Laurence Trimble joined Vitagraph Studios in early 1910 and became one of Vitagraph's leading directors. As well as directing many of the films starring Florence Turner and
John Bunny, Trimble was responsible for all of the films starring his dog Jean, the first canine to have a leading role in motion pictures.
Jean and the Calico Doll was the first in a series of pictures that put her in the ranks of Vitagraph's top stars.
Jean and the Calico Doll features the first screen performance of actress
Helen Hayes, who remembered making two films with Jean that year. "I had long curls and they let me play the juvenile lead in two pictures in support of Jean, the collie," Hayes recalled in 1931. "Jean was the most famous dog of the day and I was very thrilled." In her 1968 memoir,
On Reflection, Hayes wrote that
Frederick A. Thomson, her director when she appeared with the Columbia Players in Washington, D.C., persuaded her mother to let her perform in a film for Vitagraph Studios, where he had begun working. The Brooklyn-based troupe traveled by ferry to
Fort Lee, New Jersey, to film
Jean and the Calico Doll.
Maurice Costello and
Florence Turner, who starred as the parents, "joined everyone else, including camera and prop-men, and sat on those long slatted benches drinking hot coffee at dawn. Nobody was very fancy in those days", Hayes remembered. Making pictures was a lark and the most vagabond existence. We'd all get into a long line of automobiles with tripods, cameras, props, and lunches. Then we'd drive until we saw a lovely estate that might serve as a setting for the company. If the house and surrounding land seemed right, an official hand would wave the caravan to stop and out we'd jump, to steal the view as a background to our plot. We would hurriedly play a scene on the velvety lawn and in and out of the sycamore trees and hydrangea bushes, and then run before a window was opened and a threatening voice would send us packing. We always ran faster than the owners or their servants, who sometimes came out to chase us off their property. The audacity of us—it was marvelous! ==Reception==