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The Gilded Highway | |
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Directed by | J. Stuart Blackton |
Written by | Marian Constance Blackton (adaptation) |
Based on | A Little More by William Babington Maxwell |
Starring | Dorothy Devore John Harron Macklyn Arbuckle |
Cinematography | Nicholas Musuraca |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 74 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Gilded Highway is a lost 1926 American silent drama film directed by J. Stuart Blackton and starring Dorothy Devore, John Harron, and Macklyn Arbuckle.[1][2]
As described in a film magazine review,[3] a rich uncle dies and leaves money to the Welby family. The results are disastrous. Young Jack Welby abandons Amabel, the young woman he is engaged to; his sister Primrose quits her fiance Hugo Blythe; and the whole family goes in for high living. In the end when they are broke, they come to their senses, but not before all family members experience considerable grief. A faithful former servant who runs their old home as a boarding house comes to their assistance. The lovers are reunited.
With no prints of The Gilded Highway in any film archives,[4] it is a lost film.