Yahoo Web Search

  1. A Girl of Yesterday

    A Girl of Yesterday

    1915 · Comedy

Search results

  1. Country. United States. Languages. Silent. English intertitles. A Girl of Yesterday is a 1915 American silent comedy film directed by Allan Dwan, and distributed by Paramount Pictures and Famous Players–Lasky. The film starred Mary Pickford (who also wrote the scenario) as an older woman.

    • Famous Players Film Co.
  2. Jun 28, 2020 · 1.7K. 198K views 3 years ago. Eagles - The Girl From Yesterday (Lyrics) Tribute to Eagles ...more. Eagles - The Girl From Yesterday (Lyrics)Tribute to EaglesLyrics:It wasn't really sad the...

    • Jun 28, 2020
    • 198.4K
    • Refreshersz
  3. In A Girl of Yesterday, Mary plays Jane Stuart, a sweet old-fashioned girl who suddenly inherits wealth. While she tries to retain her traditional ways and wardrobe, her brother (played by Mary’s brother Jack) likes the attention that is now being paid to them by people who previously shunned them.

    • A Girl of Yesterday1
    • A Girl of Yesterday2
    • A Girl of Yesterday3
    • A Girl of Yesterday4
    • A Girl of Yesterday5
  4. MTV LIVE - The girl from yesterday - The Eagles

    • 123.9K
    • Luciano C. Maia
  5. Cast & crew. User reviews. IMDbPro. All topics. Plot. A Girl of Yesterday. Summaries. A girl with old-fashioned values becomes a modern sophisticate. Jane Stuart is brought up with her brother John by their poor Aunt Angela to appreciate old-fashioned customs and ways.

  6. People also ask

  7. With a lead vocal by Glenn Frey, it's sung from the guy's perspective as he struggles to make his choice: go back to her, or move on. He decides she's part of his past, not his future. She's the "girl from yesterday." Frey wrote this song with his longtime collaborator Jack Tempchin.

  8. Released October 07, 1915. Role: Jane Stuart. Co-stars: Jack Pickford, Gertrude Norman, Marshall Neilan, Frances Marion, Lillian Langdon, Claire Alexander, Glenn Martin. Prod/Dist Co: Famous Players Film Company/Paramount Pictures. Director: Allan Dwan. Screenwriter: Mary Pickford, story by Wesley C. MacDermott.

  1. People also search for