Charlotte Walker (actress)

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Charlotte Walker (December 29, 1876 - March 23, 1958) was a Broadway theater actress from Galveston, Texas.

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[edit] Stage Actress

Walker made her stage debut as a teen. At age nineteen she performed in London, England, in a comedy called The Mummy. She played in a production with Richard Mansfield and later returned to her native Texas.

She is perhaps most noted for her performance as June in Trail of the Lonesome Pine in 1911. David Belasco noticed her in On Parole. He signed her for starring parts in The Warrens of Virginia, Just A Wife, and Call The Doctor. Each of the Belasco productions was staged prior to World War I.

She continued to act on the Broadway stage. In 1923 she played with Lionel Barrymore in The School For Scandal produced by the Player's Club.

[edit] Motion Pictures

Her motion picture career began in 1915 with the movies Kindling and Out of the Darkness. Sloth (1917) is a five reeler which features Walker. In the third reel of this film she plays a youthful Dutch maid who is about sixteen years old. The setting is an old Dutch settlement on Staten Island, New York. The theme stresses the perils of indolence to a nation of people. It cautions against permitting luxury to replace the simplistic life led by America's forebears.

As a movie actress Walker continued to perform in films into the early 1930s. Her later screen performances include roles in Lightnin (1930), Millie (1931), Salvation Nell (1931), and Hotel Variety (1933).

[edit] Personal Life

Walker's first husband was physician Dr. John B. Haden. Following her divorce she came back to the stage. Her second husband, Eugene Walter, was a playwright. He wrote Trail of the Lonesome Pine. The second marriage also ended in divorce, in 1930.

Charlotte Walker died in 1958 at a hospital in Kerrville, Texas. She was 81.

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