New York (1916 film)

New York is a 1916 American silent comedy drama film directed by George Fitzmaurice and starring Florence Reed.

It was adapted by Ouida Bergère from a 1910 William J. Hurlbut play of the same title.

For example, in 1918 the Chicago Board of Censors issued an Adults Only permit for the film and required a cut, in Reel 2, of the two intertitles "Edna enjoys the luxuries that King provides her" and "And thus Oliver King becomes a benedict", and, Reel 3, two views of a nude model.

[3] The Ohio Board of Censors required a cut of a scene with a woman smoking, scene at table where a young woman lies back in man's arms while she smokes a cigarette, a cut to three feet of film a scene of young woman dancing on a table, to five feet of film of scene where drunken woman smokes a cigarette, remove the intertitles "You bet I'll come to your party.

This virtuous life is hell", "You can't leave me now when I am about to be a mother", "You're only my guardian, you know, and I'll do as I d----d please", and "God!