In the early 1920s, Madge Tyrone was classed with Anita Loos, Jeanie MacPherson, and Frances Marion as a scenarist at the top of her game. She worked closely with Louis B. Mayer, whopersonally wrote a letter of support for her first U.S. passport application. Her death, in 1955, occasioned notice in The New York Times. Despite Tyrone’s reputation and contributions to the industry—as an actress, writer, and editor—her career was, for reasons we will likely never know, relatively short-lived; she has also been completely erased from film history
Of her work in theatre and motion pictures, Elizabeth Grimball commented in 1924 to the New York Sun...
Marie Dressler was a top star who died at the height of her popularity. Her career is thoroughly doc...
Building on the work of Maggie Gale and John Stokes in The Cambridge Companion to the Actress, this ...
Anita Stewart began her career as an actress at the Vitagraph Company in 1911, and rose to become on...
MacLane’s name was rarely out of the newspapers between 1902 and 1917, the publication dates of her ...
To become a playwright, all Margaret Mayo required was a plot, a stenographer, and a day. As reporte...
Elizabeth “Bessie” McGaffey founded the first studio research department in 1914 at the Lasky studio...
The Talmadge sisters were two of the most beloved stars of the silent era. At first glance, they cou...
During the years 1907-1912, Gene Gauntier, the first “Kalem Girl,” was the preeminent figure at the ...
It would have been hard to page through any major trade publication of the 1910s and 1920s without c...
The career of Edna Williams, an unrecognized pioneer in the field of international film distribution...
Jeanie Macpherson is best known as Cecil B. DeMille’s screenwriter since she collaborated exclusivel...
By the time Margery Wilson reached her late twenties, she had completed her work as a film director....
Texas Guinan’s lasting fame derives from her reign as New York City’s Prohibition-era “queen of the ...
Florence Annie Bridgwood, usually known as “Flo” Lawrence, was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, on...
Of her work in theatre and motion pictures, Elizabeth Grimball commented in 1924 to the New York Sun...
Marie Dressler was a top star who died at the height of her popularity. Her career is thoroughly doc...
Building on the work of Maggie Gale and John Stokes in The Cambridge Companion to the Actress, this ...
Anita Stewart began her career as an actress at the Vitagraph Company in 1911, and rose to become on...
MacLane’s name was rarely out of the newspapers between 1902 and 1917, the publication dates of her ...
To become a playwright, all Margaret Mayo required was a plot, a stenographer, and a day. As reporte...
Elizabeth “Bessie” McGaffey founded the first studio research department in 1914 at the Lasky studio...
The Talmadge sisters were two of the most beloved stars of the silent era. At first glance, they cou...
During the years 1907-1912, Gene Gauntier, the first “Kalem Girl,” was the preeminent figure at the ...
It would have been hard to page through any major trade publication of the 1910s and 1920s without c...
The career of Edna Williams, an unrecognized pioneer in the field of international film distribution...
Jeanie Macpherson is best known as Cecil B. DeMille’s screenwriter since she collaborated exclusivel...
By the time Margery Wilson reached her late twenties, she had completed her work as a film director....
Texas Guinan’s lasting fame derives from her reign as New York City’s Prohibition-era “queen of the ...
Florence Annie Bridgwood, usually known as “Flo” Lawrence, was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, on...
Of her work in theatre and motion pictures, Elizabeth Grimball commented in 1924 to the New York Sun...
Marie Dressler was a top star who died at the height of her popularity. Her career is thoroughly doc...
Building on the work of Maggie Gale and John Stokes in The Cambridge Companion to the Actress, this ...