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The Millers Daughter (1905 film)

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Genre
  
Drama, Short

Duration
  

Running time
  
13 minutes

5.2/10
IMDb

Initial release
  
November 6, 1905 (USA)

Story by
  
Steele MacKaye

The Miller's Daughter (1905 film) The Millers Daughter 1905 Steele MacKaye Thomas Edison YouTube

Writer
  
Steele MacKaye (play)

Directors
  
Edwin S. Porter, Wallace McCutcheon, Sr.

Characters
  
Carringford, Hazels baby, Carringfords wife, Hazel, Hazels father, Rodney

Genres
  
Silent film, Drama, Short Film

Similar movies
  
Edwin S Porter and Wallace McCutcheon - Sr directed both

The Miller's Daughter is a 1905 American silent film produced by Edison Manufacturing Company. Edison employees Wallace McCutcheon and Edwin S. Porter are generally credited as directors. The film is based on the melodrama Hazel Kirke by Steele MacKaye.

Plot

In the original play, Hazel Kirke, daughter of miller Dunstan Kirke, is expected to marry Aaron Rodney because he rescued their mill from insolvency. She instead marries Arthur Carrington, Lord Travers against her father's wishes. Carrington's mother also disapproves, and tells Hazel the marriage is illegal because her son is already married. Despondent, Hazel tries to drown herself, but Carrington rescues her.

In Porter's adaptation, Carringford is a sophisticated urbanite and Rodney is a simple farmer. Both court Hazel, but she plans to marry Carringford against her father's wishes. On the wedding day, Carrington's real wife appears with proof they are married. Hazel is disowned and goes to live in the city slums. She tries to make a living sewing, but her sewing machine is repossessed. She returns home to beg forgiveness but is again rejected by her father. She plans to commit suicide in the millrace, but Rodney saves her. After she marries and has a baby, she goes to her father with his new grandchild, and he forgives her.

Film historian Charles Musser writes of Porter's adaptation, "[Hazel] must learn the role of the dutiful daughter, wife, and mother. The father assumes a godlike role. The change in title from the woman's name to her designated relationship to her father corresponds to this essential repositioning."

References

The Miller's Daughter (1905 film) Wikipedia
The Millers Daughter (1905 film) IMDb The Millers Daughter (1905 film) themoviedb.org