| Miss Nobody | |
|---|---|
|
1926 theatrical poster
|
|
| Directed by | Lambert Hillyer |
| Produced by | John McCormick (Production Manager) |
| Written by | George Marion, Jr. (intertitles) |
| Based on |
Shebo (short story) by Tiffany Wells |
| Starring |
Anna Q. Nilsson Walter Pidgeon Louise Fazenda |
| Cinematography | John W. Boyle |
| Edited by | Alexander Hall |
| Distributed by | First National Pictures |
|
Release date
|
June 27, 1926 |
|
Running time
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7 reels; 6,859 feet |
| Country | United States |
| Language | Silent film (English intertitles) |
Miss Nobody is a 1926 silent film drama produced and distributed by First National Pictures and directed by Lambert Hillyer. The film is based on a short story by Tiffany Wells called "Shebo"; the likely feminine pronunciation of hobo. The stars of the film were Anna Q. Nilsson and Walter Pidgeon, then in a very early role in his career. The plot of this film bears a striking resemblance to Beggars of Life, made two years later at Paramount.
The father of an heiress dies broke leaving her destitute without inheritance. She falls in with a group of hobos traveling incognito cross country dressed as a man.
This film appears to now be a lost film. Two other silent films titled Miss Nobody from 1917 (starring Gladys Hulette) and 1920 (starring Billie Rhodes) are preserved in the film collection of the Library of Congress.