Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ena Gregory

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Ena Gregory


Role
  
Actress


Died
  
June 13, 1993, Laguna Beach, California, United States

Spouse
  
Dr. Frank G. Nolan (m. 1937–1939), Albert S. Rogell (m. ?–1934)

Movies
  
The Soilers, Short Kilts, The Jazz Singer, Mother's Joy, Zeb vs Paprika

Similar People
  
Hal Roach, H M Walker, Chester Withey, Alan Crosland

Ena Gregory (18 April 1907 – 13 June 1993) was an Australian born actress who achieved fame in Hollywood in the 1920s.

Contents

Childhood

She was born Ena J. Gregory to Arthur and Jessie Gregory in Sydney Australia in 1907 and grew up in Manly. In Australia, Gregory sang, danced and performed in juvenile roles for the J. C. Williamson organisation, appearing in productions such as Eyes of Youth, in 1918. Apparently travelling with her businessman father, she arrived in California in about 1920.

Hollywood

She was first signed in Hollywood for ingenue roles by Universal Pictures in 1921. She also worked for Hal Roach Studios and First National Pictures. In all she spent five years in comic roles before going into dramatic work. By 1924 she was the leading lady of the Independent Pictures Corporation. She was a WAMPAS Baby Star of 1925.

Gregory's film career started with comedy shorts like The Bull Thrower (1920), Lion's Jaws and Kitten's Paws (1920), and The Whizbang (1921). After completing The Calgary Stampede (1925) and The Chip of the Flying U (1926), with Hoot Gibson, she was promoted to leading lady for Jack Hoxie, for two movies.

Name change

When Gregory failed to achieve stardom by losing chances due to illness and other causes, she consulted a Hollywood seer named Dareos. He suggested a new stage name which combined the syllables of Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks. It was Marian Douglas. Her first film using the new name was The Shepherd of the Hills (1928).

Gregory continued to make movies as Marion Douglas until 1931. Her final films are Twisted Tales (1931), Three Wise Clucks (1931), Aloha (1931), and Beach Pajamas (1931).

Personal life

Gregory married film director Alfred Rogell in 1931, but the union ended in divorce in August 1934. Beverly Hills, California attorney, William V.R. Smith, was named a co-respondent in a $150,000 lawsuit brought by Rogell. Gregory was awarded a temporary alimony sum of $300 per month from Rogell. Gregory married Dr. Frank Nolan on 5 November 1937. The couple separated in May 1938 and Gregory obtained a divorce decree in July 1939.

She took steps to become an U.S. citizen beginning in October 1927.

Retiring from the film industry in 1931, she became a successful real estate agent in Laguna Beach, California.

Ena Gregory died in Laguna Beach in 1993, aged 87.

Selected filmography

  • Short Kilts (1924) with Stan Laurel
  • The Folly of Vanity (1924)
  • The Calgary Stampede (1925)
  • Blazing Days (1927)
  • Sioux Blood (1929)
  • References

    Ena Gregory Wikipedia


    Similar Topics