Evelyn Selbie
Evelyn Selbie | |
---|---|
Born |
Louisville, Kentucky | July 6, 1871
Died |
December 7, 1950 Woodland Hills, Los Angeles | (aged 79)
Occupation | Film actress |
Evelyn Selbie (July 6, 1871 – December 7, 1950) was a stage actress and performer in both silent and sound films.
Biography
Born in Louisville, Kentucky, as a young woman Selbie was a sidesaddle rider. She had a career which lasted twenty-five years on the stage. She began in Proctor's stock companies in New York after leaving her home. She acted in plays like Human Hearts and The Cat and the Canary. In the former production she starred for two seasons. Then she ventured west where she tenured eighteen months at the old Central Theatre in San Francisco, California. This was followed by a season in stock in San Diego, California and then a long one in Alaska with T.D. Frawley. During the Alaska tour Evelyn alternated leads with Virginia Thornton.
Beginning in 1912 Selbie was affiliated with the Western Essanay Company. Selbie began her motion picture career in 1912 as the leading lady of Broncho Billy Anderson. Her silent movie credits include The Squaw Man, which was the first Hollywood production of Cecil B. De Mille. She continued in motion pictures until 1949 with The Doolins of Oklahoma, in which she played Birdie. She participated in the Fu Manchu film serials and did free-lance work on radio.
Evelyn Selbie died at the Motion Picture Country Hospital in Los Angeles, California in 1950. She was 79. Selbie entered the Motion Picture Country Hospital two weeks after suffering a heart attack. The interment was at Inglewood Park Cemetery, Inglewood, California.
Partial filmography
- The Price of Silence (1916)
- The Flower of Doom (1917)
- Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1917)
- The Flashlight (1917)
- Pay Me! (1917)
- Sirens of the Sea (1917)
- The Grand Passion (1918)
- Danger, Go Slow (1918)
- The Red Glove (1919)
- A Broadway Cowboy (1920)
- Devil Dog Dawson (1921)
- Without Benefit of Clergy (1921)
- Omar the Tentmaker (1922)
- The Tiger's Claw (1923)
- Poisoned Paradise: The Forbidden Story of Monte Carlo (1924)
- A Cafe in Cairo (1924)
- The Prairie Pirate (1925)
- The Test of Donald Norton (1926)
- Silken Shackles (1926)
- The Silver Treasure (1926)
- Flame of the Argentine (1926)
- Into Her Kingdom (1926)
- Camille (1926)
- The American (1927) (never-released widescreen film)
- Eager Lips (1927)
- Wild Geese (1927)
- Eternal Love (1929)
- The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu (1929)
- Love Comes Along (1930)
- Dangerous Paradise (1930)
- The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu (1930)
- Diamond Frontier (1940)
- White Eagle (1941)
References
- Frederick, Maryland Post, Friday, October 17, 1913, Page 3.
- New York Times, Evelyn Selbie, Actress, December 9, 1950, Page 15.
- Santa Fe New American, Veteran Movie Actress Dies, Friday, December 8, 1950, Page 12, Section A.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evelyn Selbie. |