The Blonde Saint | |
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Directed by | Sven Gade |
Produced by | Sam E. Rork |
Written by | Stephen French Whitman (novel The Isle of Life) Marion Fairfax (scenario) |
Starring |
Lewis Stone Doris Kenyon Gilbert Roland |
Cinematography | Tony Gaudio |
Distributed by | First National Pictures |
Release date
|
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Running time
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70 minutes 7 reels (6,800 feet) |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent |
The Blonde Saint is a 1926 silent romantic-adventure film produced by Sam E. Rork and released through First National Pictures. Lewis Stone and Doris Kenyon star and young newcomer Gilbert Roland is featured.
Producer Rork's 19-year-old daughter, Ann Rork, has a major role in the film as she has in her father's later produced The Notorious Lady. Lewis Stone also returned in The Notorious Lady.
An abridged and or incomplete version of this film survives in the British Film Institute National Film and Television Archive, London.
The plot of the film bears a striking resemblance to the plot of the Warner Brothers talkie, One Way Passage (1932). This silent appears to have been more exotic.