Loni Nest

Loni Nest
Born 4 August 1915
Berlin, Germany
Died 2 October 1990 (aged 75)
Nice, Alpes-Maritimes[ France
Occupation Actor
Years active 1918 1933

Eleonore "Loni" Nest (4 August 1915 2 October 1990), was a German actress. Born in Berlin, she was a child star of German silent films in the 1920s. She was filmed for the first time at the age of four weeks.

Life and film career

After more than 40 movies, she ended her movie career in 1928 at the age of 13. In 1933 she played in one last movie in France.[1] Her whereabouts after 1933 remained unknown for several decades, but it was eventually discovered that she died at the age of 75 on October 2, 1990 in the French town Nice.[1]

In 2014, the website "Forever Missed" published an obituary that ostensibly revealed that Nest had died on Hawaii in 2014 at the age of 98. It also described details of Nest's life after she left Germany and moved to America. Various websites including the Internet Movie Database quickly adopted this information. It was soon discovered, however that both the time and location of her death as well as the details about her later life were made up. According to the German newspaper Die Welt, German film historian Toni Schieck had discovered years before that Nest's sister Ursula had moved to the United States and died in Florida in 2007. Through her family, Schieck discovered that Nest had married and taken the last name Arnault. She moved to France where she died at the age of 75 in Nice.[1]

Filmography

  • The Story of Dida Ibsen (1918)
  • 1919: Die Ehe der Frau Mary
  • 1919: Opium
  • 1919: Harakiri
  • 1920: Kämpfende Gewalten oder Welt ohne Krieg
  • 1920: Der Reigen – Ein Werdegang
  • 1920: Patience
  • 1920: Johannes Goth
  • 1920: Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam
  • 1920: Die Schuld der Lavinia Morland
  • 1920: Das wandernde Bild
  • Man Overboard (1921)
  • 1921: Ein Erpressertrick
  • 1921: Schloß Vogelöd
  • Violet (1921)
  • 1921: Die Minderjährige – Zu jung fürs Leben
  • 1921: Pariserinnen
  • 1921: Der Sträfling von Cayenne
  • 1921: The Pearl of the Orient
  • 1921: Sturmflut des Lebens
  • 1922: Versunkene Welten
  • 1922: Tabea, stehe auf!
  • 1922: Sterbende Völker (2 parts)
  • 1922: Aus den Erinnerungen eines Frauenarztes (2 parts)
  • 1923: Quarantäne
  • 1923: Tragödie der Liebe
  • 1923: Fräulein Raffke
  • The Little Napoleon (1923)
  • 1923: Schwarze Erde
  • 1924: Zwei Kinder
  • Mother and Child (1924)
  • 1924: Der Evangelimann
  • 1925: Liebesfeuer
  • 1925: Die Prinzessin und der Geiger
  • 1925: Die freudlose Gasse
  • 1925: Aus der Jugendzeit klingt ein Lied
  • The Saint and Her Fool (1928)
  • 1928: Die Geschichte einer kleinen Pariserin (La storia di una piccola Parigina)
  • 1933: L'Épervier

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Hanns-Georg Rodek (11 April 2014). "Der gefälschte Tod eines echten Stummfilmstars". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 11 April 2014.

External links