Corporal Kate is a 1926 silent film comedy romance directed by Paul Sloane and starring Vera Reynolds and Julia Faye.[1] The film was produced by C. Gardner Sullivan, with production at De Mille Pictures Corp., and released by Producers Distributing Corporation.[2]
Corporal Kate | |
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Directed by | Paul Sloane |
Written by | Albert Shelby Le Vino John Krafft(titles) |
Based on | an original story by Zelda Sears and Marion Orth |
Produced by | C. Gardner Sullivan |
Starring | Vera Reynolds Julia Faye |
Cinematography | Henry Cronjager |
Production company | De Mille Pictures Corp. |
Distributed by | Producers Distributing Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 1hr. 20mins; 8 reels |
Country | USA |
Languages | Silent film English intertitles |
In World War I, Brooklyn manicurists Kate Jones (Vera Reynolds) and Becky Finkelstein (Julia Faye), work up a song-and-dance act that they intend to take overseas to entertain the troops. Through the influence of a friend, the girls are assigned to the French front.
Both girls fall in love with Jackson Clark (Kenneth Thompson), a rich playboy, who is in the American Expeditionary Forces, along with Williams (Harry Allen), his valet. Evelyn (Majel Coleman), a friend of Jackson's, also goes to France as a Red Cross nurse
Jackson falls for Kate and is jealous of Evelyn, but, unknown to any of them, Evelyn loves an American aviator. When the Germans advance, Becky is killed, dying in Jackson's arms.
Kate loses her arm in a selfless and heroic action, and Jackson, still greatly in love with her, proposes that they spend the rest of their lives together.
Although not directly an aviation film, Corporal Kate featured a number of stunt pilots, including Frank Clarke and Leo Nomis flying a Standard L 6 and Thomas-Morse aircraft.[3] [N 1]
Film reviewer Hal Erickson, in his review of Corporal Kate, noted, the girls "...encounter all manner of merry misadventures. Things get serious, however, when both Kate and Becky fall in love with the same doughboy, Private Jackson (Kenneth Thompson). This romantic triangle is rather bluntly resolved when tragedy strikes on the battlefield."[4]
Corporal Kate is preserved in the Library of Congress collection and UCLA Film and Television Archive.[5][6]
Films directed by Paul Sloane | |
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