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Abe Lyman, Adele Astaire, Ben Model, David Stenn, George Eastman Museum, Jeanne Eagels, John Gilbert, Man Woman and Sin, MoMA, Monta Bell, New York, Silent Movies, To Save and Project

Jeanne Eagels with John Gilbert and Marc McDermott in Man, Woman and Sin
Jeanne Eagels’ last silent movie – and her only Hollywood shoot – Man, Woman and Sin (1927) is showing in a restored print as part of To Save and Project, the 20th annual film preservation festival at New York’s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) next Saturday, January 13th, at 1:30 pm.
MGM contract director Monta Bell (obscure today, but once regarded on the level of Lubitsch) used his own background as a Washington, DC, cub newspaper reporter as the basis of this sophisticated psychodrama. Teaming top Hollywood romancer John Gilbert with Broadway legend-in-her-own-lifetime Jeanne Eagels ensured a hit, but the film was withdrawn due to rights issues and long thought lost. This restoration, the first in almost a century, uses original 35mm elements and original tints.
The screening will be introduced by author and film historian David Stenn, who funded the George Eastman Museum’s restoration, with a piano accompaniment by Ben Model. The event also includes two short Hollywood rediscoveries: Adele Astaire’s screen test for Dark Victory, and a Fox Movietone newsreel from 1930 featuring Abe Lyman’s jazz orchestra.
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