Joan of Plattsburg
Joan of Plattsburg is a 1918 propaganda drama film co-directed by William Humphrey and George Loane Tucker, written by Tucker from a story by Porter Emerson Browne, photographed by Oliver T. Marsh, released by the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation and starring Mabel Normand.[1]
Plot synopsis
An orphan (Normand) who overhears German spies plotting in a basement near an American World War I training camp and believes that, like a modern day Joan of Arc, she's listening to disembodied voices.[2]
Cast
- Mabel Normand ... Joan
- Robert Elliott ... Capt. Lane
- William Frederic ... Supt. Fisher (billed as William Fredericks)
- Joseph W. Smiley ... Ingleton
- Edward Elkas ... Silverstein
- John Webb Dillon ... Miggs
- Willard Dashiell ... Colonel
- Edith McAlpin ... Mrs. Lane
- Isabel Vernon ... Mrs. Miggs
References
External links
- Joan of Plattsburg in the New York Times
- Joan of Plattsburg at IMDB
- Joan of Plattsburg at Turner Classic Movies
- Joan of Plattsburg in the Toronto World
- Joan of Plattsburg in Visions of the Maid