Brown of Harvard (1918 film)

Brown of Harvard, also known as Tom Brown at Harvard, is a 1918 film based on the 1906 Broadway play Brown of Harvard by Rida Johnson Young and the novel by Young and Gilbert Colman. The Washington State University football team and its coach, William "Lone Star" Dietz, participated in filming while in Southern California for the 1916 Rose Bowl.[1]

Brown of Harvard
Newspaper advertisement.
Directed byHarry Beaumont
Produced byWilliam N. Selig
Written byHarry Beaumont
Based onthe 1906 play Brown of Harvard by Rida Johnson Young and the 1907 novel Brown of Harvard by Young and Gilbert Colman
StarringTom Moore
Hazel Daly
Distributed byPerfection Pictures (George Kleine System)
Release date
  • December 27, 1918 (1918-12-27)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[2] Tom Brown (Moore), a student at Harvard University, is engaged to Evelyn Ames (Daly). Her brother has become desperately involved with Marian Thorne (Winston). In an effort to protect his fiance's brother, the stigma associated with Marian Thorne's condition rests upon Tom. Evelyn breaks her engagement. Wilton Ames (Greene) crowns his borrowing of money from Tom by stealing a blank check and forging it for $300 to get Marion out of the city so that her condition may not get known. Gerald Thorne (McGrail), brother of Marian and stoke on the Harvard crew, refuses to enter the race after he is given a spurious note from his sister saying that she is leaving the city and wants to see him. Brown is put in his place and the race is won. Following the race, Gerald confronts him and charges him with being responsible for his sister's downfall. Evelyn demands that Tom marry Marian when Wilton finally confesses that he is the man involved. With Brown shown in his true light a happy reconciliation follows.

Cast

gollark: "You" are some specific brain modules which handle consciousness and language and whatever; it's hardly guaranteed that you have write access to everything else.
gollark: That... doesn't really make sense?
gollark: All mental things don't "really exist". This is hardly very relevant.
gollark: We should probably be clearer about human values as moral intuitions versus what you consciously/deliberatively think are the right ones.
gollark: You *probably* can't just switch your moral intuitions over to "I like murder now". If you can, probably don't try that.

References

  1. Progressive Silent Film List: Brown of Harvard at silentera.com
  2. "Reviews: Brown of Harvard". Exhibitors Herald. New York City: Exhibitors Herald Company. 6 (3): 25. January 12, 1918.


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