When the movies were young (1925)

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98 When the Movies were Young show in such a place, for one seldom escaped without some weary soul finding a shoulder the while he indulged in forty winks. Besides this there were the better-known Keith and Proctor Theatres on Fourteenth Street, Twenty-third, and 125th Street, the Fourteenth Street Theatre, and the old Academy of Music. In the smaller American cities, the motion picture public was of middle-class homey folks who washed their own supper dishes in a hurry so as to see the new movie, and to meet their neighbors who, like themselves, dashed hatless to the nickelodeon, dragging along with them the children and the dog. Things like this happened, when dinner hour was approaching, and mother was anxiously awaiting her child: the neighborhood policeman would casually saunter over to the picture house, poke his head in at the door, spy the wanted child, tap her little shoulder, gently reproving: "Jennie, your mother wants you" — whereupon Jennie would reluctantly tear herself away so that the family could all sit down together to their pot-roast and noodles. Yes, Browning would need courage. "Pippa Passes" being ever in Mr. Griffith's mind these days, he scanned each new face in the studio as he mulled over the needed characters. The cast would be the best possible one he could get together.