Priscilla Dean

American actress
Wheeler Oakman
(m. 1920; div. 1926)
Leslie P. Arnold
(m. 1928; died 1961)
Signature

Priscilla Dean (November 25, 1896 – December 27, 1987) was an American actress popular in silent film as well as in theatre, with a career spanning two decades.

Biography

Dean made her film debut at the age of fourteen in one-reelers for Biograph and several other studios. She was finally signed on to Universal (then called IMP) in 1911. She soon gained popularity as the female lead in the comedy series of Eddie Lyons and Lee Moran.

She was propelled to stardom after she appeared in The Gray Ghost in 1917. Following this film, she became very successful in her work. However, when the age of sound dawned, Dean's career was severely damaged. She continued to do several low-budget films for minor independent studios during the 1930s, but never regained the popularity she had earned in silent films.

Dean died at her home in Leonia, New Jersey at the age of 91 on December 27, 1987, from injuries related to a fall she had suffered the previous September.[1]

Marriages

  • The Los Angeles Times reported on October 25, 1918, that Dean was to marry Eddie Rickenbacker, at the time a fighter pilot on the Western Front. There was nothing to Dean's claim that she and the ace of aces had been "affianced for some time."[2]
  • She married Wheeler Oakman, who was also under contract at Universal and appeared in The Virgin of Stamboul and Outside the Law with Priscilla. They divorced in 1926.
  • She married Leslie P. Arnold on October 6, 1928 in Tijuana, Mexico.[3] He was famous as one of the "Around The World Flyers". He was previously married and divorced, and a court ruled that his divorce was invalid, making him a bigamist.[4] A later court decree ruled his divorce valid. Dean and Arnold remained married until his death on March 21, 1961. She had no children.

Filmography

Silent

  • A Blot on the 'Scutcheon (1912)(short)
  • The Sunbeam (1912)(short)
  • He Had But Fifty Cents (1912)(short)
  • The Man Who Wouldn't Marry (1913)(short)
  • Mother (1914)(short)
  • The Heiress and the Crook (1914)(short)
  • Oh, for the Life of a Fireman (1916)(short)
  • Bungling Bill's Burglar (1916)(short)
  • Igorrotes' Crocodiles and a Hat Box (1916)(short)
  • Heaven Will Protect a Woiking Goil (1916)(short)(*extant;Library of Congress)
  • Love, Dynamite and Baseballs (1916)(short)
  • More Truth Than Poetry (1916)(short)
  • Bungling Bill's Peeping Ways (1916)(short)
  • Search Me! (1916)(short)
  • The Social Pirates (1916)(serial)
  • The Lion Hearted Chief (1916)(short)
  • Knocking Out Knockout Kelly (1916)(short)
  • Caught with the Goods (1916)(short)(extant;Library of Congress)
  • Beer Must Go Down (1916)(short)
  • He Maid Me (1916)(short)
  • All bets Off (1916)(short)
  • The Battle of Chili Con Carne (1916)(short)
  • Broke But Ambitious (1916)(short)
  • The Terrible Turk (1916)(short)
  • Tigers Unchained (1916)(short)
  • The Boy from the Gilded East (1916)(short)
  • Nobody Guilty (1916)(short)
  • A Silly Sultan (1916)(short)
  • Model 46 (1916)(short)
  • With the Spirit's Help (1916)(short)
  • When the Spirits Fell (1916)(short)
  • Almost Guilty (1916)(short)
  • His Own Nemesis (1916)(short)
  • The Barfly (1916)(short)
  • Love and a Liar (1916)(short)
  • A Political Tramp (1916)(short)
  • Knights of a Bathtub (1916)(short)
  • How Do You Feel? (1916)(short)
  • The White Turkey (1916)(short)
  • Pass the Prunes (1916)(short)
  • Two Small Town Romeos (1916)(short)
  • It Sounded Like a Kiss (1916)(short)
  • The Bad Man of Cheyenne (1917)(short)
  • Treat 'Em Rough (1917)(short)
  • Why Uncle! (1917)(short)
  • Goin' Straight (1917)(short)

Sound

  • Trapped (1931)
  • Law of the Sea (1931)
  • Hollywood Halfbacks (1931)
  • Behind Stone Walls (1932)
  • Klondike (1932)

References

  1. ^ Staff. "Priscilla Dean; Screen Actress of Silent Films", Los Angeles Times, February 6, 1988. Accessed May 16, 2016. "Priscilla Dean, considered one of the best of the silent screen actresses, has died at her home in Leonia, a small New Jersey town she retired to more than 50 years ago."
  2. ^ "To Wed Famous Air Ace: Priscilla Dean Admits Engagement to Eddie Rickenbacker." Los Angeles Times. Oct 25, 1918, p. II1.
  3. ^ "Priscilla Dean Weds Flier. Screen Star Married To Lieut. Arnold, Naval World-girdling Aviator". New York Times. October 7, 1928.
  4. ^ "Arnold Loses On Divorce. Round the World Flier's Decree Is Invalid, Appeal Court Rules". New York Times. April 22, 1930.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Priscilla Dean.
  • Priscilla Dean at IMDb
  • Priscilla Dean photographs and articles
  • Photographs
  • Priscilla Dean in a chorus in 1910 on the right (Univ. of Washington, Sayre collection)
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