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Good and Naughty

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Good and Naughty
Lobby card
Directed byMalcolm St. Clair
Written byAvery Hopwood
Pierre Collings
Based onNaughty Cinderella
by Henri Falk and René Peter
StarringPola Negri
Tom Moore
CinematographyBert Glennon
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 7, 1926 (1926-06-07)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Good and Naughty is a 1926 American silent romantic comedy film directed by Malcolm St. Clair and starring Pola Negri and Tom Moore. It was based on the play Naughty Cinderella by Henri Falk and René Peter. Released in 1926, it is a romantic comedy of mistaken identity about an attractive interior decorator (Negri) who is forced to make herself unattractive so she can be hired by a firm that has a policy against hiring attractive women.[1][2][3]

Plot

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As described in a film magazine,[4] because a firm has a policy against hiring attractive women because they soon marry other employees and then quit, Germaine Morris makes herself unattractive and is hired as an interior decorator. She is secretly in love with the firm's head, Gerald Gray, who has been courting Claire, the wife of one of his patrons, Thomas Fenton. Claire invites Gerald to accompany them on a yachting trip. To allay suspicions, Gerald's friend Bunny West arranges for chorus girl Chouchou Rouselle to come along with them as his pretend fiancé. When the latter is unable to go, Germaine tells Bunny that she will go instead of the chorus girl. Germaine boards as her regular self, a woman of amazing loveliness, and Gerald, Bunny, and the Fenton's all fall in love with her. After several situations, including Claire confessing to her husband that she was being courted by another man, Gerald arranges a reconciliation between the husband and wife and then proposes an arrangement between himself and Germaine so that she can become a former employee.[5]

Cast

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Tom Moore and Pola Negri in Good and Naughty

Reception

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Good and Naughty earned a measured approval by New York Times film critic Mordaunt Hall, who deemed the film “an artificial but competently acted screen chronicle” and “an agreeable entertainment proving its worth by the periodical outbursts of laughter it elicited.” Hall added that though the film was appreciated by the theatre patrons “some of the humor is built on extraneous gags that do not help the continuity of the narrative, even though they had the desired effect upon the audience.”[6][7]

Preservation

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With no prints of Good and Naughty located in any film archives,[8] it is a lost film.[9]

Notes

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  1. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: Good and Naughty at silentera.com
  2. ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: Good and Naughty
  3. ^ Dwyer, 1996 p. 116: Filmography
  4. ^ "New Pictures: Good and Naughty". Exhibitors Herald. 25 (06). Chicago, Illinois: Exhibitors Herald Company: 72. April 24, 1926. Retrieved March 25, 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ Dwyer, 1996 p. 116: Filmography, plot synopsis
  6. ^ Hall, 1926: minor edit for clarity, continuity, meaning unchanged.
  7. ^ Dwyer, 1996 p. 98: “...rave reviews…”
  8. ^ The Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: Good and Naughty
  9. ^ Good and Naughty at Lost Film Files: Paramount Pictures - 1926 Archived August 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine

References

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