| Mary Pickford | ... | Amanda Afflick | |
| Albert Austin | ... | Horace Greensmith | |
| Harold Goodwin | ... | Benjamin Pillsbury Jones | |
| Rose Dione | ... | Madame Jeanne Gallifilet Didier (as Rosa Dione) | |
| Darwin Karr | ... | The Archduke | |
| Lavendor the Horse | ... | Ex polo pony | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Taylor N. Duncan | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
| Joan Marsh | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
| Nadyne Montgomery | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
| Theodore Roberts | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
| Hal Wilson | ... | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| John Francis Dillon | (as Jack Dillon) | ||
Writing credits | ||
| Waldemar Young | (scenario) | |
| Richard Bryce | play "Op O' Me Thumb" | |
| Frederick Fenn | play "Op O' Me Thumb" | |
Produced by | |||
| Mary Pickford | .... | producer | |
Cinematography by | |||
| L. William O'Connell | (as L.W. O'Connell) | ||
| Charles Rosher | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Max Parker | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Adele Crinley | |||
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| William A. Crinley | .... | assistant director | |
Art Department | |||
| Alfred L. Werker | .... | props | |
Other crew | |||
| William S. Johnson | .... | electrical effects (as William Johnson) | |
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| The Princess Diaries | Love Me Tonight | The Nanny Diaries | Temple Grandin | My Own Private Idaho |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Comedy section | IMDb USA section |
I love silent films, but I have to admit some of the old films don't translate well to the 21st century. Some of the older "classics" now seem antiquated and dull. However, I am happy to report that this is not the case with SUDS. Despite being an 86 year-old film, it still is good fun and is one of the most watchable Mary Pickford films because it doesn't take itself very seriously.
Mary plays a rather homely laundress and there is absolutely no hint of her beauty in this film. This laundress is pretty clumsy but nice. However, because her life is so drab, she dreams of a better life--even going so far as making up a fictitious boyfriend out of a guy who forgot his shirt there over 8 months ago. She described him as being a duke and talks of how he will whisk her away.
At the same time, there's a parallel plot of the horse cart that delivers the laundry from this business. The driver seems to like Mary but his feelings are not professed. Also, Mary adores the old broken-down horse and laments that it's about to be sent to the glue factory by the nasty owner of the business. She runs to its rescue and buys the horse--keeping it in her apartment! Then, the film offers two different endings on the DVD from Image Entertainment--one the American ending and the other the European ending. Both are different--one is a little sweeter, the other funnier. I recommend if you have a chance, view both endings--they are both worth seeing. There apparently was a third melancholy ending that was suggested by Chaplin that was also used, but apparently it is no longer in existence. I actually am glad, as I liked the more up-beat endings.
The bottom line is that the film is amusing and touching and well worth your time. Though a "slight film" with modest pretenses, I actually preferred it to many of the big reputation silent films.