Cleo Ridgely
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Cleo Ridgely (May 12, 1893 - August 18, 1962) was a star of silent and sound motion pictures, whose career began early in the silent film era, in 1911. Her acting career continued for forty years. She retired in the 1930s but returned to make more movies. Her final film was Hollywood Story (1951), in which she had a bit part. She was a native of New York, New York.
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[edit] A Star of the Silent Screen
Cleo starred with Ruth Roland in a girl detective series in the 1920s and co-starred in a number of films with Wallace Reid and Lew Cody. She was married to James W. Horne, who directed the Laurel and Hardy comedies for many years. Horne died in 1942. She was divorced from her first husband, Jaudon M. Ridgely, in the Los Angeles, California courts in December 1916.
Cleo worked with Famous Players-Lasky Film Company and also for Paramount Pictures. She was selected queen of the Auburn exhibit at the downtown automobile show in Los Angeles, California in October 1915. A publicity photo posed the actress with a 1916 Auburn Six. It was made by the Auburn Automobile Company and appeared at the show.
[edit] Equestrian
Cleo was an accomplished horse woman and once rode across country on horseback with her first husband from New York. In one of her Lasky features she stopped a run-away four-in-hand, risking her life, while on top of a stage coach. Miss Ridgely died in Glendale, California in 1962. She died at home, aged 69. She was buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park.
[edit] References
- Lima, Ohio, Times-Democrat, What's The Price of Film Stardom? Cleo Ridgely Says, Defiance of Death, Saturday Evening, May 6, 1916, Page 9.
- Los Angeles Times, Cleo Ridgely To Be Auburn Queen at Broadway Show, September 19, 1915, Page VII.
- Los Angeles Times, Pen Points, December 10, 1916, Page II4.
- Los Angeles Times, Rites Set Today for Mrs. Horne, Former Actress, August 21, 1962, Page 21.
- Los Angeles Times, The Week In Review, August 26, 1962, Page GB2.