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Fay Holderness

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Name
  
Fay Holderness

Role
  
Film actress

Fay Holderness lordheathcomwebimagesfayholdernesshogwild
Died
  
May 13, 1963, Santa Monica, California, United States

Spouse
  
Edmund Ayars Leeds (m. ?–1954)

Movies
  
Hog Wild, Lonesome, Should Sailors Marry?, Their Purple Moment, Call of the Cuckoo

Similar People
  
James Parrott, Paul Fejos, H M Walker, Hal Roach, Jess Robbins

Fay Holderness (April 16, 1881 – May 13, 1963) was a vaudeville performer and film actress from Oconto, Wisconsin.

Contents

Personal life

Fay Holderness was born Fay MacMurray in Oconto, Wisconsin, the daughter of Thomas James MacMurray and Mary E. Barnes MacMurray. Her father was a prominent organist and her brother, Frederick MacMurray, was a respected violinist and a composer and the father of actor Fred MacMurray. The family left Wisconsin in the late 1880s, later living in Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois. Fay acquired the surname Holderness in 1912, when she married Francis C. Holderness in Detroit. She married Edmund Ayars Leeds (1892–1954) on August 25, 1923. Fay Holderness died in 1963 at the Pacific Convalarium in Santa Monica, California, age 82, from arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease. She is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Los Angeles under the name "Fay H. Leeds."

Career

Holderness performed in a vaudeville production in Olean, New York in 1920, a presentation of The Village Four. Three actors along with Holderness appeared in this comedy and harmony singing skit.

She performed in silent movie productions as early as 1917. In 1919 Holderness was in the cast of Hearts of the World, directed by D.W. Griffith. The film was shot on location in France over a period of eighteen months. Other actors in the movie are Lillian Gish, Dorothy Gish, Kate Bruce, and George Fawcett.

Holderness was in the cast of Dick Turpin (1925). This tale of romance and adventure was set in old England. The film featured Tom Mix, Kathleen Meyers, Philo McCullough, and Alan Hale, Sr.

She appeared in many short comedies, including several with Laurel and Hardy, playing Mrs. Laurel in Their Purple Moment (1928), and Mrs. Hardy in Hog Wild (1930). She also supported W. C. Fields in The Barber Shop (1933) and The Bank Dick (1940).

Her career continued into the late 1930s and the era of sound film. Holderness' last screen credits are for Share The Wealth (1936) and Just Speeding (1936). Her uncredited parts take her career into the 1940s. Among these are parts in The Pride of the Yankees (1942) and The Mummy's Ghost (1944).

References

Fay Holderness Wikipedia