In 1895, Dorothea Baird aged twenty, played Trilby at the Haymarket Theatre opposite Beerbohm Tree’s Svengali, in Paul Potter’s stage version of the Daphne Du Maurier novel Trilby. With Trilby’s charming beauty, infamous hat, low-class humour and bare feet, Baird became a British stage celebrity. Her rehearsals under Tree, who groaned “Give me actresses from the Gutter!” undoubtedly influenced her stage success as comic, lower-class Jenny in The Princess Clementina, filmed in 1911 by William G. Barker (Irving 1967, 213)
Muriel Alleyne and Christabel Lowndes-Yates were a screenwriting duo most notable for the advice the...
Flora Finch, like many actresses from the period, tried to capitalize on her fame by starting her ow...
Helen Gardner’s silent film career peaked three times. The first peak came in 1911 with her performa...
Lydia Hayward—born in the last quarter of the nineteenth century in Sheffield, England, to a father ...
In marking the death of Leah Baird, known chiefly as an actor in the silent period, Variety stated t...
Sarah Bernhardt is the most famous actress of the late nineteenth century stage. Celebrated by an em...
In the spring of 1929, the Port Arthur Amateur Cinema Society made Canadian history. To a crowded ho...
Humanities: 2nd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)18th centur...
Florence Annie Bridgwood, usually known as “Flo” Lawrence, was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, on...
One of only a handful of silent comediennes who ventured into the “men’s terrain” of rough-house phy...
Enid Lorimer was born in London in 1887 as Enid Bosworth Nunn. She eventually became an Australian c...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
Canadaimmigrantmultiple sclerosisnursingoriginalwidowWorld War IWorld War II1890’sBritai
One of comedienne Fay Tincher’s few extant titles, Rowdy Ann (1919), has been described recently by ...
Florence Collingbourne (1880-1946) British Stage Actress was born "Florence Eliza Collingbourne" in ...
Muriel Alleyne and Christabel Lowndes-Yates were a screenwriting duo most notable for the advice the...
Flora Finch, like many actresses from the period, tried to capitalize on her fame by starting her ow...
Helen Gardner’s silent film career peaked three times. The first peak came in 1911 with her performa...
Lydia Hayward—born in the last quarter of the nineteenth century in Sheffield, England, to a father ...
In marking the death of Leah Baird, known chiefly as an actor in the silent period, Variety stated t...
Sarah Bernhardt is the most famous actress of the late nineteenth century stage. Celebrated by an em...
In the spring of 1929, the Port Arthur Amateur Cinema Society made Canadian history. To a crowded ho...
Humanities: 2nd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)18th centur...
Florence Annie Bridgwood, usually known as “Flo” Lawrence, was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, on...
One of only a handful of silent comediennes who ventured into the “men’s terrain” of rough-house phy...
Enid Lorimer was born in London in 1887 as Enid Bosworth Nunn. She eventually became an Australian c...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
Canadaimmigrantmultiple sclerosisnursingoriginalwidowWorld War IWorld War II1890’sBritai
One of comedienne Fay Tincher’s few extant titles, Rowdy Ann (1919), has been described recently by ...
Florence Collingbourne (1880-1946) British Stage Actress was born "Florence Eliza Collingbourne" in ...
Muriel Alleyne and Christabel Lowndes-Yates were a screenwriting duo most notable for the advice the...
Flora Finch, like many actresses from the period, tried to capitalize on her fame by starting her ow...
Helen Gardner’s silent film career peaked three times. The first peak came in 1911 with her performa...