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Broken Hearts of Hollywood

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Directed by
  
Lloyd Bacon

Edited by
  
Clarence Kolster

Initial release
  
14 August 1926 (USA)

Screenplay
  
C. Graham Baker

6.6/10
IMDb

Cinematography
  
Virgil Miller

Production company
  
Warner Bros.

Director
  
Lloyd Bacon

Production company
  
Warner Bros.

Broken Hearts of Hollywood httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenddaBro

Screenplay by
  
Raymond Schrock Edward Clark Graham Baker (scenario)

Starring
  
Patsy Ruth Miller Louise Dresser Douglas Fairbanks Jr.

Story by
  
Raymond L. Schrock, Edward Clark

Cast
  
Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Patsy Ruth Miller, Louise Dresser, Stuart Holmes, Anders Randolf

Similar
  
Private Izzy Murphy, Women They Talk About, The Other Tomorrow, Honky Tonk, Stark Mad

Broken Hearts of Hollywood is a 1926 comedy drama film released by Warner Bros. and directed by Lloyd Bacon. It is unknown, but the film might have been released with a Vitaphone soundtrack. A print of the film exists.

Plot

Virginia Perry leaves her husband and child to return to Hollywood; but having dissipated her beauty and seeking solace in drink, she soon finds herself another "has been" on the fringe of movie circles. Her daughter, Betty Anne, wins a national beauty contest, and en route to Hollywood she meets Hal, another contest winner; both fail in their first screen attempts and turn to Marshall, an unscrupulous trickster, who enrolls them in his acting school. Molly, a movie extra, induces Betty Anne to attend a wild party; she is arrested in a raid; and Hal, to raise the money for her bail, takes a "stunt" job in which he is badly hurt. Betty Anne seeks the aid of star actor McLain, who obtains for her the leading female role in his next film; Virginia, who is cast as her mother, keeps silent about their relationship until the film is completed. Apprehensive for her daughter's safety, she shoots Marshall while in a drunken stupor and is arrested. At the trial, Betty Anne's testimony saves her mother, who is then happily united with her daughter and Hal.

References

Broken Hearts of Hollywood Wikipedia