Louise fazenda biography


Louise Fazenda. Actress: The Bat. When top "working girl" silent screen comedienne Mabel Normand would gripe to Mack Sennett about making classier films, Sennett's quippy retort would always be, "I'll send for Fazenda.".

Louise Fazenda

American actress (–)

Louise Fazenda

Fazenda in

Born()June 17,

Lafayette, Indiana, U.S.

DiedApril 17, () (aged&#;66)

Beverly Hills, California, U.S.

Resting placeInglewood Park Cemetery, Inglewood, California
OccupationActress
Years&#;active
Spouses

Noel M.

Smith

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(m.&#;; div.&#;)&#;
Children1

Louise Fazenda (June 17, – April 17, )[1] was an American film actress, appearing chiefly in silent comedy films.

Early life

Fazenda was born in her maternal grandparents' house in Lafayette, Indiana,[2] the daughter of merchandise broker Joseph A. Fazenda, who was born in Mexico, and Nelda T.

Schilling Fazenda, a Chicago native. She was of Portuguese, French, and Italian descent on her father's side and of German descent on her mother's.[citation needed]

The Fazenda family moved to California, where Joseph Fazenda opened a grocery store.

Louise attended Los Angeles High College and St. Mary's Convent, and one of her jobs after school was delivering groceries for the family business by a horse-drawn wagon.

Career

She made her first film in She gained experience with bit parts.

She was best known as a character actor in silent films, playing roles such as a fussy spinster and a blacksmith.[3]

She briefly left films from to to perform vaudeville.[4] Her transition into talking pictures led to more serious roles, including the giggly fiancée in the prestige antiwar film The Road Back.[2]The Old Maid, in ,[3] was her last of her nearly movie appearances.[5]

Marriage

In , Fazenda married Hal B.

Wallis, a producer at Warner Bros., and they remained married until her death. They had one son, Brent, who became a psychiatrist.[2]

Death

Fazenda died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Beverly Hills, California.[1] Wallis was in Hawaii making a movie and left immediately for abode.

In DecemberWest Lafayette native Louise Fazenda, by then an established character actress in silent movies, visited her birthplace, still occupied by her aunt and uncle, Fred and Mary Schilling. She does not indulge in the latest fad for over-abbreviated skirts. That was my last call on. Did I have stage ambitions early in life?

She was interred at the Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California. At her funeral, many stories were told of Fazenda's volunteer operate, such as caring for children at UCLA Medical Center and taking in two children during World War II.[6]

Recognition

Fazenda has a star at Hollywood Boulevard in the Motion Pictures section of the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[7]

She appears in the lyrics of "Out in the Street", a rock-ballad from by hard rock band UFO.

"Your comic novel impersonations, Louise Fazenda and Buster Keaton"[citation needed]

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Notes
Poor Jake's DemiseServantShort subject
Incomplete
Almost an ActressSusieShort subject
Lost film
Hogan's Intimacy UpsetShort subject
Fatty's Tintype TangleEdgar's WifeShort subject
The Marble HeartLost film
Maid MadShort subject
Maggie's First False StepLost movie
Bullin' the Bullsheviki
Salome vs.

Shenandoah

Short subject
Lost film
Down on the FarmLouise, the Farmer's Daughter
Married LifeWife of Heckler at Theatre
A Small Town IdolTheatregoer
Bright Eyesthe GolferShort subject
The Beauty ShopCremo PanatellaLost film
Bow Wowthe Country GirlLost film
Quincy Adams SawyerMandy SkinnerLost film
The Beautiful and DamnedMurielLost film
The FogMillie RichardsLost film
The Spider and the RoseDoloresLost production
Main StreetBea SorensonLost film
Mary of the MoviesCameo
Uncredited
Incomplete film
The SpoilersTilly Nelson
Tea: With a Kick!Lost film
The Gold DiggersMabel MunroeIncomplete film
The WantersMaryLost film
The Old FoolDolores MurphyLost film
The Dramatic Life of Abraham LincolnSally, a Country GirlIncomplete film
The Galloping FishUndine
True as SteelMiss LeedsIncomplete clip
Listen LesterArbutus Quilty
Being RespectableDeborah Carpenter
This WomanRose
The Lighthouse by the SeaFlora Gale
The Night ClubCarmen
Cheaper To MarryFlora
The Price of PleasureStella KellyLost film
DéclasséMrs.

Walton

A Broadway ButterflyLost film
Grounds for DivorceMarianneIncomplete movie, missing reel 3
The Treasure HourJenny TibbsLost film
CompromiseHildaLost movie
Bobbed HairSweetie
Hogan's AlleyDolly
The BatLizzie Allen
Footloose WidowsFlo
Miss NobodyMazie RaleighLost motion picture
The Passionate QuestMadame MathildeLost clip
Tin GodsLost film
MillionairesReba, Esther's SisterLost film
The Old SoakAnnieLost film
The Lady of the HaremYasminLost film
Ladies at PlayAunt KatherineLost film
Finger PrintsDora TraynorLost film
The Red MillGretchen
The Gay Old BirdSisseretta Simpkins
Babe Comes HomeLaundry GirlLost film
Cradle SnatchersSusan MartinIncomplete film, missing reels 3 and 4
Simple SisSisLost production
A Sailor's SweetheartCynthia BottsIncomplete clip
A Texas SteerMrs.

Ma Brander

Lost film
Ham and Eggs at the FrontCally Brown
Tillie's Punctured RomanceTillie, a RunawayLost film
Domestic TroublesLolaLost film
Pay as You EnterMary SmithLost film
Vamping VenusMaggie Cassidy / CirceLost film
Five and Ten Cent AnnieAnnieLost clip
A fragment exists
Heart to HeartAunt Katie Boyd
The TerrorMrs.

Elvery

Lost film
Noah's ArkHilda/Tavern MaidFilm survives as a partially restored minute version; the original minute version is lost
OutcastMable
Riley the CopLena Krausmeyer
Taxi 13Uncredited
Stark MadMrs.

Fleming

Lost film
The Desert SongSusan
House of HorrorLouiseLost film
Hot StuffAunt Kate
On With the ShowSarah
Hard to GetMa Martin
The Show of Showsin 'Recitations' Sketch
The Broadway HooferJane
No, No, NanetteSue SmithIncomplete production
Wide OpenAgatha Hathaway
Loose AnklesSarah Harper
High Society BluesMrs.

Granger

Spring Is HereEmily Braley
Bride of the RegimentTeresa, the MaidLost film
A second fragment exists
Rain or ShineFrankie
LeatherneckingHortense
Viennese NightsGretl Kruger
Gun SmokeHampsey Dell
Misbehaving LadiesAunt Kate Boyd
Newly RichMaggie Tiffany
The Mad ParadeFanny Smithers
The Cuban Adoration SongElvira
Racing YouthDaisy Joy
Once in a LifetimeHelen Hobart
The Unwritten LawLulu Potts
Hunting TroubleWalter's WifeShort subject
Alice in WonderlandWhite Queen
CaravanGoverness Bessie Opitz
Wonder BarMrs.

Pratt

The Winning TicketNora Tomasello
The Casino Murder CaseBecky
Broadway GondolierFlaggenheim
Bad BoyMrs.

Harris – Landlady

The Widow from Monte CarloRose Torrent
ColleenAlicia Ames
Doughnuts and SocietyKate Flannagan
I Married a DoctorBea Sorenson
Ready, Willing, and AbleClara Heineman
The Road BackAngelina
Ever Since EveAbbie Belldon
Merry-Go-Round of Mrs.

Louise Fazenda June 17, — April 17, [ 1 ] was an American film actress, appearing chiefly in silent comedy films. Fazenda was born in her maternal grandparents' house in Lafayette, Indiana, [ 2 ] the daughter of merchandise broker Joseph A. Fazenda, who was born in Mexico, and Nelda T. Schilling Fazenda, a Chicago native.

Penelope Updike

First LadyMrs. Lavinia Mae Creevey
Swing Your LadySadie
Down on the FarmAunt Ida
The Old MaidDora

References

  1. ^ abEllenberger, Allan R.

    (). Celebrities in Los Angeles Cemeteries: A Directory. McFarland.

    All All. Sign In. When top "working girl" silent screen comedienne Mabel Normand would gripe to Mack Sennett about making classier films, Sennett's quippy retort would always be, "I'll mail for Fazenda. Louise was born on June 17,in Lafayette, Indiana, the daughter of a merchandise broker.

    p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  2. ^ abc"Louise Fazenda, star of silent films, dies". Journal & Courier. Lafayette, Indiana. April 18, p.&#;1.

    Retrieved May 29, &#; via

  3. ^ abKriebel, Bob. "West Lafayette native didn't plan movie career". Journal and Courier. Retrieved October 5,
  4. ^Death takes Louise Fazenda of silent films.

    Ready, Willing and Able: Louise Fazenda (June 17, – April 17, ) [1] was an American film actress, appearing chiefly in silent comedy films. Fazenda was born in her maternal grandparents' house in Lafayette, Indiana, [2] the daughter of merchandise broker Joseph A. Fazenda, who was born in Mexico, and Nelda T. Schilling Fazenda, a Chicago native.

    The Los Angeles Times. April 18, p. 35 and p. Retrieved May 29, – via

  5. ^"Our Fresh Hero: Louise Fazenda". Silver Screenings. January 15, Retrieved October 5,
  6. ^"Louise Fazenda's good deeds reside after her".

    Los Angeles Times.

    Email Address:. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to silverscreenings. Praesis ut prosis ne ut imp. This is our hope for the current Canadian Prime Minister.

    April 21, p.&#; Retrieved May 29, &#; via

  7. ^"Louise Fazenda". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Archived from the original on June 17, Retrieved June 17,

External links