Showing the Odd Way Devised to Secure a Divorce and Its Interruption by Fate.
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50 min
Wealthy clubman Richard Dorian is a lighthearted soul who can't seem to take anything seriously, including his wife. Even when they decide to divorce, he meets the lawyers with a smile. When one of the attorneys suggests a charge of brutality, Mrs. Dorian points out that it is ludicrous. Dorian offers to have a party on his yacht, during which he will try very hard to be brutal to her to give her grounds for the divorce. Among the partygoers are Mrs. Dorian's guardian and Morgan, a smuggler who is buying the yacht. The guardian, who has squandered Mrs. Dorian's money on the stock market, kills himself. Dorian thinks that his wife killed him, gallantly takes the blame himself, and dives overboard. He becomes a tramp and is shanghaied by Morgan's men to become a stoker on his former yacht. Dorian's steward, Puck, is still onboard, and he tells Dorian that the guardian committed suicide.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Lionel Barrymore | Richard Dorian | Unowned | |
Grace Valentine | Mrs. Dorian | Unowned | |
William B. Davidson | Henry Morgan (as William Davidson) | Unowned | |
Louis Wolheim | Capt. Ross (as L. Robert Wolheim) | Unowned | |
Edgar L. Davenport | Theodore Sanders | Unowned | |
Lindsay J. Hall | B.G. Holding | Unowned | |
Bert Starkey | Puck (as Buckley Starkey) | Unowned |