Volume II: Filmography

 

ALGY'S AWFUL AUTO

 

(Princess)

October 31, 1913 (Friday)

Length: 1 reel (997 feet)

Character: Comedy

Director: Carl Louis Gregory

Scenario: Lloyd F. Lonergan

Cameraman: Carl Louis Gregory

Cast: Muriel Ostriche

 

ARTICLE, Reel Life, October 25, 1913:

"FEATURED LEADING LADY AT SEVENTEEN: A forthcoming 'Cosmopolitan Magazine' theatrical department story will be devoted to Muriel Ostriche of the 'movies.' She is the seventeen-year-old who polled two-hundred-thousand votes in a recent popularity contest, and is a featured leading lady. She has been in pictures over two years, meaning a start at the age of fifteen. This was with the Eclair Company, in small parts, and now the girl is the regular leading woman of the new Princess films, in the Mutual list. She is rated a very daring 'lead,' despite her youth, and one proof of it is her riding in an unmanageable automobile in a Princess farce, called Algy's Awful Auto, which anyone who intends buying an auto should not fail to see."

 

SYNOPSIS, The Moving Picture World, November 1, 1913:

"Algy had always been contented to ride in streetcars and never dreamed of the day that he would own an auto which his neighbors would dub 'The Yellow Devil.' His sweetheart was to blame for it, however, for she induced Algy to take a number of chances in a raffle gotten up by charity, and unfortunately for Algy, he won the auto. His first difficulty came when he tried to use the street in front of his house as a garage, but this is one case where the auto filled the bill, for it was small and humble and he could take it into his bedroom. This gave Algy an idea, and being afraid of facing traffic conditions, he learned to be a chauffeur indoors and succeeded fairly well, although he did damage considerable furniture. Later he took his sweetheart for a ride and had all the troubles of a real automobilist. By this time Algy was pretty well cleaned out of money and when his 'Yellow Devil' broke down again he was glad to trade it to a rural station agent for two tickets to his home town."

 

SYNOPSIS, Reel Life, October 25, 1913:

"In his latest comedy, Mr. Lonergan gently points a lesson for the young and impecunious who aspire to automobiles. Algy is a clerk, with an ambitious sweetheart who prevails upon him to buy chances in an automobile raffle - and as fate will have it, Algy gets the auto. It is called the 'Yellow Devil' - however, it is a petite affair, and Algy turns his bedroom into a garage and the front stairs into a speedway. Then he ventures out on the roads and meets with all the troubles of a seasoned automobilist. He gets caught in a speed trap - cuts up his tires on broken glass - is robbed by a rural garage keeper - and made to fork over a small fortune for a miserable meal at a country roadhouse. By this time Algy hasn't much money left in his clothes - so the next time the 'Yellow Devil' breaks down, he is thankful to trade it, with the station master, for two tickets home by rail. Algy and his sweetheart have a delightful ride home in the train. 'Well,' says the girl, consolingly, 'the auto didn't cost but $2.00 anyway - and I guess we got our money's worth.' But Algy is thinking of all he has laid out in that single afternoon - to return home no longer the distinguished owner of a car. He feels he has been cheated - and the reflection makes him a trifle pensive. In Algy's case there is an eloquent warning for every young man in moderate circumstances - and for too aspiring sweethearts."

 

REVIEW, The Moving Picture World, November 15, 1913:

"This comedy demonstrates the adventures that befell Algy after he won an auto in a raffle. He takes it in the house and damages things, generally speeding about the rooms. It proves indeed a speed demon and he is glad later to get rid of it. A fairly amusing number."

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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.