Florida Kingsley

Florida Kingsley

Profile

Florida Kingsley

Movies

Clay Dollars
Annabelle Lee
Mother Martin
This drama was based on the poem by Edgar Allan Poe.
Dangerous Business
Mrs. Brooks
A 1920 film directed by Roy William Neill.
Youthful Folly
Aunt Martha
Nancy is a restless young girl tired of living on a plantation with her three old-maid aunts. Her life brightens when her cousin Lola comes visiting from New York. What she doesn't know is that Lola is fleeing a scandal that erupted when she was caught running around on her husband with her lover, David. It's not long before David comes looking for her, and Nancy falls in love with him. Lola sees a way out of her problem--if she can get Nancy and David to hook up, it will take the heat off of her. Nancy's aunts, who want to get rid of her, are all for the plan, and soon Nancy and David get married. However, things don't quite work out for everyone the way they planned.
The Woman Under Oath
Mrs. O'Neill
After a forward introduces the question of whether women are temperamentally suited for jury duty, Jim O'Neil, a young shipping clerk, is found holding a revolver over his dead employer, Edward Knox. The celebrated novelist Grace Norton, selected to be on the jury at Jim's trial, becomes the first woman juror in New York.
The Woman on the Index
Mrs. Martin
Sylvia Martin is a destitute young woman who is taken home by Louis Gordon. She doesn't realize he's the leader of a gang of crooks until after she marries him.
The Boy Girl
A tomboy, raised by a father who wanted a son, runs away from boarding school and gets a job at a firm.
Curiosity
The Girl's Aunt
"If yew cum a lone to thee third bench from thee fontan yew will find sum one to chear your loneliness." This note, received by the girl, is shown to her aunt. Her aunt drops the note and it is found by her uncle. He straightway becomes jealous and goes to the third bench to wait.
Three Little Powders
The Fortune Teller
Mrs. Wallace Williams is much given to conversation and, when she and her husband have a word battle, she of course wins out, making her husband exceedingly cross.