Paul Sloane directed actress Leatrice Joy in the 1926 silent film "Made for Love" (seven reels), the screenplay having been penned by Garret Fort. The periodical Motion Picture News printed its advice for Exploitation Angles to promote the film while screening its first run: "Refer to daily paper stories regarding excavations and discoveries in Egypt, mention King Tut. Stress the colorful epidsode in which tale of long dead lovers is told." That year Paul Sloane directed actress Leatrice Joy in a second film for producer Cecil B. DeMille titled "Eve's Leaves" (seven reels)
Silent Film
Actresses Blanche Sweet and Eugenie Besserer starred in the 1923 version of "Anna Christie", adapted for the screen by Bradley King and directed by John Griffith Gray under the supervision of Thomas Ince. The periodical "Screen Opinions" of 1923 noted the photography of Henry Sharp as being "very good", the type of picture as being "sensational" with a "moral standard" of "average",