top of page
Vintage original trimmed 8 x 10 in. US single-weight glossy photograph from the 1920's law- and infidelity-themed silent film melodrama, PRISONERS OF LOVE, released in 1921 by the Goldwyn Distributing Corporation and directed by Arthur Rosson. 
 
The image depicts Blanche Davis (Betty Compson), seated on her bed, gazing loonily at the framed photograph of her lover, James Randolph (Emory Johnson), after having read the telegram from him which sits next to her. The exquisite lighting includes a symbolic halo around her head which is complimented by the light from a single candle on a nearby table. Lightly trimmed to approximately 7 x 9.5 in., it is in fine-condition.

 

*"Prisoners of Love is a lost 1921 American silent drama film produced by and starring Betty Compson and distributed by Goldwyn Pictures. It was directed by Arthur Rosson and was Compson's first film after a year's hiatus from film making."
*(source: Wikipedia)

 

Provenance: The DeWitt Bodeen Collection.

 
*"Prisoners of Love is a lost 1921 American silent drama film produced by and starring Betty Compson and distributed by Goldwyn Pictures. It was directed by Arthur Rosson and was Compson's first film after a year's hiatus from film making."

*(source: Wikipedia)

 

*"Indignant over the sudden discovery of her father's double life, Blanche Davis leaves home and under an assumed name obtains employment in San Francisco with lawyers Blair and Randolph. She becomes involved with Randolph, and though not married they live as man and wife. When her father comes to San Francisco with her younger sister, Randolph falls in love with the latter and Blair, loving Blanche, determines to see her righted and takes her east. Her father gives Randolph a check to settle matters with his former mistress; seeing her father's signature, Blanche decides, for her sister's sake, not to interfere with their marriage."
*(source: AFI Catalog of Feature Films)

 

Born Homer DeWitt Bodeen on July 25, 1908, in Fresno, California, he began his career as an actor and wrote more than 20 plays before entering the film business. He began his career in the film industry when his stage work drew the attention of film writer and producer Val Lewton, who arranged for Bodeen to work as a research assistant to British novelist Aldous Huxley. He published his first book-length contribution to entertainment history in 1937, Ladies of the Footlights, a slim volume of theater celebrity profiles. In the late 1930's, he began working for RKO and worked his way up to a script writer. His screenwriting credits include Cat People (1942), The Curse of the Cat People (1944), The Seventh Victim (1943), The Enchanted Cottage (1945), I Remember Mama (1948), Night Song (1948), and Billy Budd (1962). His play, Harvest of Years, premiered on Broadway in January 1948 and ran for two weeks. Beginning in the 1950's, he moved to television, writing mainly for anthology shows including Robert Montgomery PresentsClimax!, and Schlitz Playhouse of Stars, among others.

 

Bodeen was a gay man and, in the 1950’s, was Val Dufour's companion, living with him. 

 

3RB

PRISONERS OF LOVE (1921) US 8x10 Photograph 01

SKU: CS-PRISONERS-S01
$75.00Precio
    bottom of page