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What Happened to Mary (sometimes erroneously referred to as What Happened to Mary?) is the first serial film made in the United States. [1] [2] Produced by Edison Studios, with screenplays by Horace G. Plympton, and directed by Charles Brabin, the action films starred Mary Fuller.
Leo Max Frank (April 17, 1884 – August 17, 1915) was an American lynching victim convicted in 1913 of the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan, an employee in a factory in Atlanta, Georgia where he was the superintendent. Frank's trial, conviction, and unsuccessful appeals attracted national attention.
What Happened to Mary (1912, 12-episode serial) An Unsullied Shield (1913) The Man Who Disappeared (serial, 1914) The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere (film) (1914) The Raven (1915) The Price of Fame (1916) That Sort (1916) The Adopted Son (1917) Red, White and Blue Blood (1917) The Sixteenth Wife (1917) Babette (1917) Mary Jane's Pa (1917) His ...
William Norwood Wadsworth (7 June 1874–6 June 1950) was an American actor of the silent era best known for his roles in early Westerns, playing the villain in What Happened to Mary? (1912), the first Western film serial [1] and for playing Samuel Pickwick in Mr Pickwick's Predicament (1912), an early screen adaptation of The Pickwick Papers.
January – While working as a cook at New York's Sloan Hospital under an assumed name, Typhoid Mary infects 25 people, and is placed in quarantine for life. January 12 – The United States House of Representatives rejects a proposal to give women the right to vote.
Mary Mitchell Slessor (2 December 1848 – 13 January 1915) was a Scottish Presbyterian missionary to Nigeria. Once in Nigeria, Slessor learned Efik , one of the numerous local languages, then began teaching.
May December, a new movie about a married couple with a dark history, hit Netflix on Dec. 1, and has already been causing a stir.The film stars Julianne Moore and Charles Melton as the married ...
Mary Mallon (September 23, 1869 – November 11, 1938), commonly known as Typhoid Mary, was an Irish-born American cook who is believed to have infected between 51 and 122 people with typhoid fever. The infections caused three confirmed deaths, with unconfirmed estimates of as many as 50.