The Mating
(1915) United States of America
B&W : Five reels
Directed by Raymond B. West
Cast: Bessie Barriscale [Doris Willard], Lewis J. Cody (Lew Cody) [‘Bullet Dick’ Ames], Enid Markey [Daisy Arnold], Walter Whitman (Walt Whitman) [Reverend Phelps Willard], Margaret Thompson [Eleanor Ames], Ida Lewis [Miss Fitch]
New York Motion Picture Corporation production; distributed by Mutual Film Corporation. / Scenario by C. Gardner Sullivan. Production supervision by Thomas H. Ince. / Released 22 July 1915. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format.
Drama.
Synopsis: [?] [From The Moving Picture World]? Doris Willard, the daughter of a village minister, achieves the realization of her great dream, a year at college. Doris, although a sweet and pretty girl, is greatly handicapped by her clothes. On her arrival at college she is eyed by the other girls with concealed amusement and curiosity and soon realizes that she “doesn’t belong.” The girls snub her at every opportunity and she is desperately lonesome and longs for companionship. The Saturday before Thanksgiving when everyone else has gone to the big Princeton-Yale game, Doris sits alone in her room. She picks up the newspaper and sees in it a picture that greatly appeals to her. It is a newspaper cut of “Bullet” Dick Ames, the universal choice for the “All-American Eleven.” She conceives a desperate plan. She thinks nobody at her college knows Dick and decides she will make the girls think he is in love with her. She writes a note to herself to which she signs Dick’s name. The note is a proposal of marriage. This she drops on the porch of the girls’ hall and it is picked up by one of the girls who reads it to the bunch. Daisy Arnold, the undisputed ruler of the “Beauty Squad,” will not believe that Dick knows Doris, and writes to his sister, Eleanor, asking both her and Dick down for the holidays. In her letter she tells Eleanor about Doris claiming Dick has asked her to marry him. Dick sees the letter and he and his sister accept the invitation. When Dick sees Doris, he decides to help her out in her deception. Doris is panic-stricken on the night of the reception given in Eleanor’s and Dick’s honor, but when she is introduced to Dick he says, “Why sure, we are old friends,” and Daisy and her friends are much disappointed, their plan for humiliating Doris having fallen through. After meeting Dick, Doris is unwilling to carry out the deception, but he insists, and before his visit is over they are much in love with each other. Doris, however, refuses to marry Dick, thinking he has asked her out of pity, but through Eleanor’s efforts he manages to make her understand that he really loves her.
Survival status: (unknown)
Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].
Listing updated: 17 October 2022.
References: Tarbox-Lost p. 248 : Website-IMDb.
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