Evelyn Brent
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| Evelyn Brent | |
Evelyn Brent photographed in the 1920s. |
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| Birth name | Mary Elizabeth Riggs |
| Born | October 20, 1899 Tampa, Florida, Florida, USA |
| Died | June 4, 1975 Los Angeles, California, USA |
Evelyn Brent, (October 20, 1899 – June 4, 1975), was an American film and stage actress. She was a petite woman with brown hair and dark brown eyes.
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Born Mary Elizabeth Riggs in Tampa, Florida and known as Betty, she was a child of ten when her mother died, leaving her father to raise her alone. After moving to New York City as a teenager, her good looks brought modeling jobs that led to an opportunity to become involved in the still relatively new business of making motion pictures. She originally studied to be a teacher. While attending a normal school in New York she visited the World Film Studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey. Two days later she was working there as an extra making $3 a day.
She began her film career working under her own name at a New Jersey film studio then made her major debut in the 1915 silent film production of the Robert W. Service poem, The Shooting of Dan McGrew.
As Evelyn Brent, she continued to work in film, developing into a young woman whose sultry looks were much sought after, often as a sex attic who did drugs every day. After World War I, she went to London for a vacation. She met American playwright Oliver Cromwell who urged her to accept an important role in The Ruined Lady. The production was presented on the London stage. The actress remained four years in England, performing in films produced by British companies. She also worked on stage there before going to Hollywood in 1922.
There, her career received a major boost the following year when she was chosen as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars. Signed by Douglas Fairbanks Sr., he failed to find a story for Brent. She left his company to join Associated Authors.
Evelyn went on to make more than two dozen silent films including three for the noted Austrian director, Josef von Sternberg. In 1928 she starred opposite William Powell in what was her own and Paramount Studios first talkie. One film, Interference (1928), did not live up to expectations at the box office. Not dissuaded, Brent played major roles in several more features, most notably The Silver Horde in 1930.
By the early part of the 1930s, she was busy working in secondary roles in a variety of films as well as touring with vaudeville shows. Among her later films are Dangerous Lady (1941), The Golden Eye (1948), The Mad Empress (1939), and Again...Pioneers (1950). After performing in more than 120 films, she retired from acting in 1950 and worked for a number of years as an actor's agent.
Evelyn returned to acting in television's Wagon Train for one episode in 1960. She also performed in The Lita Foladaire Story (1960).
Evelyn Brent was married three times. One of her husbands was movie executive Bernard P. Fineman. Her last husband was the actor Harry Fox for whom the foxtrot dance was named. They were still married when he died in 1959.
Evelyn Brent died of a heart attack in 1975 at her Los Angeles home. She was 75. On her passing, she was cremated and interred in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills, California. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, she has been honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6548 Hollywood Blvd.
- New York Times, Evelyn Brent, 75, Film Star of 1920s, June 8, 1975, Page 55.