
Don't Call Me Little Girl (1921)

Don't Call Me Little Girl (1921)
Overview
Joan Doubleday is a shy spinster, who has been engaged to Monty Wade for 12 years, is secretly adored by Peter Flagg. Her young niece, Jerry, arrives and sets out to capture Monty. On the wedding day, Jerry announces that the grooms have exchanged places and that Peter will marry Joan. A quarrel prevents preparations for the wedding, but Jerry finally convinces Joan that she was meant for Peter.
Starring Cast
Rating & Dimensions
Not Rated
Overview
Joan Doubleday is a shy spinster, who has been engaged to Monty Wade for 12 years, is secretly adored by Peter Flagg. Her young niece, Jerry, arrives and sets out to capture Monty. On the wedding day, Jerry announces that the grooms have exchanged places and that Peter will marry Joan. A quarrel prevents preparations for the wedding, but Jerry finally convinces Joan that she was meant for Peter.
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film is rated neutral due to the absence of specific plot details or thematic information that would indicate a clear political stance, suggesting a focus on apolitical personal narratives.
This 1926 silent short film features traditional casting with no apparent intentional race or gender swaps. Its narrative and framing are consistent with the era, presenting traditional identities neutrally or positively without explicit DEI critiques.
Secondary
The film 'Don't Call Me Little Girl' does not appear to include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes in its narrative. Consequently, there is no portrayal to evaluate, resulting in a net impact rating of N/A.
The film 'Don't Call Me Little Girl' is a silent drama from 1924. Available plot summaries and historical context do not indicate the presence of any transsexual characters or themes, resulting in a determination of N/A for its portrayal.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
There is no widely known prior source material or historical record for "Don't Call Me Little Girl" (1921) that establishes its characters with a different gender than portrayed in the film. Therefore, no gender swap is identified.
There is no evidence to suggest that any character in the 1921 film "Don't Call Me Little Girl" was canonically or historically established as one race and then portrayed as a different race on screen. The film's characters align with the typical casting and source material of its era.
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