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Katherine MacDonald

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Relatives
  
Mary MacLaren (sister)

Siblings
  
Mary MacLaren

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Katherine MacDonald

Awards
  
Hollywood Walk of Fame


Katherine MacDonald mediacacheak0pinimgcom736xc401d1c401d1fc6

Full Name
  
Katherine Agnew MacDonald

Born
  
December 14, 1891 (
1891-12-14
)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US

Occupation
  
Actress, film producer, model

Died
  
June 4, 1956, Santa Barbara, California, United States

Movies
  
Passion's Playground, Shark Monroe, The Spirit of '17

Spouse
  
Christian Holmes (m. 1928–1931), Charles S. Johnston (m. 1924–1926), Malcolm Struss (m. 1910–1919)

Children
  
Britt Johnston, Ann Holmes

Similar People
  
Mary MacLaren, Tom Forman, William Desmond Taylor, William S Hart, Cecil B DeMille

War and Medicine // Nurse Katherine Macdonald


Katherine Agnew MacDonald (December 14, 1891–June 4, 1956) was an American actress and film producer. She was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Contents

Katherine MacDonald Katherine MacDonald Hollywood Star Walk Los Angeles Times

The Turning Point (1920) Katherine MacDonald Lithograph Conservation


Career

Katherine MacDonald Portrait of the actress Katherine MacDonald by Thomas Staedeli

Starting her career as a popular model in New York City in the 1910s, MacDonald moved to Los Angeles in 1917. She became one of the first women to produce films in Hollywood, and produced nine features for her company, Katherine MacDonald Pictures, from 1919–1921.

Katherine MacDonald Katherine MacDonald Betzwood Film Archive Libraries at

MacDonald was among the top ranks of actresses financially in 1920, earning about $50,000 per picture from a contract with First National. She achieved the peak of her popularity between 1920 and 1923. From 1922 to 1925 produced by B.P. Schulberg. However, she was considered only a minor talent in the film industry, although her curvaceous figure resulted in the nickname of the "American Beauty".

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Her first significant role was her lead role in Shark Monroe (1918) opposite William S. Hart. She would be featured in a number of silent films, including The Squaw Man (1918), Mr. Fix-It (1918), Passion's Playground (1920), The Beautiful Liar (1921), Stranger Than Fiction (1921), and The Infidel (1922). Her films typically were romantic dramas. MacDonald only made two pictures after 1923, one each in 1925 and 1926.

Personal life

Katherine MacDonald Katherine MacDonald Mineral cosmetics

MacDonald's career was surrounded by controversy in her private life. She had a public feud with her sister, fellow actress Mary MacLaren, five years her junior. The gossip columns also held rumors of an affair with U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, which was unlikely given his poor health after his 1919 stroke.

While working as a model in New York City, Katherine met her first husband, artist K. Malcolm Struss. They married in 1910 but the marriage was short-lived, and they officially divorced in 1919. She married Charles S. Johnston, a young Chicago millionaire, in 1924 and they soon had one son, Britt. They divorced in 1926.

Katherine MacDonald Pictures of Katherine MacDonald Picture 232595 Pictures Of

In 1928 she married Christian Rasmus Holmes (1898-1944), an heir to the Fleischmann's yeast company, but that marriage ended in a sensational divorce suit in 1931. MacDonald claimed cruelty—that her husband had fired a revolver at her through a locked door, had deliberately burnt her with lit cigarettes, and had sometimes locked her in a cage. Holmes counter-sued, claiming that MacDonald had embarrassed him by having affairs. MacDonald and Holmes had one daughter, Ann.

Katherine MacDonald Katherine MacDonald Wikipdia

After leaving the movie industry MacDonald ran a successful cosmetics business in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Katherine MacDonald Pictures of Katherine MacDonald Picture 232601 Pictures Of

Her statistics list her height as 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) with a weight of 130 pounds (59 kg), with brown hair and blue eyes. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6777 Hollywood Boulevard.

Filmography

Actress
1926
Old Loves and New as
Elinor Carew / Lady Geraldine
1925
The Unnamed Woman as
Flora Brookes
1923
Chastity as
Norma O'Neill
1923
The Scarlet Lily as
Dora Mason
1923
The Lonely Road as
Betty Austin
1923
Refuge as
Nadia
1923
Money, Money, Money as
Priscilla Hobbs
1922
The Woman Conquers as
Ninon Le Compte
1922
White Shoulders as
Virginia Pitman
1922
Heroes and Husbands as
Susanne Danbury
1922
Domestic Relations as
Barbara Benton
1922
The Infidel as
Lola Daintry
1922
The Woman's Side as
Mary Gray
1921
The Beautiful Liar as
Helen Haynes / Elsie Parmelee
1921
Her Social Value as
Marion Hoyte
1921
Stranger Than Fiction as
Diane Drexel
1921
Trust Your Wife as
Margot Hastings
1921
My Lady's Latchkey as
Annesley Grayle
1920
Curtain as
Nancy Bradshaw
1920
The Notorious Miss Lisle as
Gaenor Lisle
1920
Passion's Playground as
Mary Grant
1920
The Turning Point as
Diana Tennant
1919
The Beauty Market as
Amelie Thorndike
1919
The Thunderbolt as
Ruth Pomeroy
1919
High Pockets as
Joy Blythe
1919
The Woman Thou Gavest Me as
Mary MacNeill
1919
Speedy Meade as
Mary Dillman
1918
The Squaw Man as
Diana, Henry's Wife
1918
Battling Jane as
Pollet's Daughter
1918
Riddle Gawne as
Kathleen Harkness
1918
Shark Monroe as
Marjorie Hilton
1918
His Own Home Town as
Carol Landis
1918
Mr. Fix-It as
Georgiana Burroughs
1918
Headin' South as
The Girl
1918
The Spirit of '17 as
Flora Edwards (as Katherine McDonald)
1917
Her Bargain
Producer
1921
Stranger Than Fiction (producer)
1921
Trust Your Wife (producer)
1920
Curtain (producer)
1920
The Notorious Miss Lisle (producer)
1920
The Turning Point (producer)
Self
1923
Screen Snapshots, Series 4, No. 9 (Documentary short) as
Self
1921
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 23 (Documentary short) as
Self
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 11 (Documentary short) as
Self

References

Katherine MacDonald Wikipedia