The Bridal Chair

The Bridal Chair is a British silent motion picture of 1919 directed by G. B. Samuelson and starring Miriam J. Sabbage, C. M. Hallard, Daisy Burrell and Mary Rorke. A drama, it was written by Samuelson and Roland Pertwee.

The Bridal Chair
Produced byG. B. Samuelson
Written byG. B. Samuelson
Roland Pertwee
StarringMiriam J. Sabbage
C. M. Hallard
Daisy Burrell
Mary Rorke
Production
company
Release date
  • 1919 (1919)
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageSilent
English intertitles

The film was premiered at a Trade Show in July 1919.[1]

Plot

Sylvane Sheridan is a cripple in a wheelchair, engaged to Lord Louis Lewis, a faithful middle-aged man who resists the temptation to abandon her for other young ladies, such as Jill Hargreaves. He has vowed not to marry anyone else while Sylvane survives.

Cast

Daisy Burrell in 1919, on the cover of Pictures and Picturegoer
gollark: Yes, but this makes it not a special case. It's very elegant.
gollark: f(x)=x^6, g(x)=2x, you can just *add* f and g to get a cool new function returning x^6+2x.
gollark: But it lets you operate on functions really nicely.
gollark: In an array language, this is the natural representation.
gollark: See, mathematically, a function is just a specific type of set of ordered pairs.

References

  1. Rachael Low, Roger Manvell, The History of the British Film: 1918-1929 (Allen & Unwin, 1971), p. 140
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