Mary Anderson (actress, born 1897)
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Mary Anderson | |
---|---|
Born | Brooklyn, New York, USA | June 28, 1897
Died | June 22, 1986 El Cajon, California, USA | (aged 88)
Years active | 1914–1923 |
Spouse(s) | Pliny Goodfriend (m. 19??; div. 1937) |
Mary Anderson (June 28, 1897 – June 22, 1986) was an American actress, who performed in over 77 silent films between 1914 and 1923.
Career
Anderson was born in Brooklyn, New York, where she also attended Erasmus Hall High School.[1] Anderson later attended Holy Cross School and there made her first public performances as a Grecian dancer at charity functions.[citation needed] Anderson had been seen in many productions since the day she first made her bow on the silver screen for Vitagraph Studios.
A popular player, she probably did her best work in Irvin Willat's feature production, The False Faces (1919), for release through Ince-Paramount. Anderson produced her own film, Bubbles (1920), which had a splendid reception by the public. She was four feet and eleven inches in height and weighed one hundred and five pounds, and had golden hair and blue eyes. She was an expert swimmer.[2]
She later worked for Famous Players-Lasky and Canyon Pictures.
Personal life/death
She was daughter of actress Nellie Anderson.[3] She married cinematographer Pliny Goodfriend but they divorced in 1937. She died in El Cajon, California, six days before her 89th birthday.
Selected filmography
- My Official Wife (1914)
- The Silent Plea (1915)
- The Human Caldron (1915)
- Cal Marvin's Wife (1915)
- The Flower of the Desert (1916)
- Horse Shoe for Luck (1916)
- Her Loving Relations (1916)
- The Warning (1917)
- By Right of Possession (1917)
- When Men Are Tempted (1917)
- Sunlight's Last Raid (1917)
- The Divorcee (1917)
- The Flaming Omen (1917)
- The Magnificent Meddler (1917)
- The False Faces (1919)
- The Spender (1919)
- Bubbles (1920)
- Vanishing Trails (1920)
- Two Minutes to Go (1921)
- The Half Breed (1922)
- Enemies of Children (1923)
References
- ^ "Motion Picture Studio Directory", entry for Mary Anderson under "Actresses—Leads", Motion Picture News (New York, N.Y.), October 21, 1916, p. 69. Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
- ^ Fox, Charles Donald; Milton L. Silver (1920). "Mary Anderson". Who's Who on the Screen. New York City: Ross Publishing. (Note: Not currently in copyright)
- ^ "Mary Anderson Autographs, Memorabilia & Collectibles Page 1 | HistoryForSale". HistoryForSale - Autographs, Collectibles & Memorabilia. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
External links