Many of the very early motion pictures were brief excerpts from stage dramas: the most notable of these being a movie now known as "The Kiss", in which an actor and actress enact a very brief kissing scene from the play "The Widow Jones".
"He and She" appears to be a similar staging of an excerpt from a stage drama, although its source remains unidentified. The actress seen here is identified as Roma T. Roma, a monicker sounding suspiciously like a stage name. The actor's name is Frank Wood, a name so commonplace that any attempt to research it would lead a researcher up many blind alleys.
In a set that appears to represent a living room or drawing room, we see a fortyish woman in some agitation as she confronts a man who is apparently her husband, although he is old enough to be her father. While they speak in unheard but mounting agitation, both of them point to a nearby clock: apparently some crucial event is about to transpire. She grips a cushion while she has some sort of tantrum. He pulls the cushion from her hands, drops it to the floor and jumps up and down on it, as if trying to prove that he can out-tantrum her.
Eventually she turns on the water-works, bursting into tears. Of course no man can withstand this; he gives her what appears to be a jewellery box, although we don't see what's inside it. Instantly, she is all smiles again. Happy ending!
This is VERY primitive story-telling ... but the new medium of cinema had to learn how to convey a narrative, and this movie is part of that learning process. The most notable aspect of "He and She" is that it was directed by William K.L. Dickson, the employee in Thomas Edison's lab who did far more than Edison himself to invent motion pictures. Purely as an historical artefact, I'll rate this movie 4 out of 10.