The Prodigal Wife is a lost[1] 1918 American silent drama film directed by Frank Reicher and starring Mary Boland. It is based on a short story by Edith Barnard Delano that appeared in Harper's Magazine.

The Prodigal Wife
Still with Harris Gordon, Lucy Cotton, and Mary Boland
Directed byFrank Reicher
Written byEve Unsell
Based on"The Flaming Ramparts"
by Edith Barnard Delano
Produced byScreencraft Pictures
StarringMary Boland
CinematographyIra B. Schwartz
Production
company
Screencraft Productions
Distributed byPioneer Film; State's Rights basis
Release date
  • December 1918 (1918-12)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

The film may have been rereleased in 1919 as a 5-reeler.[2]

Plot

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As described in a film magazine,[3] Dr. Frederick Farnham (Bloomer) and his wife Marion (Boland) live a precarious existence in a cheap boarding house. Unhappy because she believes she is neglected, Marna runs off with another boarder who says he has "struck it rich". Dr. Farnham returns home to tell his wife that their days of poverty are over as he has obtained a position on the staff of a hospital, but finds that he and his four-year-old daughter Marna have been deserted. He tells her that her mother is dead and was a wonderful person. Marion goes down and down and becomes a shell of her former self and believes her daughter is dead. Years later, driven to extreme poverty, the mother determines to seek her husband out to obtain some relief. The doctor is now well-to-do and Marna (Cotton) has grown to womanhood. Marion goes to the doctor's home and does not find him there, but discovers her daughter in the flesh before her. Adroitly she finds out that Marna worships her "dead" mother, and Marion leaves, determined to sin no more. Marna marries a writer, Dallas Harvey (Gordon), and Marion becomes the family nursemaid after Marna has a child. When temptation comes to Marna the same way it did to Marion years earlier, Marion divulges her story and saves her daughter from sin. Dr. Farnham overhears the counsel and forgives his wife and begs her to return to him, but she refuses, declaring that she intends to devote her life to saving others just as she saved her daughter.

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ The Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Prodigal Wife
  2. ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The Prodigal Wife(Wayback)
  3. ^ "Reviews: The Prodigal Wife". Exhibitors Herald. 7 (23). New York City: Exhibitors Herald Company: 21. November 30, 1918.
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