Vintage 8x10 in. US single-weight glossy copy photograph (not a vintage original photo printed at the time it was taken) from the silent film adventure comedy/romance, HIS MAJESTY, THE AMERICAN, released in 1919 by United Artists and directed by Joseph Henabery. This film has a place of importance in that it was the first film to be released by the newly-formed United Artists Corporation.

The image features a humorous interior medium shot of William Brooks (Douglas Fairbanks) as he put his finger against the end of the barrel of a man's gun (presumably to stop any bullets!) as another man glares at him. Printed on single-weight stock with a glossy finish, this vintage copy photograph is in very fine+ condition without any pinholes, tears, stains, or other flaws.

Elton Banks, credited as assisting director Joseph Henabery with the scenario, was the pseudonym of Douglas Fairbanks. This film provided Boris Karloff with one of his first acting jobs in Hollywood. He worked as an extra, and can be spotted in the sequence where several of Sarzeau's men storm the inn where William Brooks (Fairbanks) is staying. Karloff is at the front of the crowd, sporting a dark mustache and wearing a cloth cap. He can also be seen on the staircase as the men race up the stairs to Brooks's room. 

Plot: For excitement, millionaire William Brooks assists the New York fire department, using both a fire alarm and pole in his home. He also helps the police department, but when the District Attorney cracks down on crime, Billy goes to Murdero, Mexico to look for thrills. There, after a visit by Pancho Villa quells the fighting Billy enjoyed, he welcomes a cable urging him to come to the small European kingdom of Alaine to find his unknown mother and learn the source of the mysterious payments that support him. In Alaine, Billy is pleasantly surprised to find the country in political turmoil. After Billy subverts the plot of the king's minister of war to overthrow the king, and leads the cavalry to stop the people's uprising, Billy discovers that the king's daughter is his mother, and that the king's ward is the countess with whom he has fallen in love. After marrying her, Billy makes the country a republic.