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Calaboose

as Doris Lane

1943
The Amazing Quest of Ernest Bliss

as Frances Clayton

1937
Three Married Men

as Jennie Mullins

1936
Spendthrift

as Sally Barnaby

1936
Charlie Chan in Paris

as Yvette Lamartine

1935
Monte Carlo Nights

as Mary Vernon

1934
Ever Since Eve

as Elizabeth Vandergrift

1934
College Rhythm

as Gloria Van Dayham

1934
The World Gone Mad

as Diane Cromwell

1933
Hard to Handle

as Ruth Waters

1933
One Year Later

as Molly Collins

1933
Girl Missing

as June Dale

1933
Blessed Event

as Gladys Price

1932
Only the Brave

as Barbara Calhoun

1930
The Virginian

as Molly Stark Wood

1929
The Man I Love

as Celia Fields

1929
The Marriage Playground

as Judith Wheater

1929
River of Romance

as Lucy Jeffers

1929
Partners in Crime

as Marie Burke, The Cigarette Girl

1928
Brown of Harvard

as Mary Abbot

1926
The Air Mail

as Minnie Wade

1925
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Mary Brian Mary Brian

Birthday

1906-02-17

Place of Birth

Corsicana, Texas, USA

Biography

Mary Brian (born Louise Byrdie Dantzler), was an American actress, who made the transition from silent films to sound films. Brian was dubbed "The Sweetest Girl in Pictures." After her showing in a beauty contest, she was given an audition by Paramount Pictures and cast by director Herbert Brenon as Wendy Darling in his silent movie version of J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. There she starred with Betty Bronson and Esther Ralston, and the three of them stayed close for the rest of their lives. Ralston described both Bronson and Brian as 'very charming people'. The studio, who created her stage name for the movie and said she was age 16 instead of 18, because the latter sounded too old for the role, then signed her to a long-term motion picture contract. Brian played Fancy Vanhern, daughter of Percy Marmont, in Brenon's The Street of Forgotten Men, which had newcomer Louise Brooks in an uncredited debut role as a moll. Her first talkie was Varsity, which was filmed with part-sound and talking sequences, opposite Buddy Rogers. After successfully making the transition to sound, she co-starred with Gary Cooper, Walter Huston and Richard Arlen in one of the earliest Western talkies, The Virginian, her first all-talkie feature. In it, she played a spirited frontier heroine, schoolmarm Molly Stark Wood, who was the love interest of the Virginian. Brian co-starred in several hits during the 1930s, including The Royal Family of Broadway, Paramount on Parade, and The Front Page. After her contract with Paramount ended in 1932, Brian decided to freelance, which was unusual in a period when multi-year contracts with one studio were common. That same year, she appeared on the vaudeville stage at New York's Palace Theatre. Also in the same year, she starred in Manhattan Tower. When World War II hit in 1941, Brian began traveling to entertain the troops, ending up spending most of the war years traveling the world with the U.S.O., and entertaining servicemen from the South Pacific to Europe, including Italy and North Africa.Flying to England on a troop shoot, Mary got caught in the Battle of the Bulge and spent the Christmas of 1944 with the soldiers fighting that battle. She appeared in only a handful of films thereafter. Her last performance on the silver screen was in Dragnet, a B-movie in which she played Anne Hogan opposite Henry Wilcoxon. Over the course of 22 years, Brian had appeared in more than 79 movies. She played in the stage comedy Mary Had a Little... in the 1951 in Melbourne, Australia, co-starring with John Hubbard. Like many "older" actresses, during the 1950s Brian created a career for herself in television. Perhaps her most notable role was playing the title character's mother in Meet Corliss Archer in 1954. She also dedicated much time to portrait painting after her acting years.
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