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Virginia Pearson

 
AMG AllMovie Guide:

Virginia Pearson

Biography

American silent-screen actress Virginia Pearson is best remembered for a role she didn't play, that of the voracious man-eater in the 1914 Fox hit A Fool There Was. Pearson had starred in the original 1909 Broadway play, but when the screen rights were acquired by William Fox, the producer was persuaded to cast an unknown, Theda Bara. The rest, as they say, is history. Ironically, Bara made her screen debut as an extra in The Stain (1914), a vehicle starring Virginia Pearson. Bara's international success naturally caused every studio to cast about for femme fatales, including Fox, who hired Pearson in the time-honored tradition of keeping the new star, Bara, in line. The studio launched Pearson as "The Statuesque William Fox Star" and cast her in a series of erotic melodramas -- Blazing Love (1916), Wrath of Love (1917), and The Love Auction (1919) -- that appeared suspiciously similar to Bara rejects. Never really a threat to Bara's femme fatale supremacy, Pearson also never allowed herself to be as closely identified with one characterization. Consequently, whereas Bara chose retirement once the "vamp" craze finally came to a close, Virginia Pearson and her husband, character actor Sheldon Lewis, founded the Virginia Pearson Photoplay Company. On shaky ground financially, the company folded after only two releases, and Pearson gave up stardom in favor of supporting roles, most notably the ill-fated prima donna in The Phantom of the Opera. She retired from films in 1932 and returned to the stage. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi
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Virginia Pearson

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Virginia Pearson

Virginia Pearson, c. 1918
Born Virginia Belle Pearson
March 7, 1886(1886-03-07)
Anchorage, Kentucky
Died June 6, 1958(1958-06-06) (aged 72)
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
Occupation Actress
Years active 1910-1932
Spouse Sheldon Lewis

Virginia Belle Pearson (March 7, 1886 - June 6, 1958) was an American stage and film actress. She made fifty-one films in a career which extended from 1910 until 1932.

Contents

Career

Born in Anchorage, Kentucky, Pearson worked for a brief time as an assistant in the public library in Louisville, Kentucky after completing school. Pearson trained in the tradition of the stars of the American stage, and played in stock productions in Washington, D.C. and New York City. In New York she played the heroine in Hypocrisy, a story which laid bare "the shame of society." She was promoted by William Fox of Fox Film Corporation for the same kind of strong vamp parts as those played by Theda Bara. Among her movies is Blazing Love (1916), Wildness of Youth (1922), The Vital Question (1916), Sister Against Sister (1917), The Red Kimona (1925), Wizard of Oz (1925), and The Phantom of the Opera (1925).

In 1916 Pearson and her husband, movie actor Sheldon Lewis, severed their ties with the Virginia Pearson Producing Company. The couple affiliated themselves with the Independent Productions Company, capitalized at $1,000,000. In 1924 the couple were forced to declare bankruptcy. In 1928, Pearson was legally divorced from Lewis. At the time, it was considered bad box office for screen actresses to be married. However the two remained constant companions., and resided for many years at the old Hollywood Hotel. Later they lived at the Motion Picture Country Home.

Death

Virginia Pearson died of uremic poisoning in Hollywood on June 6, 1958 nearly a month to the day after Sheldon Lewis. She was 72. Funeral services were held at the Pierce Brothers Hollywood Chapel. She was buried with an unmarked grave in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1910 On Her Doorsteps
1914 The Stain Stevens' daughter
1915 The Turn of the Road Marcia Wilbur
1916 Thou Art the Man Emily Raynor
1917 Thou Shalt Not Steal Mary Bruce
1918 The Firebrand Princess Natalya
1919 The Bishop's Emeralds Hester, Lady Cardew
1922 Wildness of Youth Louise Wesley
1923 A Prince of a King Queen Claudia
1925 Wizard of Oz Lady Vishuss
1925 The Phantom of the Opera Virginia Pearson as Carlotta/Carlotta's mother (1930 redux)
1926 Atta Boy Madame Carlton
1927 Driven from Home
1928 The Big City Tennessee
1929 Smilin' Guns Mrs. van Smythe
1931 The Primrose Path
1932 Back Street Bit part Uncredited

References

  • Los Angeles Times, "Silent Screen's Star Virginia Pearson Dies", June 10, 1958, Page B1.
  • Mansfield, Ohio News, "Virginia Quits Her Firm", August 19, 1916, Page 15.
  • New York Times, "Virginia Pearson Dies", June 10, 1958, Page 33.
  • Reno Evening Gazette, "Stage People On Reno Screen", Saturday, August 5, 1916, Supplement Pages 7 and 10.

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Related topics:
Bishop's Emeralds (1919 Film)
Curtis Benton (Writer, Actor, Drama/Romance)
Virginia Pearson (Actor, Drama)

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