Vanity Fair
0 sources
Vanity Fair
Summary
Vanity Fair is a short film[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of short_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Vanity Fair's image is recorded as Vanity Fair (1911) 1.jpg[3].
- Vanity Fair's instance of is recorded as short film[4].
- Vanity Fair's director is recorded as Charles Kent[5].
- Vanity Fair's screenwriter is recorded as Eugene Mullin[6].
- Vanity Fair's genre is recorded as silent film[7].
- Vanity Fair's genre is recorded as film based on a novel[8].
- Vanity Fair's based on is recorded as Vanity Fair[9].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Charles Kent[10].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Alec B. Francis[11].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Helen Gardner[12].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as John Bunny[13].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Kate Price[14].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Leo Delaney[15].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Robert Gaillard[16].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Robert Taber[17].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Rose Tapley[18].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Tefft Johnson[19].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as William R. Dunn[20].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as William Shea[21].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as William V. Ranous[22].
- Vanity Fair's cast member is recorded as Harry Northrup[23].
- Vanity Fair's producer is recorded as J. Stuart Blackton[24].
- Vanity Fair's production company is recorded as Vitagraph Studios[25].
- Vanity Fair's IMDb ID is recorded as tt0143973[26].
- Vanity Fair's Commons category is recorded as Vanity Fair (1911 film)[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Vanity Fair's producer is recorded as J. Stuart Blackton[24]. Its director is recorded as Charles Kent[5]. Its screenwriter is recorded as Eugene Mullin[6]. Cast members include Charles Kent[10], Alec B. Francis[11], Helen Gardner[12], John Bunny[13], Kate Price[14], and Leo Delaney[15].
Publication
Vanity Fair's publication date is recorded as +1911-01-01T00:00:00Z[28]. Genres include silent film[7] and film based on a novel[8].
Why It Matters
Vanity Fair ranks in the top 6% of short_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29]