The Dawn of a Tomorrow (1915 film)

The Dawn of a Tomorrow is a 1915 American silent film starring Mary Pickford, produced by Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company and directed by James Kirkwood. It is based on a 1909 stage play starring Eleanor Robson Belmont, her last stage role. This film was re-released by Paramount in 1919 under their Success-Series banner and a copy survives in Sweden today. The story was remade in 1924 again as The Dawn of a Tomorrow with Jacqueline Logan in the lead.[1]

The Dawn of a Tomorrow
Film pamphlet
Directed byJames Kirkwood
Written byEve Unsell (scenario)
Based onThe Dawn of a Tomorrow
by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Produced byAdolph Zukor
Daniel Frohman
StarringMary Pickford
David Powell
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 7, 1915 (1915-06-07)
Running time
5 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
Photo card for the film.

Plot

edit

The Dawn of Tomorrow is about a young girl named Glad (Mary Pickford) who becomes the inspiration for a suicidal millionaire to keep living. Glad, the selfless heroine, lives in a poor neighborhood of London. She tries to persuade her sweetheart Dandy (played by David Powell), who is an unscrupulous thief, to give up his ways, though initially not to much avail. At the same time, the millionaire Sir Oliver Holt (Forrest Robinson) has been diagnosed with incurable dementia. Because of this, Holt becomes depressed to the point where he plans his suicide.

Having disguised himself as a beggar, Holt wanders into the slums, where Glad lives. They encounter each other while he is preparing to kill himself, and Glad manages to persuade him out of suicide before it is too late. Her compassion and empathy towards Holt's sufferings touches his heart and he begins to have hope in his recovery. Meanwhile, Dandy has been falsely accused of murder, and only Holt's corrupt nephew (Robert Cain) could prove his innocence. Glad, for the sake of her love for Dandy, pleads with Holt's unnamed nephew to help him. The nephew refuses, however, and tries to assault Glad. Holt then comes to her rescue and chastises his nephew. Glad and Dandy are now finally reunited and the millionaire Holt, now seeming to be renewed in mind and spirit, vows to a life of charity and is suicidal no more.

Cast

edit

Preservation status

edit
  • A print is preserved in Europe at Stockholm's Enemateket-Svenska Filminstitutet.[2]

References

edit
edit