A Warner Brothers Pictures Release
September 1924 - 7 Reels
Directed by Mal St. Clair
Written by Darryl F. Zanuck

FEATURED CAST
Rin-Tin-Tin
June Marlowe (as Carolina Blair)
and
Eric St. Clair

Records indicate that "Find Your Man" was in production first, but "The Tenth Woman" was released a month before.  In either event, it proved Warners was serious about their new actress, as they were about another new find of theirs, Rin-Tin-Tin.

Rinty was found during World War I as an abandoned puppy and brought back to the U.S. by Corporal Lee Duncan. Trained by Mr. Duncan, Rin-Tin-Tin soon found his way to the motion picture screen, a medium that used dogs frequently.
This was but the fourth film for the already popular "actor", and he would go on to make twenty five films for Warner Brothers (twenty nine in all), soon becoming their top star overall, and in many instances literally saving the studio financially.
To put another emerging star, June, with Rinty was a natural.  While it is said that Rinty could be downright mean at times (biting actors and such), June always had an affinity for animals so she and he worked and got along very well together.

June would star in six films with Rin-Tin-Tin, more than any other actress, and this was their first pairing.  Warners ran a publicity notice in the August 2, 1924 issue of Moving Picture World which said:

"June Marlowe, the pretty screen star, is the latest film player to sign a contract with Warner Brothers to appear in a number of their productions. The signing of Miss Marlowe is of particular importance, because of the policy of the Warners to cast for their pictures as they go along and not to place stars under long term agreement unless of unusual merit. Miss Marlowe is somewhat new to the screen, although having appeared in leading roles in several of the most important productions of the past season.
Miss Marlowe is just nineteen*, an attractive brunette, and comes from Minneapolis, where her father was a prominent banker*. She made her first appearance before the camera under the direction of Mal St. Clair, for whom she will work in her first Warner Brothers production, in the feminine lead of
"Find Your Man," in which Rin-Tin-Tin, the wonder dog of the screen, plays the leading role."
* June was twenty at that time, and her father owned a meat market.


Warner's standard publicity photo for June's first few films.
The film is pretty much a standard melodrama, giving Rin-Tin-Tin the chance to save the hero from the machinations of the villain, putting himself (and our heroine June) in harm's way throughout the film.  The response of audiences to the wonderful stunts and charm of Rin-Tin-Tin was so great that Warners immediately made additional plans for their new-found canine star.  And June would be along for the ride.

Mal St. Clair, the film's director was the one who first noticed June, and it was written by 
Darryl F. Zanuck who  later became one of the most important figures of the film industry.

For more about German Shepherds and Rin-Tin-Tin, visit Dan Condon's German Shepherd Site.

This film is unavailable for viewing.

The Films of June Marlowe A Lost Lady