Denise Plummer (Mary Alden) is the long-suffering mother who sacrifices her own needs to provide for her husband and children in this sentimental tearjerker. Eldest child Harriet (Louise Lee) runs off to Greenwich Village; Sally (Dorothy MacKaill) has inherited none of her mother's kindly nature; and husband John (Holmes E. Herbert) squanders his money on golf clothes to impress a local floozie. Her son Kenneth (Albert Hackett) is fatally shot trying to defend the honor of one of his wayward sisters from the lecherous Senator James Gleason (J. Barney Sherry).
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A tough, demanding businesswoman discovers that she's about to be deported back to Canada, forcing her to rush into a marriage of convenience with her young assistant in order to stay in the U.S. But the ruse becomes even more complicated when the two must visit his family in Alaska while posing as a couple.
A dedicated entrepreneur and inventor looking to make it big creating innovative dog toys and treats finds success with the support of a handsome client.
A successful lawyer returns to his small hometown to defend his father, a local judge, against a murder charge. As the trial commences, the urbane counselor slowly begins to reconnect with his roots.
Based on the ground-breaking Brown vs. the Board of Education case, the made-for-television Separate But Equal follows a young Thurgood Marshall (Sidney Poitier) as a lawyer who argues the racially-charged lawsuit before the Supreme Court. Marshall's opponent is John W. Davis (Burt Lancaster) and the two argue passionately and eloquently before a Supreme Court led by Chief Justice Earl Warren (Richard Kiley). Separate But Equal is a moving and human dramatization of one of the most pivotal court cases in American history.