Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1922)

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<m OTION PICTURP MAGAZINE i "Mrs. Mainwaring came to ^nt you're enough. You're me on the day I went away," r • j i r J> Carlotta told him. "She told f rlend "lOUgh for me. me you were marrying me Sir MarCUS.felt Conceptions out of pity for me/ She said . and reconceptions dissolving that you really loved her . . . jn hjs bram He ha(j & fleet_ always had ...".' • , r t j-j.1 • i mg picture of Judith in her drawing-room, comfortable, correct — eager, too . . . But there he was!.' Obviously, as a man and a human, he couldn't leave a young and tender girl alone in London, penniless, hatless, friendless, a prey Sir Marcus Ordeyne took Carlotta home. It was' far more surprising to Sir Marcus;than it was to Carlotta.' Carlotta had been brought up to believe that men ruled her destiny. "There was nothing particularly strange to her in the idea that a man should take her to his home and install her in a little private seraglio of his own. Doubtless, he would be her husband, and if not, he would find some one else for her. To Carlotta every man she ' caught a glimpse of was a potential husband. She had -enough faith in Sir Marcus Ordeyne to believe that if he did not /Tv select himself for her he .AGS. MORALS Told in short-story form, by permission, from the Realart production of the scenario by Julia Crawford Ivers, based on the novel, "The Morals of Marcus," by William J. Locke. Directed by William D. Taylor, and starring May McAvcy. The cast: Carlotta May McAvoy Sir Marcus Ordeyne .William Carleton Sebastian Pasquale William E. Lawrence Judith Mainwaring Kathlyn Williams Antoinette Bridgeta Clark Stenson Sydney Bracey Harry ;. Starke Patterson Hamdi . ,. Nicolas de Buiz Mrs. MacMurray . :... Marian Skinner would find one "just as thin." Man was a species called "husband" to Carlotta. There was, as yet, no further differentiation in her mind than that of "fat" and "thin." She liked living in the home of Sir Marcus Ordeyne. A nice woman named Mrs. MacMurray took her shopping and they bought "queer" English clothes, tweed skirts and sweaters and straight silk dinner frocks. Sir Marcus had told her she must not wear her Turkish costume again. She had put it away, obediently. Carlotta rather changed things for Sir Marcus. In the first place, she cleared up his understanding as to his friendship for Judith Mainwaring, or, rather, her friendship for him. He had always regarded it as a tranquil relationship, interesting but platonic. He could talk to her and be comfortable with her and there was just enough estheticism in the relationship to keep it from being daily bread. But now, suddenly, he knew that he dared not tell Judith about Carlotta, and if he dared not tell Judith about Carlotta there was a reason. Some fundamental reason. What was it? If Judith were just his very good friend she would be interested in Carlotta. But Marcus knew, quite