Aileen Pringle

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Aileen Pringle
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Aileen Pringle

Aileen Pringle (July 23, 1895December 16, 1989) was a highly successful and popular stage and film actress during the silent film era.

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[edit] Early life

Born Aileen Bisbee into an extremely prominent and wealthy San Francisco, California family and educated in Europe, Aileen began her acting career shortly after her 1916 marriage to Charles McKenzie Pringle, the son of a wealthy titled British Jamaican landowner and a member of the Privy and Legislative Councils of Jamaica.

[edit] Career rise

One of Pringle's first high-profile roles was in the Rudolph Valentino film Stolen Moments (1920). However, many of Pringle's first roles were only modestly successful, and she continued to build her career until the early 1920s when she was personally selected by her friend, the extraordinarily popular romance novelist, Elinor Glyn, to star in the 1924 film adaptation of her novel Three Weeks opposite matinee idol Conrad Nagel. The role catapulted Pringle into leading-lady status and her career began to build momentum.

[edit] Scandal

One small set-back occurred on November 15, 1924 when Aileen Pringle was among a select group of Hollywood elites who boarded a yacht in San Pedro, California called The Oneida owned by newspaper scion and billionaire William Randolph Hearst. The event was to be a birthday party organized by Hearst for film producer and director Thomas Ince.

Other prominent guests aboard The Oneida included columnist Louella Parsons, actor Charlie Chaplin, actress Marion Davies (who was also Hearst's lover) and actresses Seena Owen, Jacqueline Logan and Julanne Johnston.

At dinner that Sunday night, the group enthusiastically celebrated Ince's 42nd birthday. Early Monday morning, Ince was taken from the yacht by water taxi and brought ashore, accompanied by Dr. Goodman a licensed, though non-practicing, physician. By Tuesday night, Thomas Ince was dead.

Although the mysterious death of Thomas Ince was ruled to have been caused by a gastro-intestinal illness, the press frenzy that followed turned the event into a Hollywood legend; with various enigmatic and lurid stories being proffered by gossips. Including an infamous story of Hearst accidentally shooting Ince while aiming for Chaplin, who he believed to be having an affair with Marion Davies. Pringle's career however, weathered the controversy.

[edit] Later career

Pringle's acting career continued to soar throughout the early 1920s. However, she was allegedly disliked by many of her co-workers for her apparently haughty and dismissive behavior. At one point she allegedly threatened actor Conrad Nagel with physical violence after he was instructed in a scene to carry her. Pringle's apparent disdain for her profession began to hurt her career, and by the late 1920s her roles became fewer and fewer. Although disliked by Hollywood insiders, Aileen Pringle was often dubbed by the press as the "Darling of the Intelligentsia" and hobnobbed and corresponded with such literary wits as H L Mencken, who became a life-long friend of the actress.

After her 1926 divorce from Charles Pringle, Aileen Pringle further focused on her acting career. But, with the advent of talkies, the studios began heavily promoting a new crop of starlets and Pringle's career faded. During the sound era, she continued to take small parts in major films and even uncredited roles. In 1944 Pringle married noted author, James M. Cain, but the union only lasted two years and ended in a bitter divorce. By the late 1940s, Pringle retired from the screen and lived a wealthy retirement in New York City, where she died in 1989 at the age of 94.

For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Aileen Pringle was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6723 Hollywood Blvd., in Los Angeles, California.

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