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  • Our Mutual Girl, No. 29 (1914)
  • Short | Short, Drama
Our Mutual Girl, No. 29 (1914)
Short | Short, Drama

Margaret has found The Woman with the Red Rose, as bidden to do by Madame Dolores. She has learned the secret that The Woman holds for her. It is fraught with either menace or joy, but which? Only distance and the flight of time can give ...See moreMargaret has found The Woman with the Red Rose, as bidden to do by Madame Dolores. She has learned the secret that The Woman holds for her. It is fraught with either menace or joy, but which? Only distance and the flight of time can give the proper perspective to that. And then, while Our Mutual Girl, Mrs. Knickerbocker, Madge Travis, Margaret's friend, and Howard Dunbar, The Man of Mystery, are discussing the excitement of the preceding days while Margaret's quest was on, Our Mutual Girl, with characteristic impulsiveness, abruptly changes the topic of conversation. Water that has gone over the dam, ever has been uninteresting to Margaret. Barring her artistic standards, she is a post-futurist in action. She had met Lieut. John C. Porte, who will try to fly across the Atlantic in his huge airboat, in the early winter. And now, as the hydro-aeroplane rapidly nears completion, the New York newspapers are filled with stories of this remarkable undertaking. Margaret, ever an omnivorous reader of the day's news, sees a story of Lieutenant Porte's trying-out flights. Instantly she makes up her mind to go up in The America. And, the idea once implanted in her swift, fertile brain, action rapidly follows. She broaches the subject to her aunt. Mrs. Knickerbocker remonstrates. Miss Travis objects. Dunbar teases, and foolishly adds to Margaret's determination to go up by wagering with her that she will not fly. And that night Margaret leaves her aunt's Fifth Avenue house, to go alone to Hammondsport. Early the next morning she reaches the aeroplane factory of Glenn Curtiss and a few minutes later, she is away in a wonderful down-the-wind flight in The America with Porte, the first and thus far the only woman who has gone aloft in the trans-Atlantic flier. Elated with her success she returns that night to Mrs. Knickerbocker's house and collects her wager from the astounded Dunbar. Written by Moving Picture World synopsis See less
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Director
John W. Noble (as Jack Noble)
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Status
Edit Released
Updated Aug 3, 1914

Release date
Aug 3, 1914 (United States)

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Cast

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7 cast members
Name Known for
Norma Phillips
Margaret, Our Mutual Girl Margaret, Our Mutual Girl   See fewer
Mayme Kelso
Mrs. Knickerbocker, Margaret's Aunt Mrs. Knickerbocker, Margaret's Aunt   See fewer
Edward Brennan
Van Courtland Dunbar, a.k.a. Raffles Van Courtland Dunbar, a.k.a. Raffles   See fewer
Glenn Curtiss
Self - Aviator (as Glenn H. Curtiss) Self - Aviator (as Glenn H. Curtiss)   See fewer
John C. Porte
Self - Aviator (as John Cyril Porte) Self - Aviator (as John Cyril Porte)   See fewer
Madge Tyrone
Madge Travers Madge Travers   See fewer
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