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Viola Dana

  • Born: Jun 28, 1897 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York
  • Died: Jul 03, 1987 in Woodland Hills, California
  • Occupation: Actor, Director
  • Active: '20s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: Forty Winks, Merton of the Movies, That Certain Thing
  • First Major Screen Credit: Opportunity (1918)

Biography

Together with her sister Shirley Mason, actress Viola Dana began her Broadway career in 1913, under her family name of Flugrath. Viola played the lead in the original production of Poor Little Rich Girl, which led to her being cast in two films. A star at the Edison studios in the teens, Viola married Edison's finest director, John H. Collins, and the two collaborated on such above-average efforts as Children of Eve (1915) (a surprisingly graphic re-enactment of the notorious 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist fire), The Cossack Whip (1916) and Blue Jeans (1917). Collins died during the influenza epidemic of 1918; less than two years later, Viola suffered another personal tragedy when her then-beau, stunt pilot Omar Locklear, fell to his death while making a film. During the 1920s, Viola was a highly-paid star with the Metro company. Her star faded around 1928; reduced to working for parsimonious Columbia Pictures, Viola turned out one last memorable silent appearance when she starred in Frank Capra's first Columbia effort, That Certain Thing (1928). When talkies came in, producers decided that Viola's voice didn't match her face. She worked in vaudeville before retiring completely, preferring to remain at home as the wife of western star/stunt man "Lefty" Flynn. Upon the rediscovery of her John Collins-directed Edison films in the mid-1970s, Viola Dana returned to the public eye, regaling TV interviewers and film-festival audiences with her clear-minded, down-to-earth reminiscences of her screen career. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Viola Dana
Viola Dana, 1922
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Viola Dana, 1922

Viola Dana, sometimes credited as Viola Flugrath, (born June 28, 1897 in Brooklyn, New York; died July 3, 1987 in Woodland Hills, California) was an American film actress who was successful during the era of silent movies.

Career

Dana was a child star, appearing on the stage at the age of three. She read Shakespeare and particularly identified with the teenage Juliet. She enjoyed a long run at the Hudson Theater in New York City. A particular favorite of audiences was her performance in David Belasco's Poor Little Rich Girl, when she was 16. She went into vaudeville with Dustin Farnum in The Little Rebel and played a bit part in The Model by Augustus Thomas.

Born Virginia Flugrath, Dana entered films in 1910 by the time she made her final film appearance in 1929, she had appeared in almost 100 films. Her first motion picture was made for the Edison Company at a former Manhattan (New York) riding academy on West 61st Street. The stalls had been transformed to dressing rooms. Dana became a star with Biograph Studios.

Unable to make a successful transition to 'talkies', she retired in 1929. Her final screen credits are roles in Two Sisters (1929), One Splendid Hour (1929), and The Show of Shows (1929).

Dana became engaged to Ormer Locklear, a barnstorming aviator who died in an accident on August 2, 1920. Locklear was the prototype for the Robert Redford movie, The Great Waldo Pepper (1975). Dana witnessed Locklear's crash and was an honored guest for the premiere of The Great Waldo Pepper. The actress did not fly again for twenty-five years after the 1920 fatality.

More than 50 years after her retirement from the screen she appeared in the documentary Hollywood (1980), discussing her career as a silent film star during the Hollywood era of the 1920s. In 1987, she was interviewed for the documentary Buster Keaton: A Hard Act to Follow and died later the same year from heart failure, aged 90. Viola Dana is interred at Hollywood Forever Cemetery under her original name of Virginia Flugrath.

Viola Dana has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to motion pictures. It is located at 6541 Hollywood Boulevard.

References

  • Greeley, Colorado Daily Tribune, Viola Dana loved the real Waldo Pepper, April 28, 1975, Page 23.
  • Indianapolis Star, Little Viola Dana Ambitious to Become Grown-Up Actress, January 15, 1914, Page 13.
  • Lima, Ohio News, Viola Dana In Person At Faurot, March 23, 1930, Page 24.
  • Ogden, Utah Standard, From The Movies To Stardom, January 10, 1914, Page 27.

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Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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