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Kathleen Clifford

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Occupation
  
Actress

Ex-spouse
  
Meo Illitch

Role
  
Film actress

Name
  
Kathleen Clifford

Years active
  
1907–1932


Kathleen Clifford httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Born
  
February 16, 1887 (
1887-02-16
)

Died
  
December 28, 1962, Los Angeles, California, United States

Movies
  
Excess Baggage, When the Clouds Roll By, Who Is Number One?

Similar People
  
James Cruze, Victor Fleming, William Bertram

Kathleen Clifford (February 16, 1887 – December 28, 1962) was an American vaudeville and Broadway stage and film actress of the early twentieth century.

Contents

Kathleen Clifford Kathleen Clifford Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Biography

Born in Charlottesville, Virginia, Kathleen Clifford's career acting was initially built on the vaudeville stages as a comedian. Clifford was renowned for her impersonations of men and was often humorously billed as "The Smartest Chap in Town". At one point, as a male impersonator, she was working as a duo with female impersonator Bothwell Browne.

In January 1907, Clifford made her Broadway stage debut at the Lincoln Square Theatre in the J.J. and Lee Schultz produced musical The Bell of London Town. Clifford's stage career was prolific and lasted throughout the 1910s. Some of her most notable roles were in the 1911 musical triple bill Hell, Tempations and Gaby at the Folies Bergère theatre, the 1911-1912 original musical comedy Vera Violetta at the Winter Garden Theatre, the Florenz Ziegfeld musical production A Winsome Widow (1912) and the 1916 H. H. Frazee produced A Pair of Queens opposite actor Edward Abeles at the Longacre Theatre.

Kathleen Clifford made her screen debut in the 1917 William Bertram directed mystery serial Who Is Number One? opposite silent film actor Cullen Landis. She would appear in several high-profile roles throughout the late 1910s and early 1920s. Most notably: opposite Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. in the 1919 comedy When the Clouds Roll By, in the Ouida Bergère penned and George Fitzmaurice directed crime drama Kick In opposite Betty Compson, May McAvoy and Bert Lytell (1922), and in the role of 'Queen Berengaria' opposite Wallace Beery and the young actress Marguerite De La Motte in Richard the Lion-Hearted (1923). Clifford's last silent film would be in the 1928 James Cruze directed comedy Excess Baggage opposite the popular silent film actor William Haines.

With the advent of talkies Clifford settled into semi-retirement. She would make only one film during the early years of sound film; The Bride's Bereavement, a comedy short featuring several former silent film stars such as Aileen Pringle, Montagu Love, Luis Alberni and Charles Ray.

Kathleen ran a florist business Broadway Florist in Hollywood in the late 1920s.

Kathleen Clifford Kathleen Clifford silent film star Silent cinema actress

In 1945, Kathleen Clifford penned a book for children entitled The Enchanted Glen: Never Trod By the Feet of Men that was illustrated by Kim Weed and published by Beverly Publishing, Los Angeles, California. Clifford's It's April. . . Remember? was published by Exposition Press, New York, 1955

Kathleen Clifford Passed Time Kathleen Clifford She Never Quit

Kathleen Clifford died at the age of 75 in Los Angeles, California in 1962.

Filmography

Actress
1932
The Bride's Bereavement; or, the Snake in the Grass (Short) as
Salvation Army Girl
1928
Excess Baggage as
Mabel Ford
1927
Life in Hollywood No. 6 (Short)
1925
Sporting Life as
Molly McGuire
1925
The Love Gamble as
Fifi Gordon
1924
Grandpa's Girl (Short) as
Jean Bradley
1924
No More Women as
Daisy Crenshaw
1923
Richard the Lion-Hearted as
Queen Berengaria
1922
Kick In as
Frou Frou
1921
Cold Steel as
Janet Hosmer
1919
When the Clouds Roll by as
Lucette Bancroft
1919
Angel Child as
Glory Moore
1918
The Law That Divides as
Kathleen Preston
1917
Who Is Number One? as
Aimee Villon
Self
1923
Screen Snapshots, Series 3, No. 17 (Documentary short) as
Self

References

Kathleen Clifford Wikipedia


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