp Lois Weber Productions promoIn June 1917 Weber became the first American female director to establish and run her own movie studio 14 when she formed her own production company Lois Weber Productions 169 with the financial assistance of Universal 32 She leased a self contained estate and had offices dressing rooms scenic and property rooms and a 12 000 square feet 1 100 m2 shooting stage constructed 170 171 172 Smalley was made studio manager and the Smalleys made their home on the studio lot 14 at 1550 N Sierra Bonita Avenue 173 According to film historian Shelley Stamp while Weber and Smalley were often co credited as directors it was the wife who clearly had the artistic vision to drive the business partnership forward 172 By this time Weber s idealized collaborative marriage with Smalley had begun to show signs of deterioration which was accelerated by the increased focus of critics and journalists on Weber as the dominant filmmaker at the expense of Smalley after 1916 174 and Weber increasingly took credit for her contributions after 1917 15 However as early as 1913 some saw Weber as the fertile brain in the partnership with Smalley seen as an indolent womanizer who chased every woman on the lot which resulted in arguments and shouting matches 117 Weber consciously resisted the industry s movement toward assembly line style studio film making By concentrating on only one production at a time and mobilizing her entire workforce around that effort Weber aimed for quality film making rather than efficient bookkeeping Weber s independence allowed her to shoot her films in sequence as she preferred rather than out of order to suit production schedules 172 William D Routt indicates that Lois Weber Productions were a good investment cost effective The company made movies cheaply in later years at least shooting on location even for interiors using a small cast working fast Its somewhat sensational topics and titles guaranteed at least a modest box office return and at times may have done much better than that 83 Karen Mahar attributes the success of Weber s films of the 1910s to their representation of the generational conflict of the era between the traditional view of women and that of the freedoms of the emerging New Woman and the emergent consumer culture 117 Mahar argues that Weber s life was an expression of this generational divide she was a stage performer and a Church Army Worker a filmmaker and a middle class matron a childless advocate of birth control who radiates domesticity While Weber was clearly a New Woman by virtue of her career she was also publicly identified as the wife and collaborator of her first husband 117 Shelley Stamp argues that Weber s image was instrumental in defining both her particular place in film making practices and women s roles within early Hollywood generally and that her wifely bourgeois persona relatively conservative and staid mirrored the film industry s idealized conception of its new customers white married middle class women perceived to be arbiters of taste in their communities 175 While Weber s beliefs reflected modern values as did her career as a filmmaker that was atypical for women of her era she had internalized much of what the Victorians deemed proper behavior for women and there are strong elements of the Victorian code of womanhood in her films 176 The Smalleys exemplified and promoted the Victorian ideal of marriage as companionship and a partnership 176 From 1917 Weber was active in supporting the newly established Hollywood Studio Club a residence for struggling would be starlets 177 After the United States entered World War I Weber served on the board of the Motion Picture War Service Association headed by D W Griffith and including Mack Sennett Charlie Chaplin Mary Pickford Douglas Fairbanks William S Hart Cecil B DeMille and William Desmond Taylor The Association raised funds for the construction of a thousand bed hospital 178 In 1918 the Fox Film Corporation hired Weber to direct Queen of the Seas 179 in which Annette Kellerman swam and dove naked However she was replaced eventually by John G Adolfi 180 In September 1918 Weber broke her left arm in two places when she slipped on the floor and fell in Barker Brothers 181 a downtown Los Angeles furniture store forcing her to be hospitalized in the California Hospital 182 183 184 Weber s arm was still causing her trouble seven months later 185 Anita Stewart Productions edit Despite continuing to work at Universal and renting out her studio to other independent producers including Marshall Neilan Weber found it difficult to pay the bills and to find the capital to finance her own productions 14 By December 1918 Weber had left Universal and signed a contract with Louis B Mayer to direct Anita Stewart for 3 500 a week 186 187 In a letter to Weber Mayer proclaimed My unchanging policy will be great star great director great play great cast You are authorized to get these without stint or limit Spare nothing neither expense time or effort Results only are what I m after 188 Weber made two films with Stewart as the lead A Midnight Romance and Mary Regan both released in 1919 to mixed reviews 189 Famous Players Lasky edit Needing finances in July 1919 Weber signed a contract with Famous Players Lasky to direct five films to be distributed through Paramount Artcraft for 50 000 each 14 157 190 191 plus one third of the profits 192 and guaranteed first run bookings in Paramount theaters 189 By January 1920 Smalley and Weber purchased a two level home at 1917 N Ivar Avenue Hollywood 193 194 later the home of Preston Sturges in the 1940s 195 In October 1920 Weber purchased the studio facilities at 4634 Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles near Sunset Boulevard which she had been leasing for the previous three years 196 197 198 By February 1921 Weber was at the zenith of her career 199 regarded as fearless in the production of her pictures as she once was in her struggle for a living and her indubitable position is that of one of the best directors of the screen 46 One newspaper wrote Lois Weber is not only the foremost woman director she s the whole works and attributed her success to having a feminine touch lacking in most man made films 200 In an effort to protect the American film industry by 1921 Weber advocated the prohibition of the importation of all European films into the United States 201 In May 1921 Weber anticipated the possibility of both color and three dimensional films 202 Following the cinematic rumination on modern marriage begun by Cecil B DeMille 203 and like other post war filmmakers Weber turned her attention toward marriage and domestic life to honor her deal with Famous Players Lasky with such melodramas as To Please One Woman What s Worth While Too Wise Wives and What Do Men Want 189 203 However as the United States entered the Jazz Age in the 1920s Weber came to be seen as passe in part because of her propensity for didacticism 204 but also because her values became increasingly archaic her moralising propagandistic tone was unsuited to the era of the flapper girl and a hedonism that seemed all the more urgent 205 By this time her morally upright films bored modern audiences her crusading was unwanted and her views were considered quaint 206 Her fall from favor was also due to her inability or unwillingness to adapt to changing audience tastes 14 and her refusal to feature big name stars or to glamorize consumerist excess in her films 207 After an advance screening in February 1921 Paramount executives decided not to distribute the fourth film in their arrangement with Weber What Do Men Want 207 a domestic melodrama about a philandering husband and a faithful wife 189 Claire Windsor and to cancel their arrangement with Weber to distribute her films 32 After making 13 films 208 by April 1921 Lois Weber Productions collapsed and Weber was forced to release all her contracted staff with the exception of two novice actors 209 While she would direct a few other movies effectively her career as a Hollywood director was over 206 F B Warren Corporation edit nbsp Lois Weber Productions ad 1921 After reading the articles Impoverished College Teaching and Boycotting the Ministry in the April 30 1921 issue of Literary Digest about the underpayment of educators and clergy Weber with scenarist Marion Orth crafted a melodramatic narrative to bring the issue to life in The Blot 210 Starring Claire Windsor and Louis Calhern 211 The Blot was her masterpiece 72 her most successful film from this period 212 and probably Weber s best known film today 207 The film rejects the values of capitalist America that measures the value of people in wealth and property by depicting the compromises and choices impoverished women are forced to make to achieve social mobility and financial security 212 It condemns capitalistic materialism and linked consumerism with sexual exploitation 157 and addresses class money and ethnicity 213 Weber s basically Christian ethos shines clearly through this plot the text disapproves of both the new consumerist immigrant class and the old aristocratic one 205 Despite xenophobic assumptions 214 Weber advocates learning asceticism and service to the needy 205 According to film historian Kevin Brownlow in The Blot Weber s technique is reminiscent of that of William C deMille with its quietness in its use of detail and its emphasis on naturalism Weber used the same method of direction too filming in continuity 215 To tell with maximum realism this story of a college professor s family hardworking but with only a meager income Weber filmed in real houses using a special lighting rig and gave supporting roles to non actors 216 To emphasize this film was a woman centered narrative in a radical departure from Hollywood practice Weber used point of view cutting from the perspective of the professor s wife 4 Weber also used extreme close ups and an ambiguous ending that Richard Combs describes The Blot as so un Griffithian as to seem almost modernistically open ended while others see it as almost surreal declaring it the Los Olvidados of the literally down at heel middle class 4 Due to the collapse of her distribution deal with Paramount Weber was forced to distribute The Blot through the F B Warren Corporation a newly formed small independent company that would also distribute a film each by Canadian women producers Nell Shipman and May Tully later in 1921 207 The Blot was released on September 4 1921 but was not well received critically and did little box office and vanished after its run After The Blot Weber s films did not make money at the box office 217 For decades The Blot was considered a lost film until it was rediscovered by the American Film Institute in 1975 and was reconstituted and restored by Robert Gitt of the UCLA Film amp Television Archive in 1986 from an incomplete negative and an incomplete print 210 215 The Blot was then produced for video by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill of Photoplay Productions and released on home video and DVD 210 As part of the deal to distribute The Blot F B Warren also released What Do Men Want 218 219 After the film s premiere at Manhattan s Lyric Theatre on November 13 1921 The New York Times while praising Weber for her casting and the technical aspects of the film and also the performance of Claire Windsor dismissed the film as a simplified sermon that provided pat answers which ignored the real facts of life which it considers incompetent irrelevant and immaterial 220 Soon after the New York City premiere of The Blot and in an attempt to salvage their troubled marriage Weber and Smalley sailed for Europe 221 with Weber s sister and brother in law Ethel and Louis A Howland They ultimately traveled for six months through Europe Egypt China and India 222 In late December 1921 they were in Rome with plans to travel to the Orient 223 Weber and Smalley returned to the United States on April 7 1922 224 On June 24 1922 Weber obtained a divorce secretly from Smalley 225 226 who was described as both alcoholic and abusive 227 but kept him as a friend and companion 14 Their divorce was made public on January 12 1923 by the Los Angeles Examiner 225 Universal edit nbsp Lois Weber 1922 American Caramel Fancy BordersMovie CardUpon her return to Hollywood Weber found an industry in transition evident in the fact that Erich von Stroheim was out of favor D W Griffith was gradually more marginalized and Rex Ingram like von Stroheim could not adapt to production changes demanded by the consolidated studios As Shelley Stamp explains In an age of studio conglomeration and vertical integration few independents could survive a reality that hit women particularly hard both Alice Guy Blache and Nell Shipman closed their production companies during this period as well Will Hays newly installed at the MPPDA was also beginning to assert greater control over studio releases 228 222 In November 1922 Weber returned to Universal 14 222 where she directed A Chapter in Her Life 229 based on the 1903 novel Jewel A Chapter in her Life by Clara Louise Burnham 230 and a remake of a 1915 film called Jewel which she had directed previously with Smalley A Chapter in Her Life was part of a slate of literary adaptations Universal released that year headlined by Lon Chaney s The Hunchback of Notre Dame and marketed under the tag line Great Pictures made from Great Books with Great Exploitation Tieups 228 The film starring Claude Gillingwater was released on September 17 1923 230 231 However according to Stamp Without a chain of theaters under its control like emerging studio giants MGM and Paramount Universal now occupied a significantly different market position than it had during the height of Weber s career there in the mid 1910s With the bulk of urban first run theaters closed to Universal the studio now relied on independent theaters mainly located in small towns and rural areas Nor was the studio home to the female directing talent it had once been Weber was now on her own 228 Consequently Universal s trade ads made a clear pitch to small town exhibitors offering them quality pictures at reasonable prices providing access to first run pictures many studios reserved for their large urban venues A Chapter in Her Life is available on home video and DVD from Nostalgia 232 Hiatus edit While Weber was praised for her direction in A Chapter in Her Life critics felt the film s subject matter a young girl whose love and faith transform the troubled adults in her life was ultimately out of step with the times Film Daily dubbed the material old fashioned with other critics objecting to the film s Pollyanna themes 228 Weber subsequently left Universal vowing not to produce any films for a while intending to write plays and a novel instead She traveled to Europe again and spent time at the Colorado summer home of her friend novelist Margaretta Tuttle who had written the novel Feet of Clay later made into a 1924 film by Cecil B deMille saying she would remain on vacation until the censors came to their senses 228 At the time Weber complained of both the control exerted by consolidated studios as well as the ever more strenuous censorship of the Hays Code I have received many offers but in each case I m hampered with too many conditions The producers select the stories select the cast tell you how much you can pay for a picture and how long you can have to make it in All this could be borne But when they tell you that they also will cut your picture that is too much 233 228 222 The trade journal Film Mercury declared that it would be interesting to know why Weber has made no films in the past year or so noting that it is almost a crime for such wonderful director material to be lying idle while third raters flood the screen with junk 234 After suffering a nervous collapse in 1923 Weber made no movies until 1925 32 During this period when Weber ostensibly retired from public life it was rumored that Weber had attempted suicide and had entered a mental facility to treat her mental depression 235 By the end of January 1925 Weber announced her engagement to Captain Harry Gantz born in Deadwood South Dakota on September 4 1887 died August 11 1949 in Cairns Queensland Australia 236 237 238 239 a retired army officer who had served as a second lieutenant in the Philippine Constabulary from 1907 to 1911 240 then as a second lieutenant in company C of the 23rd Infantry from 1912 to 1915 241 In October 1914 Gantz transferred from the 23rd Infantry to the Aviation Section U S Signal Corps and became a pioneer aviator during the Pancho Villa Expedition making him an early bird of aviation On September 1 1915 Gantz married Beatrice Wooster Miller At the time of his engagement to Weber Gantz was a wealthy orange rancher and the owner of the 140 acre El Dorado Ranch in Fullerton California 242 243 244 Gantz is credited with bringing Weber out of a retirement which was more nearly a despondent withdrawal from public life 226 However Anthony Slide indicates that Gantz was something of an opportunist who persuaded Weber to marry him and co incidentally let him manage her considerable fortune 245 Universal edit In January 1925 Weber returned once again to Universal hired by Carl Laemmle to take charge of all story development for a 5 million production initiative based around the adaptation of popular novels 222 246 Universal released one major big budget film each year including The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923 and The Phantom of the Opera 1925 247 both starring Lon Chaney Sr After two unsuccessful previews in 1925 Weber and Maurice Pivar were assigned to re edit The Phantom of the Opera before its ultimate release in September 1925 248 Another novel which Universal decided to film was Uncle Tom s Cabin for which Weber completed an adaptation for a film to be directed in 1926 by Harry A Pollard 249 who had starred as Uncle Tom in a 1913 version and was by 1923 Universal s leading director with nine consecutive hits 247 In 1926 Weber signed a new distribution deal with Universal making her one of the highest paid women in the business 229 One of her first comeback movies was The Marriage Clause which Weber adapted from the short story Technic by Dana Burnet in The Saturday Evening Post of May 16 1925 250 It starred Francis X Bushman and brought contract player Billie Dove to international prominence 229 251 It was released on September 12 1926 By June 1926 Weber was signed to direct Sensation Seekers a romantic drama based on Ernest Pascal s novel Egypt 252 that also starred Billie Dove However just before her wedding Weber replaced Pollard as director of Uncle Tom s Cabin 253 as he had been hospitalized in Manhattan with blood poisoning and a shattered jaw 254 255 caused by the maltreatment of a tooth infection by a New York dentist 256 Weber ceased work on Sensation Seekers and was willing to interrupt her honeymoon to travel to Louisiana to direct the location scenes for Uncle Tom s Cabin 257 On June 15 the Los Angeles Times reported Gantz had obtained a license to marry Weber 258 On June 30 1926 a justice of the peace married the couple in a ceremony at Enchanted Hill the home of screenwriter Frances Marion in Santa Ana California 14 259 At their wedding Weber reduced her age by nine years to 38 to match her new husband 260 In 1927 Smalley married music teacher Phyllis Lorraine Ephlin 261 262 263 After five months during which his life was in serious jeopardy 264 and six jaw operations 255 Pollard emerged from hospital disfigured for life but undaunted ready once more to resume his megaphone 256 Weber was no longer required for Uncle Tom s Cabin 265 Weber returned to direct Sensation Seekers which was released on March 20 1927 266 United Artists edit In November 1926 Weber joined United Artists to direct a comedy film called Topsy and Eva based on a popular play of that name written by Catherine Chisholm Cushing 267 featuring the Duncan Sisters in blackface 268 269 Weber had adapted from the original novel when she was attached to the Universal version of Uncle Tom s Cabin She attempted to make another serious adaptation but the studio decided that it should be a comedy rather than a drama After some shooting by Weber she thought some of the scenes to be shot were insulting to African Americans including such racist humor as a stork dropping a black baby into a trash can 13 Topsy and Eva was reassigned to Del Lord to direct with some additional scenes by D W Griffith 270 By 1927 Weber advised young women to avoid filmmaking careers 271 In 1927 DeMille Pictures signed Weber to direct her final silent movie The Angel of Broadway which featured Leatrice Joy 272 273 released on October 3 1927 274 However the advent of sound technology and the demise of silent movies coupled with some negative reviews and poor box office receipts ended Weber s comeback in 1927 14 For example Variety believed The Angel of Broadway s sentimentality would appeal to the masses but not to sophisticated urban audiences For New York this title is a dud but in the hinterland it may well be esteemed box office Pathe has in fact a very good commercial property for the territory west of Hoboken 275 Nadir edit By February 1927 Weber owned and operated Lois Weber s Garden Village at 4633 Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles 276 In the late 1920s Weber and Gantz sub divided the El Rancho ranch creating the upscale Brookdale Heights now at West Brookfield Place Fullerton with the 300 400 residential lots advertised for 1 500 to 3 000 each and houses priced at 8 000 to 9 000 each On another part of their acreage the Gantzes built a Spanish style residence with a tower retreat for Weber at 225 W Union Ave 277 When Weber was asked in April 1928 when she might direct again she replied when I find a producer who thinks I have intelligence enough to be let alone and go ahead with my own unit 278 Five years elapsed before Weber got the opportunity again While Weber and Gantz appeared to be enjoying domestic harmony in March 1930 279 soon afterward Weber was separated from Gantz and was living with her mother and nephew in Los Angeles 280 In 1931 Gantz sold the El Dorado ranch to C Stanley Chapman the son of Charles C Chapman 281 By 1932 Weber was still separated from Gantz and was managing an apartment building in Fullerton California In February 1932 Universal released a condensed version of Shoes called The Unshod Maiden 282 complete with satirical narration 283 Final comeback edit Through the intervention of Frances Marion by early June 1932 Weber was hired by United Artists as a script doctor 14 to work on Cynara 284 with Marion 285 In February 1933 Universal signed Weber to scout for new talent and to direct screen tests 22 32 286 Within weeks Weber had interviewed 250 girls and young women from dramatic schools 287 In 1933 Universal offered Weber another directing contract assigning her to Edna Ferber s Glamour 288 but she was removed from the project abruptly and it was transferred to a reluctant William Wyler 289 Weber and Gantz spent five weeks on location in Kauai Hawaii from August 24 1933 290 291 as she had been hired by the Seven Seas Corporation to direct Virginia Cherrill then the fiancee of Cary Grant 292 and Mona Maris in Cane Fire 293 a tale of racial prejudice and miscegenation on a Hawaiian sugar plantation 294 Made on a low budget on the plantations of the Kekaha Sugar Company and the Waimea Sugar Company and at Alexander McBryde s Lawai Kai estate 295 it was the first film shot on the island of Kauai It was released as White Heat 296 by the Pinnacle Production Company on June 15 1934 to limited commercial and critical success 297 with Weber quoted as saying at the time that the film was not a hit but will not lose any money 298 White Heat proved to be her final film and her only talkie It was shown on television on Friday June 21 1940 on NBC s station W2XBS but is now considered a lost film 299 Later years and death editWeber and Gantz divorced about 1935 226 300 In November 1939 Weber was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital in critical condition suffering from a stomach ailment that had afflicted her for years 301 14 She died almost two weeks later on Monday November 13 1939 destitute 297 from a bleeding ulcer She was 60 years old Her younger sister Ethel Howland and friends Frances Marion and Veda Terry were at her bedside 14 Her death was largely overlooked with her Variety obituary only two brief paragraphs long 14 302 and a brief mention in the Los Angeles Examiner 303 Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper contributed a more substantial tribute in the Los Angeles Times 304 On Friday November 17 1939 more than 300 people attended Weber s funeral 305 306 which was paid for by Frances Marion 14 297 After the funeral Weber was cremated at the Los Angeles Crematory 307 and the location of her remains is unknown 305 306 Weber wrote a memoir The End of the Circle which was to have been published shortly before her death 308 but ultimately was not despite the efforts of her sister Ethel Howland and was later stolen in the 1970s 3 For her contribution to the motion picture industry on February 8 1960 Weber was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6518 Hollywood Blvd 309 Legacy editThe Buffalo Dreams Fantastic Film Festival gives out the Lois Weber Award in her honor since 2017 310 A one woman play Tea with Lois is based on Weber s talks at the Hollywood Studio Club Written produced and directed by Susan Kurtz it was recorded and shown at the 53rd Cinecon Film Festival in 2017 311 312 The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission installed a Lois Weber historical marker in front of the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny 313 Executive produced and hosted by Elizabeth Banks directed by Svetlana Cvetko Yours Sincerely Lois Weber a 6 minute documentary which won best documentary at the 2017 LA Shorts International Film Festival told through the fictionalized character of a young magazine photographer who hopes to impress Weber examines Lois Weber s career for I ll Take You There a Hollywood themed novel by Wally Lamb first released as an iOS app for Metabook 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 On April 13 2022 the American Film Institute announced a new initiative concerning short films from the silent and early sound film eras the project was named Behind the Veil after a lost 1914 film by Weber 322 323 Selected filmography editYear Title Act ress Wri ter Pro ducer Direc tor Role Notes1911 A Heroine of 76 Yes Yes The Tavern Keeper s Daughter Co directed with Edwin S Porter and Phillips SmalleyThe Heiress Yes Yes Mrs Browne the Heiress Co directed with Phillips SmalleyThe Realization Yes Yes Mrs KendallOn the Brink Yes Yes Yes Tess a Girl of the Village Co directed with Edwin S PorterFate Yes Yes Flora Brown Co directed with Phillips SmalleyA Breach of Faith Yes YesThe Martyr Yes Yes Yes The Wife and Mother1912 Angels Unaware Yes Yes The WifeThe Fine Feathers Yes Yes Yes The Artist s ModelThe Bargain Yes Yes May ShirwoodThe Final Pardon Yes Yes Yes The SingerEyes That See Not Yes Yes Yes The Millionaire s WifeThe Price of Peace Yes Yes YesThe Power of Thought Yes Yes Yes Lois The MaidThe Greater Love Yes Yes The Invalid WifeThe Troubadour s Triumph Yes YesThe Greater Christian Yes Yes Helen Co directed with Phillips SmalleyAn Old Fashioned Girl Yes Yes Yes The Old Fashioned GirlA Japanese Idyll Yes YesFaraway Fields Yes Yes Yes The Ambitious Older SisterLeaves in the Storm Yes Yes The Wife1913 The Jew s Christmas Yes Yes Yes Leah Isaac s Daughter Co directed with Phillips SmalleySuspense Yes Yes Yes The WifeHis Brand Yes Yes Yes The WifeThe Female of the Species Yes Yes Yes The Gypsy the Bad good Woman Co directed with Phillips SmalleyHow Men Propose Yes Yes Yes The Maid1914 A Fool and His Money Yes Yes Yes Helen Hogg the Daughter of the House Co written and directed with Phillips SmalleyThe Leper s Coat Yes Yes Yes The Wife Co directed with Phillips SmalleyThe Merchant of Venice Yes Yes Yes Paria Based on the play by William ShakespeareCo directed with Phillips SmalleyBehind the Veil Yes Yes Yes Lois the Mother Co directed with Phillips SmalleyFalse Colors Yes Yes Mrs Moore daughter FloThe Career of Waterloo Peterson Yes Yes Co directed with Phillips SmalleyTraitor Yes YesThe Opened Shutters Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise Burnham1915 It s No Laughing Matter Yes Yes Yes Co produced with Phillips SmalleyHypocrites Yes Yes YesSunshine Molly Yes Yes Yes Yes Sunshine Molly Story by Alice von SaxmarCo produced with Phillips SmalleyCaptain Courtesy Yes Co directed with Phillips SmalleyScandal Yes Yes Yes Daisy DeanA Cigarette That s All Yes Yes Story by Helena Phillips EvansCo directed with Phillips SmalleyJewel Yes Yes Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise BurnhamCo produced and directed with Phillips Smalley1916 Discontent Yes Yes Co directed with Allen G SieglerThe Dumb Girl of Portici Yes Yes Yes Based on the opera by Daniel Auber Germain Delavigne and Eugene ScribeCo produced with Phillips Smalley and Carl LaemmleCo directed with Phillips SmalleyHop The Devil s Brew Yes Yes Yes Lydia Jansen Co directed with Phillips SmalleyJohn Needham s Double Yes Co directed with Phillips SmalleyThe Flirt Yes Yes Based on a novel by Booth TarkingtonCo directed with Phillips SmalleyWhere Are My Children Yes Yes Yes Story by Lucy Payton and Franklyn HallCo written produced and directed with Phillips SmalleyThe Eye of God Yes Yes Yes Ana Lost filmCo directed with Phillips SmalleyShoes Yes Yes Yes Based on a novel by Jane AddamsStory by Stella Wynne HerronCo produced with Phillips SmalleySaving the Family Name Yes Yes Co directed with Phillips SmalleyIdle Wives Yes Yes Yes Anne Wall Based on a novel by James OppenheimCo written and directed with Phillips SmalleyWanted A Home Yes Yes Yes Co produced and directed with Phillips SmalleyThe People vs John Doe Yes Yes YesThe Rock of Riches Yes Yes Yes1917 Alone in the World YesThe Mysterious Mrs Musslewhite Yes Yes Based on a short story by Thomas EdgelowEven As You and I YesThe Hand That Rocks the Cradle Yes Yes Yes Yes Mrs Broome Co written produced and directed by Phillips SmalleyThe Price of a Good Time Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion OrthCo produced and directed with Phillips Smalley1918 Tarzan of the Apes Yes Based on the novel by Edgar Rice BurroughsCo written with Fred MillerThe Doctor and the Woman Yes Yes Lost filmBased on the novel by Mary Roberts RinehartCo written and directed with Phillips SmalleyFor Husbands Only Yes Yes Yes Story by Gladys Bronwyn SternCo directed with Phillips SmalleyBorrowed Clothes Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion OrthCo produced with Phillips Smalley1919 When a Girl Loves Yes Yes Co directed with Phillips SmalleyA Midnight Romance Yes Yes Story by Marion OrthMary Regan Yes Yes Story by Leroy ScottHome Yes YesForbidden Yes Yes Lost filmStory by E V DurlingCo directed with Phillips Smalley1920 To Please One Woman Yes Yes Yes Story by Marion Orth1921 What s Worth While Yes Yes YesToo Wise Wives Yes Yes Yes Story co written by Marion OrthThe Blot Yes Yes Yes Scenario by Marion OrthWhat Do Men Want Yes Yes Yes1923 A Chapter in Her Life Yes Yes Based on a novel by Clara Louise BurnhamCo written with Doris Schroeder1926 The Marriage Clause Yes Yes Based on a story by Dana Burnet1927 Sensation Seekers Yes Yes Based on a story by Ernest PascalThe Angel of Broadway Yes1934 White Heat Yes Yes Co written with James BodreroFurther reading editAcker Ally Reel Women Pioneers of the Cinema 1896 present New York 1991 Foster Gwendolyn Audrey Women Film Directors An International Bio critical Dictionary Westport CT London 1995 Hutchinson Pamela Lois Weber It is Good to be a Director Criterion 2021 Koszarski Richard 1976 Hollywood Directors 1914 1940 Oxford University Press Library of Congress Catalog Number 76 9262 Lowe Denise An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Women in Early American films 1895 1930 Routledge 2005 Norden Martin F The Birth Control Films of Margaret Sanger and Lois Weber forthcoming Norden Martin F Lois Weber Interviews Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi 2019 ISBN 1628464747 Pendergast Tom and Sara Pendergast eds International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers Vol 2 Directors Detroit MI 2000 Slide Anthony Lois Weber The Director Who Lost Her Way in History Westport CT Greenwood Press 1996 Stamp Shelley Exit Flapper Enter Woman or Lois Weber in Jazz Age Hollywood Framework Fall 2010 Stamp Shelley Lois Weber in Early Hollywood University of California Press May 2015 ISBN 9780520284463 curator Shelley Stamp producer Bret Wood executive producer Illeana Douglas 2018 Pioneers First Women Filmmakers boxset New York NY Kino Classics Library of Congress Blu ray DVD book OCLC 1077206039 OCLC 1100589636 OCLC 1206364129 324 325 Pages 52 57 provide overviews and details of several films Lois Weber and Phillips Smalley co created between 1911 and 1921 These restored films are featured on disc three Tibbetts John C and James M Welsh The Encyclopedia of Filmmakers Vol Two New York NY 2002 Unterburger Amy L ed Women Filmmakers amp Their Films Detroit MI New York and London 1998 References edit a b Lois Weber 1881 1939 Dictionary of Women Worldwide 25 000 Women Through the Ages 2007 Dictionary of Women Worldwide Routt William D March 2001 Lois Weber or the exigency of writing Screening the Past 12 1 Archived from the original on May 4 2013 Retrieved April 17 2022 Lois Weber writer of cinema a b c Anthony Slide The Silent Feminists pp 29 151 a b c Jennifer Parchesky Lois Weber s The Blot Rewriting Melodrama Reproducing the Middle Class Cinema Journal 39 1 Autumn 1999 23 Her first husband Phillips Smalley indicates they collaborated on 350 films See Terry Ramsaye ed Phillips Smalley Motion Picture Almanac Vol 38 Quigley Publications 1929 56 a b c d Linda Seger When Women Call the Shots The Developing Power and Influence of Women in Television and Film iUniverse 2003 8 One source estimates that fewer than fifty of Weber s films survive See Annette Kuhn and Susannah Radstone The Women s Companion to International Film University of California Press 1994 418 Lois Weber filmography a b Aubrey Malone Censoring Hollywood Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor McFarland 2011 7 a b Julie Talen 24 Split Screen s Big Comeback Salon com May 15 2002 Women Behind the Camera Women as Directors Archived May 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine Louella O Brown Pathe F B O Radio Victor Merge Stirs Movieland Rochester Evening Journal and the Post Express December 27 1928 22 a b c d e f g Lisa Singh The Silenced Woman of Silent Films Why Lois Weber Has Not Been Rediscovered Archived March 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine michelebeverly com accessed December 19 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Cari Beauchamp Without Lying Down Frances Marion and the Powerful Women of Early Hollywood University of California Press 1998 35 36 41 112 149 193 282 83 346 a b c d Richard Koszarski An Evening s Entertainment The Age of the Silent Feature Picture 1915 1928 University of California Press 1994 223 Anthony Slide in Gwendolyn Audrey Foster Early Women Filmakers as Social Arbiters Troping the Body Gender Etiquette and Performance SIU Press 2000 110 Dargis Manohla December 15 2016 Lois Weber Eloquent Filmmaker of the Silent Screen The New York Times Charlie Keil and Shelley Stamp American Cinema s Transitional Era Audiences Institutions Practices University of California Press 2004 338 Terry Ramsaye ed Motion Picture Almanac Vol 38 Quigley Publications 1929 34 Esther Ralston How I Broke into the Movies St Joseph Gazette November 30 1930 7A Vicki Callahan Reclaiming the Archive Feminism and Film History Wayne State University Press 2010 131 a b Harrison Carroll The Film Shop Tyrone Daily Herald Tyrone PA February 4 1933 4 Lois Weber Director of Moving Pictures Helped Anita Stewart and Other Stars to Win Success The New York Times November 14 1939 23 2 a b United States of America Bureau of the Census Twelfth Census of the United States 1900 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1900 T623 1854 rolls Source Citation Year 1900 Census Place Allegheny Ward 2 Allegheny Pennsylvania Roll T623 1355 Page 1A Enumeration District 17 a b Tenth Census of the United States 1880 NARA microfilm publication T9 1 454 rolls Records of the Bureau of the Census Record Group 29 National Archives Washington D C Source Citation Year 1880 Census Place Allegheny Allegheny Pennsylvania Roll 1086 Family History Film 1255086 Page 339B Enumeration District 13 Image 0686 Many sources indicate erroneously that Weber was born either in 1881 e g Eugene Michael Vazzana s Silent Film Necrology Births and Deaths of Over 9000 Performers Directors Producers and Other Filmmakers of the Silent Era Through 1993 McFarland 1995 350 Other sources indicate 1882 e g Lois Weber Movies in American History An Encyclopedia ed Philip C Dimare ABC CLIO 2011 850 One source even indicates she was born in 1886 e g American Women The Official Who s Who Among the Women of the Nation Vol 3 ed Durward Howes Richard Blank Pub Co 1939 319 since 1907 Pittsburgh s Northside neighborhood born Mathilda Schneeman in March 1854 in Reserve Township Allegheny County Pennsylvania died 1935 in Miami Florida Ancestry com 1860 United States Federal Census database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2009 Images reproduced by FamilySearch Original data 1860 U S census population schedule NARA microfilm publication M653 1 438 rolls Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration n d Source Citation Year 1860 Census Place Reserve Allegheny Pennsylvania Roll M653 1066 Page 1014 Image 175 Family History Library Film 805066 Ancestry com Florida Death Index 1877 1998 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2004 Original data State of Florida Florida Death Index 1877 1998 Florida Florida Department of Health Office of Vital Records 1998 born June 1855 died about 1910 a b c d e f g h Lois Weber Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia January 1 2002 Lois Weber profile highbeam com accessed December 19 2016 a b c Routt William D March 2001 Lois Weber or the exigency of writing Screening the Past 12 4 Archived from the original on June 20 2002 Retrieved April 17 2022 Lois Weber writing exigence born April 9 1877 in Allegheny County Pennsylvania died February 26 1966 in Florida Elizabeth Snaman Weber Y Singers Give Second Concert Miami News Metropolis February 22 1924 11 Ancestry com Florida Death Index 1877 1998 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2004 born July 3 1887 in Pennsylvania Tenth census of the state of Florida 1935 Microfilm series S 5 30 reels Record Group 001021 State Library and Archives of Florida Tallahassee Florida Ethel Weber aka Ethel Howland profile imdb com accessed December 19 2016 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 89 a b Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez California and Californians Vol 4 ed Rockwell Dennis Hunt The Lewis publishing company 1930 176 1 Born Florence Lois Weber on June 13 1879 in Allegheny City annexed in 1907 officially as the North Side Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Lois Weber was the second daughter of George and Mary Matilda nee Snaman Weber George s parents Salesius Weber and Elizabeth Koch Weber arrived by 1854 from Germany a b Gwendolyn Audrey Foster Women Film Directors An International Bio critical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1995 365 Famous American Women A Biographical Dictionary from Colonial Times to the Present ed Robert McHenry Courier Dover Publications 1980 432 a b Carolyn Lowrey The First One Hundred Noted Men and Women of the Screen Moffat Yard and company 1920 190 a b Daniel Eagan America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry Continuum International Publishing Group 2010 50 Ancestry com 1900 United States Federal Census database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2004 Original data United States of America Bureau of the Census Twelfth Census of the United States 1900 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1900 T623 1854 rolls Source Citation Year 1900 Census Place Allegheny Ward 2 Allegheny Pennsylvania Roll T623 1355 Page 1A Enumeration District 17 Society The Fort Wayne Daily News Fort Wayne IN April 25 1903 6 with a harpist named Mrs Apt Thomas New Observations Vols 18 21 New Observations Publications Inc 2 Sir Henry Joseph Wood My Life of Music Ayer Publishing 1946 74 113 Gives Up Piano To Become Movie Star Berkeley Daily Gazette December 9 1927 2 Weber described the incident that precipitated her retirement Just as I started to play a black key came off in my hand I kept forgetting that the key was not there and reaching for it The incident broke my nerve I could not finish and I never appeared on the concert stage again It is my belief that when that key came off in my hand a certain phase of my development came to an end Lois Weber in Elizabeth Peltret On the Lot with Lois Weber Photoplay October 1917 Lois Weber Director Owes Career to Broken Piano Key Hartford Courant October 17 1926 Louise Heck Rabi Women Filmmakers A Critical Reception Scarecrow Press 1984 54 Gerald Bordman and Richard Norton American Musical Theatre A Chronicle 4th ed Oxford University Press 2010 109 115 A Perpetual Leading Lady Sunset 32 Passenger Dept Southern Pacific Co 1914 634 a b c d e f Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 90 Boston Globe September 27 1904 in Louise Heck Rabi Women Filmmakers A Critical Reception Scarecrow Press 1984 54 George Washburn Smalley from Appleton s Cyclopedia of American Biography ed James Grant Wilson and John Fiske 6 vols New York D Appleton and Company 1887 1889 Terry L Jones Historical Dictionary of the Civil War 2 vols Scarecrow Press 2002 1303 Joseph James Mathews George W Smalley Forty Years a Foreign Correspondent North Carolina Press 1973 77 Smalley was married December 25 1862 to Phoebe Garnaut They had five children Eleanor Phillips who studied law at Harvard from 1887 89 Evelyn born April 1869 Ida born November 1873 and Emerson See Obituary Record of the Graduates of the Undergraduate Schools Deceased 1860 70 1950 51 Vol 11 1915 1920 New Haven CT Yale University August 1920 17 and Ancestry com 1900 United States Federal Census database on line United States of America Bureau of the Census Twelfth Census of the United States 1900 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1900 T623 1854 rolls Year 1900 Census Place Manhattan New York City Roll T623 1114 Page 5A Enumeration District 743 Anthony Slide Early Women Directors Da Capo Press 1984 36 Oscar Sherwin Prophet of Liberty The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips New York Brookman Associates 1958 305 Theatrical Gossip The New York Times August 24 1901 Phillips Smalley Internet Broadway Database Ancestry com Motion Picture Studio Directories 1919 and 1921 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc Original data Motion Picture Studio Directories 1919 and 1921 Motion Picture News Inc Print Publication 2 vols Sacramento California California State Library California History Section Source Citation Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual 1921 p 275 Ancestry com Cook County Illinois Marriages Index 1871 1920 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2011 Original data Illinois Cook County Marriages 1871 1920 Index FamilySearch Salt Lake City Utah 2010 Illinois Department of Public Health records Marriage Records 1871 present Division of Vital Records Springfield Illinois FHL Film Number 1030368 a b c d Lois Weber Movies in American History An Encyclopedia ed Philip C Dimare ABC CLIO 2011 850 a b Alison McMahan Alice Guy Blache Lost Visionary of the Cinema Continuum International Publishing Group 2002 71 a b c d e Jennifer M Bean and Diane Negra A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema Duke University Press 2002 46 48 270 167 69 271 86 Alice Guy The Memoirs of Alice Guy Blache trans Roberta Blache and ed Anthony Slide nd ed Scarecrow Press 1996 79 Alison McMahan Alice Guy Blache Lost Visionary of the Cinema Continuum International Publishing Group 2002 xx xxvi Motion Picture Studio Directory 1919 204 Durward Howes ed Weber Lois in American Women The Official Who s Who Among the Women of the Nation Vol 2 Richard Blank Pub Co 1937 Moving Picture World 8 6 February 11 1911 283 Full Credits of A Heroine of 76 IMDb accessed December 19 2016 Slide Anthony 1996 Lois Weber The Director who Lost Her Way in History Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29945 2 ISSN 0198 9871 Issue 54 of Contributions to the study of popular culture Routt William D BILL ROUTT S HOME PAGE routt net s3 website ap southeast 2 amazonaws com Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved April 17 2022 a b Routt William D March 2001 Lois Weber or the exigency of writing Screening the Past 12 3 Archived from the original on March 20 2002 Retrieved April 17 2022 Lois Weber writer of cinema Charles Musser Before the Nickelodeon Edwin S Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company University of California 465 John Drinkwater The Life and Adventures of Carl Laemmle Ayer Publishing 1978 195 Anthony Slide Early Women Directors Da Capo Press 1984 38 a b Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 188 Mark Garrett Cooper Universal Women Filmmaking and Institutional Change in Early Hollywood University of Illinois Press 2010 54 American Women The Official Who s Who Among the Women of the Nation Vol 2 ed Durward Howes Richard Blank Pub Co 1937 241 Vicki Callahan Reclaiming the Archive Feminism and Film History Wayne State University Press 2010 132 Gertrude Price Only Movie Players Live in this Town Toledo News Bee January 6 1914 13 E J Fleming Wallace Reid The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol McFarland 2007 57 Charles Musser Before the Nickelodeon Edwin S Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company University of California Press 1991 424 actual film credit a b Suspense IMDb Tom Gunning Centre de Cultura Contemporania de Barcelona Retrieved April 16 2022 Tom Gunning The Criterion Collection Retrieved April 16 2022 Tom Gunning Melodrama West and East Archived June 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine Miriam Hansen Babel and Babylon Spectatorship in American Silent Film Harvard University Press 1994 71 Miriam Hansen Babel and Babylon Spectatorship in American Silent Film Harvard University Press 1994 71 72 Ann Catherine Paietta Saints Clergy and Other Religious Figures on Film and Television 1895 2003 McFarland amp Co 2005 78 Robert Hamilton Ball Shakespeare on Silent Film A Strange Eventful History Volume 1968 Part 2 Allen amp Unwin 1968 206 Lester D Friedman Hollywood s Image of the Jew Ungar 1982 25 a b Patricia Erens The Jew in American Cinema Indiana University Press 1988 pp 46 47 George Blaisdell reviewer The Jew s Christmas Motion Picture Weekly December 5 1913 1132 Lester D Friedman Unspeakable Images Ethnicity and the American Cinema University of Illinois Press 1991 The Story of the Jew s Christmas Universal Weekly December 13 1913 13 16 Where Are My Children MUBI Retrieved April 17 2022 Lois Weber MUBI Retrieved April 17 2022 Barbara Hodgdon and W B Worthen A Companion to Shakespeare and Performance John Wiley and Sons 2008 589 Biography for Lois Weber IMDb Merchant of Venice The Marion Daily Star Marion OH December 6 1913 5 The Merchant of Venice 1914 film profile IMDb accessed December 19 2016 a b Robert Hamilton Ball Shakespeare on Silent Film A Strange Eventful History Volume 1968 Part 2 Allen amp Unwin 1968 208 Merchant of Venice Is Supreme Adaptation of Shakespeare Universal Weekly February 14 1914 5 British Universities Film and Video Council The Merchant of Venice 1914 film bufvc ac uk accessed December 19 2016 a b c d e f g Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 90 92 Michael Quinn Bosworth Hobart Encyclopedia of Early Cinema ed Richard Abel Taylor amp Francis 2005 114 Thomas Slater Transcending Boundaries Lois Weber and the Discourse Over Women s Roles in the Teens and Twenties Archived April 26 2012 at the Wayback Machine Quarterly Review of Film and Video 18 3 2001 257 a b c d e Mark Garrett Cooper Universal Women Filmmaking and Institutional Change in Early Hollywood University of Illinois Press 2010 132 Eric Mazur ed Encyclopedia of Religion and Film ABC CLIO 2011 396 a b Daniel Eagan America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry Continuum International Publishing Group 2010 51 Lois Weber in Richard Koszarski An Evening s Entertainment The Age of the Silent Feature Picture 1915 1928 University of California Press 1994 223 cf Women Religion and American Film Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America Vol 1 eds Rosemary Skinner Keller Rosemary Radford Ruether and Marie Cantlon Indiana University Press 2006 1011 Anthony Slide Early Women Directors Da Capo Press 1984 pp 34 41 Anthony Slide Christianity Hollywood Style Reverend Neal Dodd Silent Topics Essays on Undocumented Areas of Silent Film Scarecrow Press 2005 31 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 140 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 93 94 Initially the actress portraying Naked Truth is unidentified Anthony Slide indicates Naked Truth bears a physical resemblance to Weber herself which led some to speculate it was Weber however contemporary sources indicate it was an actress named Margaret Edwards For example Ruth Waterbury Photoplay The Aristocrat of Motion Picture Magazines Vol 8 Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company 1915 105 and Coming The Daily Republican Cape Girardeau MO August 9 1915 4 For a summary of the discussion see Anthony Slide Early Women Directors Da Capo Press 1984 38 and Louise Heck Rabi Women Filmmakers A Critical Reception Scarecrow Press 1984 56 Margaret Edwards profile filmography IMDb com accessed December 19 2016 See Daisy Sinclair Mrs Margaret Edwards obituary Variety January 16 1929 She is buried at the Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla New York with her husband actor John Edwards born John Marnell May 22 1868 Natick Massachusetts died October 16 1929 New York City See John Edwards Variety October 23 1929 AS 355 John Edwards Actor The New York Times October 17 1929 Eugene Michael Vazzana Silent Film Necrology 2nd ed McFarland 2001 153 He Said He Could Act 1914 downloadd1w blogspot com September 2009 The History of Sex in Cinema filmsite org accessed December 19 2016 Hypocrites Variety November 7 1914 a b c Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 96 Gerald Leinwand Mackerels in the Moonlight Four Corrupt American Mayors McFarland 2004 209 10 No Naked Truth Boston s Mayor Insists Upon Draping Truth in Bosworth s Hypocrites New York Dramatic Mirror April 14 1915 24 4 Women Religion and American Film Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America Vol 1 eds Rosemary Skinner Keller Rosemary Radford Ruether and Marie Cantlon Indiana University Press 2006 1011 Timeline of Greatest Film Milestones and Turning Points in Film History The Year 1915 filmsite org accessed December 19 2016 Lois Weber HYPOCRITES Marlborough Express Marlborough New Zealand June 18 1917 8 Koszarski 1976 p 49 Smalleys Back with Universal Moving Picture World USA April 3 1915 76 a b c Annette Kuhn Cinema Censorship and Sexuality 1909 1925 Taylor amp Francis 1988 28 Carl Laemmle in Bret Wood The Blot tcm com accessed December 19 2016 Hal Erickson 2013 Eye of God 1916 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on November 14 2013 Anna Pavlowa in Film The New York Times June 9 1915 Robert S Birchard Early Universal City Arcadia Publishing 2009 73 The Dumb Girl of Portici imdb com accessed December 19 2016 Notes Written on the Screen The New York Times April 2 1916 E Ann Kaplan Motherhood and Representation The Mother in Popular Culture and Melodrama Routledge 1992 97 Larry Langman American Film Cycles The Silent Era Greenwood Publishing Group 1998 93 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 7 Ally Acker Women behind the Camera Feminists or Filmmakers Agenda 14 1992 42 E Ann Kaplan Motherhood and Representation The Mother in Popular Culture and Melodrama Routledge 1992 133 a b Where Are My Children notes tcm com accessed December 19 2016 a b c Lois Weber Movies in American History An Encyclopedia ed Philip C Dimare ABC CLIO 2011 850 Annette Kuhn Cinema Censorship and Sexuality 1909 1925 Taylor amp Francis 1988 32 Kevin Brownlow Behind the Mask of Innocence Knopf 1990 55 Where Are My Children Alternate Versions Bluebird Photo Plays The Saturday Evening Post 188 28 1916 via Google Books a b Mark Garrett Cooper Universal Women Filmmaking and Institutional Change in Early Hollywood University of Illinois Press 2010 134 Larry Lee Holland Mary MacLaren and Katherine MacDonald Films in Review 36 National Board of Review of Motion Pictures 1985 227 Annike Kross Restoration and Screening of Shoes USA Lois Weber 1916 The 16th Annual SF Silent Film Festival Day 4 YAM July 16 2011 Here s Video of Downtown s Pershing Square As It Was in 1916 Curbed L A October 14 2015 a b c d Shelley Stamp Lois Weber and The Hand That Rocks the Cradle starts thursday com August 2010 August 6 2010 Kay Sloan The Hand That Rocks the Cradle An Introduction Film History 1 4 1987 341 Lois Weber Starts Production Moving Picture World USA June 30 1917 2106 Lois Weber Starts Production Motion Picture World June 30 1917 2106 News of Lois Weber Productions Lois Weber Bulletin 1 June 1917 RIC a b c Bret Wood The Blot Motion Picture Studio Directory 1919 202 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 141 Shelley Stamp Presenting the Smalleys Collaborators in Authorship and Direction Film History 18 2 2006 119 a b Lisa L Rudman Marriage The Ideal and the Reel Or the Cinematic Marriage Manual Film History 1 4 1987 327 Charlie Keil and Shelley Stamp American Cinema s Transitional Era Audiences Institutions Practices University of California Press 2004 345 E J Fleming Wallace Reid The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol McFarland 2007 126 27 Queen of the Seas IMDb Kay Saunders Notorious Australian Women HarperCollins Australia 2011 Lois Weber Hospitalized Camera Los Angeles CA September 22 1918 Retrieved April 21 2022 via Dr Walter Lindley Scrapbooks California Hospital Volume VI box 8 page 75 Honnold Mudd Library Special Collections Lois Weber Breaks Arm by Fall in Downtown Store Husband of Film Director Arrives From East and Hears of Accident Los Angeles Examiner Los Angeles CA September 22 1918 Retrieved April 21 2022 via Dr Walter Lindley Scrapbooks California Hospital Volume VI box 8 page 67 Honnold Mudd Library Special Collections Lois Weber Breaks Arm by Fall in Downtown Store Husband of Film Director Arrives From East and Hears of Accident Los Angeles Examiner September 18 1918 Lois Weber Breaks Arm Moving Picture World October 12 1918 207 Broken Arm Causing Trouble Moving Picture World USA February 8 1919 754 Lois Weber s Arm Moving Picture World USA April 12 1919 218 Lois Weber to Direct Anita Stewart Moving Picture World USA December 7 1918 1056 Charles Higham Merchant of Dreams Louis B Mayer M G M and the Secret Hollywood Laurel 1994 46 47 Louis B Mayer to Lois Weber in Mark A Vieira Irving Thalberg Boy Wonder to Producer Prince University of California Press 2010 18 a b c d Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 143 In the News Net The New York Times July 27 1919 Lois Weber Signs with Famous Players Lasky Moving Picture World USA August 2 1919 644 Autumn Stephens Drama Queens Wild Women of the Silver Screen Conari Press 1998 190 Ancestry com 1920 United States Federal Census database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2010 Images reproduced by FamilySearch Original data Fourteenth Census of the United States 1920 NARA microfilm publication T625 2076 rolls Records of the Bureau of the Census Record Group 29 National Archives Washington D C For details on the contents of the film numbers visit the following NARA web page NARA Note Enumeration Districts 819 839 are on roll 323 Chicago City Source Citation Year 1920 Census Place Los Angeles Assembly District 63 Los Angeles Roll T625 106 Page 5A Enumeration District 162 Image 681 Film Folk Purchase Homes Moving Picture World May 14 1921 179 Preston Sturges Life June 7 1946 90 Lois Weber Buys Studio She Has Leased for Past Three Years Moving Picture World USA October 2 1920 635 Ancestry com Motion Picture Studio Directories 1919 and 1921 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc Original data Motion Picture Studio Directories 1919 and 1921 Motion Picture News Inc Print Publication 2 vols Sacramento California California State Library California History Section Source Citation Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual 1921 p 277 William Allen Johnston Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual 1921 395 Annette Kuhn and Susannah Radstone The Women s Companion to International Film University of California Press 1994 418 Lois Weber is The Whole Works in Filmdom Iowa City Press Citizen Iowa City IA February 7 1921 6 Carl Sandburg The Movies Are Carl Sandburg s Film Reviews and Essays 1920 1928 ed Arnie Bernstein Lake Claremont Press 2000 83 Lois Weber Three Dimensional Films The Washington Post Washington DC May 15 1921 63 a b Lucy Fischer American Cinema of the 1920s Themes and Variations Rutgers University Press 2009 48 Lea Jacobs The Decline of Sentiment American Film in the 1920s University of California Press 2008 84 a b c E Ann Kaplan Motherhood and Representation The Mother in Popular Culture and Melodrama Routledge 1992 138 a b Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 149 a b c d Lucy Fischer American Cinema of the 1920s Themes and Variations Rutgers University Press 2009 60 Lois Weber Productions Food For Film Fans Providence News Providence RI April 4 1921 11 a b c Bret Wood The Blot film profile tcm com accessed December 19 2016 Kenneth White Munden ed The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Part 1 Feature Films 1921 1930 University of California Press 1997 70 a b Gwendolyn Audrey Foster Early Women Filmakers as Social Arbiters Troping the Body Gender Etiquette and Performance SIU Press 2000 111 Patricia Mellencamp A Fine Romance Five Ages of Film Feminism Temple University Press 1995 213 E Ann Kaplan Motherhood and Representation The Mother in Popular Culture and Melodrama Routledge 1992 136 a b Kevin Brownlow Behind the Mask of Innocence Knopf 1990 292 The Blot photoplay co uk accessed December 19 2016 Patricia Mellencamp A Fine Romance Five Ages of Film Feminism Temple University Press 1995 214 Kenneth White Munden ed The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Part 1 Feature Films 1921 1930 University of California Press 1997 879 What Do Men Want The Screen The New York Times November 14 1921 Vicki Callahan Reclaiming the Archive Feminism and Film History Wayne State University Press 2010 149 a b c d e Shelley Stamp Lois Weber in Jazz Age Hollywood Archived April 10 2012 at the Wayback Machine Framework The Journal of Cinema and Media 52 Chicago Daily Tribune December 31 1921 10 Ancestry com New York Passenger Lists 1820 1957 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2010 Source Citation Year 1922 Microfilm Serial T715 Microfilm Roll T715 3098 Line 9 Page Number 13 a b Actress Secretly Divorced Reno Evening Gazette Reno NV January 12 1923 10 a b c Notable American Women A Biographical Dictionary eds Edward T James Janet Wilson James Paul S Boyer Harvard University Press 1974 555 Kevin Brownlow Behind the Mask of Innocence Knopf 1990 xxiii a b c d e f Shelley Stamp Exit Flapper Enter Woman findarticles com accessed December 19 2016 a b c Vicki Callahan Reclaiming the Archive Feminism and Film History Wayne State University Press 2010 134 a b Kenneth White Munden ed The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Part 1 Feature Films 1921 1930 University of California Press 1997 117 A Chapter in Her Life profile imdb com accessed December 19 2016 Silent Films on Video A C silentsaregolden com accessed December 19 2016 Grace Kingsley Flashes She Rebels Lois Weber Says Too Many Film Restrictions Los Angeles Times July 7 1923 I7 Film Mercury October 2 1925 n p quoted in Slide Lois Weber 132 33 Louise Heck Rabi Women Filmmakers A Critical Reception Scarecrow Press 1984 65 Ancestry com 1900 United States Federal Census database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2004 Original data United States of America Bureau of the Census Twelfth Census of the United States 1900 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1900 T623 1854 rolls Source Citation Year 1900 Census Place Deadwood Lawrence South Dakota Roll T623 1551 Page 15B Enumeration District 26 Orange County California Biographies 1921 County California Biographies 1921 Archived April 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine Registration Year 1949 Registration Place Queensland Registration Number 002866 Page Number 781 Source Information Ancestry com Australia Death Index 1787 1985 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2010 Original data Compiled from publicly available sources COL HARRY GANTZ The New York Times August 12 1949 17 Orange County California Biographies 1921 Archived April 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine Harry Gantz profile earlyaviators com accessed December 19 2016 Thomas William Herringshaw Herringshaw s American Blue book of Biography Prominent Americans of 1926 who have Achieved Success in the Various Civil Industrial and Commercial Line of Activity American Blue Book Publishers 1926 451 Captain Harry Gantz has Developed an El Dorado out of a Badly Treated Ranch Los Angeles Times January 3 1928 D27 Justice Brown Detwiler Who s Who in California Who s Who Publishing Company 1929 252 Anthony Slide The Silent Feminists America s First Women Directors Scarecrow Press 1996 Lois Weber Engaged Moving Picture World January 31 1925 487 Universal Program Running High Los Angeles Times January 23 1925 A9 a b David Pierce Carl Laemmle s Outstanding Achievement Harry Pollard and the Struggle to Film Uncle Tom s Cabin Film History 10 4 1998 459 Robert S Birchard Early Universal City Arcadia Publishing 2009 111 Grace Kingsley LOIS WEBER FOR UNCLE TOM Pollard Ill Woman Director Makes Slavery Epic Ruth Roland Comes Back to Screen Harry Beaumont to Travel Los Angeles Times June 24 1926 A8 The Marriage Clause screenplay tcm com accessed December 19 2016 Billie Dove In Love Mart At The Capitol This Week Reading Eagle January 22 1928 12 Atlanta Constitution May 30 1926 UNCLE TOM AND THE JINX The New York Times July 24 1927 Grace Kingsley Lois Weber for Uncle Tom Los Angeles Daily Times June 24 1926 A8 a b Bret Wood Uncle Tom s Cabin 1927 Turner Classic Movies TCM WarnerMedia New York N Y a b Uncle Tom Comes to the Screen The Motion Picture Review 1927 iath virginia edu accessed December 19 2016 Grace Kingsley Lois Weber for Uncle Tom Los Angeles Daily Times June 24 1926 A8 Cupid Beaten by Picture Demand Los Angeles Times July 2 1926 A2 Grace Kingsley Lois Weber s Own Uncle Tom Los Angeles Times July 2 1926 A8 Uncle Tom and the Jinx New York Times July 24 1927 5 and Universal Starts Feature Productions Los Angeles Times July 26 1926 A9 For a detailed account of the production see David Pierce Carl Laemmle s Outstanding Achievement Harry Pollard and the Struggle to Film Uncle Tom s Cabin Film History 10 4 1998 459 76 PRINCIPAL IN LATEST FILM CITY ROMANCE LOIS WEBER TO BECOME BRIDE AGAIN Motion Picture Director Will Marry Retired Army Flyer in Near Future Los Angeles Times June 15 1926 A1 Don Juan So This Is Hollywood Paris and Hollywood USA October 1926 18 Movie Star Won by Captain Harry Gantz Atlanta Constitution Atlanta GA July 2 1926 Photoplay July 1926 Ancestry com 1920 Original data Fourteenth Census of the United States 1920 NARA microfilm publication T625 2076 rolls Year 1920 Census Place Los Angeles Assembly District 63 Los Angeles Roll T625 106 Page 5B Enumeration District 164 Image 782 Ancestry com California Death Index 1940 1997 Source Citation Place Los Angeles Date January 3 1965 Paul Thompson Uncle Carl Sells Uncle Tom Down the Movie River Motion Picture Classic September 1927 Lois Weber Combines Work and Honeymoon The Milwaukee Sentinel July 14 1926 4 Kenneth White Munden ed The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Part 1 Feature Films 1921 1930 University of California Press 1997 696 Topsy amp Eva The Movie BIG PICTURES COMING Potemkin Russian Film Michael Strogoff and Old Ironsides to Open Soon The New York Times November 28 1926 Assign Lois Weber to Direct Duncan Girls Moving Picture World USA December 4 1926 351 Full cast and crew for Topsy and Eva film profile IMDb accessed December 19 2016 Karen Ward Mahar Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood JHU Press 2008 2 Kenneth White Munden ed The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Part 1 Feature Films 1921 1930 University of California Press 1997 19 Kay Armatage The Girl From God s Country Nell Shipman and the Silent Cinema University of Toronto Press 2003 51 52 The Angel of Broadway film profile IMDb accessed December 19 2016 Variety November 2 1927 18 in Lea Jacobs The Decline of Sentiment American Film in the 1920s University of California Press 2008 Los Angeles Times February 27 1927 Sherry Angel HOME DESIGN A Stroll in Brookdale Tour to Showcase 1920s 1930s Homes May 19 1990 latimes com accessed December 19 2016 Grace Kingsley Night with Day Trimmings Los Angeles Times April 1 1928 I8 Grace Kingsley And Joy Los Angeles Times March 16 1930 I4 Ancestry com 1930 United States Federal Census database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2002 Original data United States of America Bureau of the Census Fifteenth Census of the United States 1930 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1930 T626 2 667 rolls Source Citation Year 1930 Census Place Los Angeles Los Angeles Roll 134 Page 16B Enumeration District 67 Image 590 0 C Stanley Chapman House The Unshod Maiden IMDb William M Drew The Last Silent Picture Show Silent Films on American Screens in the 1930s Scarecrow Press 2010 93 Cynara IMDb Louella O Parsons Hal Roach s Doctor Story Rochester Evening Journal June 3 1932 18 The New York Times February 12 1933 A Movie Talent Scout Considers The Girls Who Pass Before Her The Sun Baltimore MD February 19 1933 Kay Armatage The Girl From God s Country Nell Shipman and the Silent Cinema University of Toronto Press 2003 52 According to Jan Herman William Wyler A Talent for Trouble director Wyler was forced into doing the picture He felt it was a real disappointment and couldn t muster the enthusiasm to save it He always remembered it as kind of a screwy picture Ancestry com Honolulu Hawaii Passenger and Crew Lists 1900 1969 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2009 Original data Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving or Departing at Honolulu Hawaii 1900 1954 Source Citation Repository Name National Archives and Records Administration NARA NARA Series A3422 Roll 135 Ancestry com California Passenger and Crew Lists 1882 1957 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2008 2011 Archive information series roll number m1764 47 Marc Eliot Cary Grant A Biography Harmony Books 2004 92 Peter Hyun In the New World The Making of a Korean American University of Hawaii Press 1995 136 37 Gwendolyn Audrey Foster Women Film Directors An International Bio critical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1995 365 66 White Heat film profile tcm com accessed December 19 2016 White Heat IMDb a b c Gwendolyn Audrey Foster Women Film Directors An International Bio critical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1995 366 Mrs Louis Lois Weber in Peter Hyun In the New World The Making of a Korean American University of Hawaii Press 1995 138 White Heat film trivia tcm com accessed December 19 2016 Lois Weber The Hartford Courant Hartford CT November 14 1939 Hedda Hopper Lois Weber Critically Ill Pioneer of Films in Hospital Fights Ravages of Stomach Ailment Los Angeles Times November 6 1939 A1 Variety November 15 1939 Los Angeles Examiner November 14 1939 Hedda Hopper Death Takes Lois Weber Veteran Film Writer Director Producer and Musician Passes Los Angeles Times November 14 1939 A1 a b LOIS WEBER BURIED Los Angeles CA November 17 1939 AP a b Lois Weber Rites Set for Today Los Angeles Times November 17 1939 30 Weber Funeral to Be Friday Hollywood Mourns Woman Film Director Who Died on Monday Los Angeles Times November 15 1939 17 Edwin Schallert Movieland Jottings and Castings Los Angeles Times August 22 1939 13 Awards for Lois Weber Internet Movie Database Retrieved May 7 2013 Buffalo Dreams Announces Special Filmmaker Awards Horror News November 9 2017 Mallory Mary August 28 2017 Hollywood Heights 53rd Cinecon Festival Offers Diverse Lineup The Daily Mirror Retrieved December 2 2020 Special Programs at Cinecon 53 Cinecon 53 Retrieved December 2 2020 Maruca Julia June 13 2019 Silent Filmmaker Lois Weber Honored With Historical Marker On Pittsburgh s North Side 90 5 WESA FM Retrieved April 21 2022 Screenings Synopsis Director Note Gallery Credits Yours Sincerely Lois Weber Archived from the original on December 8 2017 Retrieved April 21 2022 Blackley Katie October 27 2017 Legacy Of Prolific Female Silent Filmmaker Celebrated In Documentary 90 5 WESA FM Retrieved April 21 2022 Focus on Female Directors 2018 Calendar American Cinematheque Svetlana Cvetko s Yours Sincerely Lois Weber USA 6 min Executive produced by Elizabeth Banks this documentary examines the achievements of the highest paid silent film director at Universal in 1916 Lois Weber It is told through the fictionalized character of a young magazine photographer who hopes to impress her Elizabeth Banks MySHOOT September 6 2017 Retrieved April 21 2022 Spangler Todd November 11 2016 Wally Lamb Digital Book I ll Take You There to Feature Elizabeth Banks Short Film EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved April 21 2022 Faires Robert December 2 2016 Book Review I ll Take You There The Austin Chronicle Archived from the original on January 30 2017 Retrieved April 21 2022 Clehane Diane November 30 2016 Why Hollywood Types and Authors Like Wally Lamb Love Metabook Adweek Retrieved April 21 2022 Lewis Andy April 23 2018 Real Life Murder That Inspired Twin Peaks Probed in New Book The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved April 21 2022 Tangcay Jazz January 6 2023 Women Were Better Represented in Hollywood During the Silent Film Era AFI Study Reports EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved April 3 2023 AFI Awarded 350 000 Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities American Film Institute January 6 2023 Retrieved April 3 2023 Barry Matt Pioneers First Women Filmmakers Coming to Blu ray amp DVD Nov 20th from Kino NitrateVille Retrieved April 16 2022 Bernstein Paula October 24 2016 Pioneers First Women Filmmakers Aims to Showcase the Golden Age of Women Directors Filmmaker Magazine Retrieved April 17 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lois Weber nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Lois Weber Weber Lois 1881 1939 Encyclopedia com Lois Weber at the Women Film Pioneers Project Literature on Lois Weber virtual history com The Films of Lois Weber mikegrost com Lois Weber at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lois Weber amp oldid 1187981022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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