Lois Weber
Lois Weber began film work as an actress, then soon began also writing and directing films. She has been referred to as "the most important female director the American film industry has known". Best known for her hard-hitting films that address social issues, she continued making films into the 1920s until she lost favor with motion picture audiences.
Filmography
Suspense.
The Eye of God
The Women Who Run Hollywood
From Death to Life
Scandal
Early Directors on Directing
No Image
The Picture of Dorian Gray
No Image
Fate
The Spider and Her Web
The Price
Idle Wives
The Merchant of Venice
Hop - The Devil's Brew
A Heroine of '76
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle
No Image
The Pursuit of Hate
No Image
False Colors
The Rosary
Lost by a Hair
Sunshine Molly
How Men Propose
The Jew's Christmas
No Image
Lost Illusions
No Image
Sherlock Holmes, Jr.
No Image
Eyes That See Not
On the Brink
No Image
Alone in the World
The Twins
Fine Feathers
No Image
A Japanese Idyll