The Subduing of Mrs. Nag

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Mrs. Nag objects to her husband having a pretty female stenographer in his office, and orders him to employ one of his own sex. So Miss Prue, the good-looking stenographer to whom Mrs. Nag objects, dresses in man's attire. On her way to business one morning she sends a bouquet of flowers to Mrs. Nag, with the inscription, "Compliments of an ardent admirer." Miss Prue apprises her boss of her deed, and when Mrs. Nag arrives at his office, he accuses her of having another admirer. Miss Prue is victorious and when we see her in the last scene she is her own admirable self once more, seated before the typewriter in Mr. Nag's office, with every prospect of being an uninterrupted and permanent employee. Mild and docile, Mrs. Nag modestly enters the office, but offers no objections or interruptions, submissively waiting for her husband to escort her home.

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14-07-1911

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US

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17 min

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Director
George D. Baker

George D. Baker

Writer, illustrator and film director. Baker first joined Vitagraph Studios and was the primary director for the comedies starring John Bunny and Flora Finch. He then joined Metro Studios and later worked as a freelance director throughout the 20s, before retiring in his late fifties
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