When the movies were young (1925)

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224 When the Movies were Young Mr. Griffith said of it, "If it serves no other use, it will teach cafe managers in the interior how to run a cafe." There was also "Oil and Water" in which Blanche Sweet surprised both exhibitors and fans by her splendid work in an unfamiliar role. It was strange that the one woman in whom Mr. Griffith had seen the least promise came to play the most important roles in his Biograph pictures. Strange also that Mary Pickford, who had played in so many more pictures than any of his stars, and was by far the most popular of them all, never played in a big Griffith picture. Before the end of the season, much curiosity was abroad as to what David Griffith was up to. Way out to the wilds of Chatsworth he was beating it day by day — this remote spot having been chosen to represent the Plains of Bethulia. For the story told in a book of the Apocrypha of Judith and Holofernes was the big thing Mr. Griffith was doing, and being so secretive about it, he had aroused everybody's curiosity. Blanche Sweet played the lead in this picture — "Judith of Bethulia" — Mr. Griffith's most pretentious movie so far, and his "Old Biograph" swan song. Henry Walthall and the late Alfred Paget were the male leads. How hard and how patiently the director worked with the temperamental Miss Sweet. For hours one day he had been trying to get some feeling, some warmth out of her, until the utter lack of response got his goat. So with bended knee he went after the fair lady and he gently but firmly kicked her off the stage — just politely kneed her off. Then, as was his wont, he burst forth in song, apparently oblivious of the situation. It was now Blanche's turn to worry. She backed up