Pauline Curley

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Pauline Curley

Promotional still from The Fall of the Romanoffs (1917)
Born December 19, 1898(1898-12-19)
Holyoke, Massachusetts
Died December 16, 2000 (aged 101)
Santa Monica, California
Other name(s) Pauline Peach
Occupation actress
Years active 1904–1929
Spouse(s) Kenneth Peach (1923–1988)

Pauline Curley (December 19, 1898 - December 16, 2000) was a vaudeville and silent film actress from Holyoke, Massachusetts.[1] Her film career spanned much of the silent era, from 1912-1929. She married cinematographer Kenneth Peach in 1923, taking his last name as Pauline Curley Peach and remaining married until his death in 1988.

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[edit] Acting career

Pauline Curley's acting career spanned the period of 1903 through 1929, after which she retired from acting although she retained a connection to the movie business through her cinematographer husband.

[edit] Early years

Pauline Curley's mother, Rose Curley, brought her into show business at the age of four, at first on stage in vaudeville shows.[1] In 1910 Rose brought Pauline to New York City to find her work in the newly-established silent movie industry and on the stage, getting her bit parts in a variety of movies, as well as weekly stage performances in Uncle Tom's Cabin and Little Lord Fauntleroy for the Jack Packard Stock Company. Her mother gave different ages for Pauline depending on the requirements of the role, leaving her confused about her actual age, which she only learned in 1998.[1]

[edit] Entry into movies

Curley's first motion picture was Tangled Relations (1912). She played one of the children in a movie which starred Florence Lawrence and Owen Moore. For an audition for The Straight Road in 1914, Pauline was dressed as a boy to land a part as an orphan; a variety of such roles followed, "cornering the market in orphans and waifs".[1]

In 1915, aged sixteen, she played the ingenue Claudia Frawley in Life Without Soul, an adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.

[edit] Move to Hollywood

Mary took Pauline Curley to Hollywood in 1917 in search of more lucrative work. She soon landed the role of Princess Irina of Russia in Herbert Brenon's The Fall of the Romanoffs, her first Hollywood work and, according to Variety, her best known.[2] In 1918 she was a leading lady in five films, including working opposite Douglas Fairbanks as the leading lady in King Vidor's first full-length feature, The Turn in the Road.

Curley supported Douglas Fairbanks and Tully Marshall in Bound In Morocco (1918). This is a farcical tale of a young American's adventures in Morocco. In 1920 she was featured in The Invisible Hand, a Vitagraph serial with Brinsley Shaw and Antonio Moreno. It was directed by William J. Bauman. This was her first Western, a genre that would henceforth dominate her work.

In 1926 Curley played with Helen Chadwick, Jack Mulhall, and Emmett King, in The Naked Truth. It was a film about parents who failed to tell their children about the mysteries of life at the appropriate time. It deals with the consequences.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Mutti-Mewse, Howard. "Pauline Curley", The Independent, January 5, 2001. 
  2. ^ "Obituaries: Pauline Curley Peach", Variety, January 1, 2001, p. 46. 
  • Decatur Review, The Screen, September 14, 1919, Page 16.
  • Los Angeles Times, Bound In Morocco, August 13, 1918, Page II3.
  • The Washington Post, Photoplay For Women, May 23, 1926, Page F6.