Helen Howard

Most Popular Helen Howard Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Captain Blood Trailer (1924)

21 September 1924

Young Irish physician Peter Blood is exiled as a slave to Barbados, where he and his friend Jeremy are purchased by Colonel Bishop at the behest of his niece Arabella.

The First Auto Trailer (1927)

27 June 1927

The transition from horses to automobiles at the turn of the century causes problems between a father and son.

My Wild Irish Rose Trailer (1922)

30 August 1922

Based on the play The Shaughraun, this is the story of Robert Ffolliat, a young Irish lad, who is done out of his land and sent off to a penal colony in Australia following false accusations by the greedy Kinchella.

Deserted at the Altar Trailer (1922)

01 December 1922

Anna Moore, a poor orphaned country girl, and her little brother, Tommy, live with hypocritical Squire Simpson, who conspires with his son to acquire the inheritance due the girl.

Brass Buttons Trailer (1919)

06 April 1919

Kingston Hollister admires Bernice Cleveland from afar. He asks Officer Callahan, the policeman on the beat, about her and mistakenly believes she is a lady's maid.

The Ghost of Rosy Taylor Trailer (1918)

08 July 1918

George Periolat plays a dual role in this film, initially as Joseph Sayles a sickly old man who has taken his daughter, Rhoda (played by Mary Miles Minter), overseas after a quarrel with his family.

Primitive Woman Trailer (1918)

15 April 1918

A young woman of wealth revenges herself on a young author whose peculiar ideas about women have led him to act and speak in an insulting manner.

Blind Youth Trailer (1920)

15 March 1920

Maurie Monnier, a poor young American sculptor in Paris, marries Clarice, a gold-digging model who later abandons him.

The Sea Master Trailer (1917)

22 October 1917

To maintain order aboard the Southern Cross, Bull Dorgan, its fierce captain, beats Pedro, a trouble-making sailor, who swears revenge as he steers the boat toward the wild Barbary Coast.

The Little Fool Trailer (1921)

14 March 1921

Richard Forrest's philosophy of marital relations is that it is not up to the husband to hold his wife's love but that she should "hold it herself.