Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Church and the Woman

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Directed by
  
Raymond Longford

Starring
  
Lottie Lyell

Production company
  
Longford-Pugliese

Director
  
Raymond Longford

Written by
  
Raymond Longford

Cast
  
Lottie Lyell

Produced by
  
Humbert Pugliese

Edited by
  
Ernest Higgins

Initial release
  
13 October 1917

Producer
  
Humbert Pugliese

Cinematography
  
Ernest Higgins

Based on
  
the novel 'A Priest's Secret' by Edmund Finn

Similar
  
The Midnight Wedding, The Bushwhackers, The Fatal Wedding, The Man They Could Not Hang

The Church and the Woman is a 1917 Australian silent film directed by Raymond Longford set against the background of sectarianism in Australia. It is considered a lost film.

Contents

Synopsis

Eileen Shannon falls in love with Dr Burton . However he is a Protestant and her strongly Catholic father John refuses to give his consent to marriage between them.

Eileen pleads to her brother Darcy, a Catholic priest, for his help, but he does not support mixed marriages either.

John is murdered and Dr Burton is arrested for the crime and sentenced to death. The real murderer confesses to Darcy in the confessional. Unable to break the confidence of the confessional, Darcy admits to the murder and Dr Burton is freed. The murderer eventually confesses and Eileen marries Dr Burton.

Cast

  • Lottie Lyell as Eileen Shannon
  • Boyd Irwin as Dr Sidney Burton
  • Nada Conrade as Helen Burton
  • J.P. O'Neill as Mike Feeney
  • Harry Roberts as Father Darcy Shannon
  • Percy Walshe as John Shannon
  • Roland Watts-Phillips
  • Pat McGrath
  • George K. Chesterton Bonar
  • Production

    The movie was the first of three financed by exhibitor Humbert Pugliese and his mother Caroline. Shooting began in March 1917 with location filming at the Sacred Heart Church, Darlinghurst, Catholic Riverview College, Sydney, and Wentworth House, Vaucluse. A scene depicting a Catholic mass was filmed not by Protestant Longford but by his Catholic assistant, Pat McGrath.

    Lawsuits

    The production and distribution of the film was notable for the large number of lawsuits associated with it.

    The Monk and the Woman

    The producer of the film The Monk and the Woman sued Humbert Pugliese for copyright infringement. This was resolved when Pugliese agreed not to advertise The Church as the Woman in the press or on noticeboards without adding the words: "The film must not be confused with the film of the play entitled The Monk and the Woman."

    A Priest's Secret

    Later on the writer Edmund Finn succeeded in getting an injunction stopping the film being distributed on the grounds it was adapted from his novel, The Priest's Secret. Pugliese denied he had ever read the novel but Justice Street in the Equity Court of New South Wales found that there were too many similarities and ordered that Finn was entitled to an injunction, an account of profits, and an order for the delivering up of negatives.

    Pugliese appealed this decision in the Supreme Court but was unsuccessful. The court held that after comparing the film's script with the novel, it was clear the former had been adapted from the latter – the main incidents of the plot were the same, long passages in the script were taken verbatim from the novel, and there was one passage on page seven of the script where Longford used the name "Martin" when speaking of the character in his scenario, "Mike Feeny", who was obviously taken from the character, "Martin Sullivan", in the novel.

    The film was re-released with Edmund Finn credited as the author of the original novel.

    The Church and the Nun

    Pugliese and his Brisbane exhibitors sued a company for exhibiting a film under the title of The Church and the Nun. The court ruled in their favour, deciding that the other film had to make clear in advertising it was a different movie from The Church and the Woman.

    Ernest Higgins

    The cinematographer of the film, Ernest Higgins, sued Pugliese for unpaid wages of almost £700, mostly for work on this film, and the jury found in his favour.

    Reception

    Despite its legal troubles, the film was a popular success at the box office.

    References

    The Church and the Woman Wikipedia