When the movies were young (1925)

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The Movies Tempt 31 and instructions about keeping "inside the lines" and "outside the lines," the camera opened up, ground away for about twenty feet, and the ordeal was over. When work was finished for the day, Mr. McCutcheon paid his new actor five dollars and told him to call on the morrow. So the next morning there was an early start to the studio. They were to work outside, and there were to be horses! I shall never forget the sadly amused expression my husband brought home with him, the evening of that second day. Nor his comments: "It's not so bad, you know, five dollars for simply riding a horse in the wilds of Fort Lee on a cool spring day. I think it wouldn't be a bad idea for you to go down and see what you can do. Don't tell them who you are, I mean, don't tell them you're my wife. I think it is better business not to." So a few days later, I dolled up for a visit to the studio. After I had waited an hour or so, Mr. McCutcheon turned to me and said, "All right, just put a little make-up on; this isn't very important." There was no coaching for the acting ; only one thing mattered, and that was, not to appear as though hunting frantically for the lines on the floor that marked your stage, while the scenes were being taken. Mr. Griffith and I "listened in" on all the stories and experiences the actors at the studio had to tell. We would have all the information we could get on the subject of moving pictures, those tawdry and cheap moving pictures, the existence of which we had hitherto been aware of only through the lurid posters in front of the motion picture places — those terrible moving picture places where we wouldn't be caught dead. But we could find use for as many of those little "fives" as might come our way.