Our Mutual Girl, No. 35's primary photo
  • Our Mutual Girl, No. 35 (1914)
  • Short | Short, Drama
Primary photo for Our Mutual Girl, No. 35
Our Mutual Girl, No. 35 (1914)
Short | Short, Drama

Before Margaret left town to visit the John Hays Hammonds at Lookout Hill, the famous estate in Gloucester. Mass., she determined to get some toys for Baby Lily. She took counsel of Jean Parke, her very good friend, who had been Our Mutual...See moreBefore Margaret left town to visit the John Hays Hammonds at Lookout Hill, the famous estate in Gloucester. Mass., she determined to get some toys for Baby Lily. She took counsel of Jean Parke, her very good friend, who had been Our Mutual Girl's sponsor in New York artistic and literary circles, and Miss Parke suggested that Margaret visit Rose O'Neill, creator of the famous Kewpies. So Our Mutual Girl and Miss Parke motored to Miss O'Neill's studios. Miss O'Neill, artist, painter, and author, drew Kewpie pictures for Margaret and, when she learned that Our Mutual Girl intended to buy some Kewpies for Baby Lily, insisted that Margaret accept as gifts a number of the handsomest and cutest of these sprites. Having seen the little foundling safe with her old nurse, Sally. Margaret felt free to go to Gloucester. There "Jack" Hammond, inventor of the method of steering ships by wireless, not alone showed Our Mutual Girl how he maneuvered a huge vessel about the harbor, though the ship did not have a soul aboard her, but he treated Margaret with a view of his latest invention, an electrical dog that hopped and played about as lively as if it were a real dog. Our Mutual Girl, ever adventurous, determined that she would go out early one morning with the fishing fleet. Her friends tried to dissuade her, saying that the trip would be nasty and dirty and smelly. But Margaret became only the more enamored of the idea. So one morning she quietly left her hostess' estate, slipped to the wharves, and soon was aboard an old fishing smack. For several hours, and it was all before eight o'clock in the morning, too, the fleet stood back and forth, now throwing out its nets, now visiting the lobster pots. An old, weather-beaten sailor taught Margaret how to hold a live and very bitey lobster so that its claws couldn't invade Our Mutual Girl's soft hands. But Margaret quickly gave up the idea of playing with lobsters when she found aboard the fishing smack a tiny kitten, the pet of the captain. When Margaret returned she had a lengthy talk about the future of Baby Lily and it was suggested that Margaret visit a Mrs. Rogers, a very wealthy and childless widow who wanted to adopt a little girl. Our Mutual girl adopted the suggestion reluctantly, because she wanted to keep Baby Lily for herself, and she became more determined to do so when she found that Mrs. Rogers' idea of a baby girl was about the same as of her toy dog. So Margaret left Gloucester for Newport with the question of the baby's future still unsettled. Written by Moving Picture World synopsis See less
Read more: Plot summary
Director
John W. Noble (as Jack Noble)
Writer
Carolyn Wells (story)
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Status
Edit Released
Updated Sep 14, 1914

Release date
Sep 14, 1914 (United States)

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Cast

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12 cast members
Name Known for
Norma Phillips
Margaret, Our Mutual Girl Margaret, Our Mutual Girl   See fewer
Mayme Kelso
Mrs. Knickerbocker - Margaret's Aunt Mrs. Knickerbocker - Margaret's Aunt   See fewer
Graham Velsey
Lawyer Ned Vale (as C.W. Velsey) Lawyer Ned Vale (as C.W. Velsey)   See fewer
Jessie Lewis
Lewis - Mrs. Knickerbocker's Maid Lewis - Mrs. Knickerbocker's Maid   See fewer
Melitha Elam
Margaret's Old Nurse - Sally Margaret's Old Nurse - Sally   See fewer
James Alling
Mrs. Knickerbocker's Butler Mrs. Knickerbocker's Butler   See fewer
Dorothy Rangess
Baby Lily Baby Lily   See fewer
Clara Whipple
The Baby's Mother The Baby's Mother   See fewer
Rose O'Neill
Self - Creator of the Kewpie Doll Self - Creator of the Kewpie Doll   See fewer
Edith Walkers
Edith (unconfirmed) Edith (unconfirmed)   See fewer
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