Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Nina Byron

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Nina Betts

Occupation
  
Actor Dancer

Name
  
Nina Byron



Born
  
July 27, 1900 (
1900-07-27
)
Christchurch, New Zealand

Spouse(s)
  
Nicholas Dunaew (1884–1963)

Nina Byron (born July 27, 1900, died January 21, 1987) was a silent film actress from Christchurch, New Zealand. Her given name was Nina Clarice Betts.

Contents

Film actress

She came to America with her mother. Her father stayed behind in New Zealand and committed suicide. She studied dancing, went on tour, and joined the Hitchykoo company. Only a year after coming to New York City, Byron came to Los Angeles to make Truthful Tulliver (1917) with William S. Hart. As Abby Hope in The Heir of the Ages (1917), Byron was described by a critic as having substantial acting skills. She was the ingenue (stock character) for House Peters. The material she was given to work with, according to the reviewer, did not test her ability. He likens Byron's laughter in the film to Mary Pickford. Her character was merely required to laugh like the silent film icon. Her other film credits are for roles in The Cruise of the Make-Believes (1918), The Source (1918), The Dub (1919), Johnny Get Your Gun (1919), The Boomerang (1919), and The Broken Butterfly (1919).

Marriage

In June 1922 Nicholas Dunaew, actor and leading man with Pauline Frederick, sued Byron for divorce. Dunaew was also a film director who desired to produce a series of anti-Bolshevist motion pictures. He resided at the Green Room Club in New York at the time. In his divorce petition he stated that he had attempted to lift his wife from poverty to his own level, but failed. He concluded by saying one cannot make a silk purse from a sow's ear. Dunaew met Byron in New York when she was at the August and Louis Lumiere studio having some pictures taken. He quickly fell in love with her and brought her, together with mother, to Los Angeles. Byron and Dunaew married in September 1918 and resided at 1504 McCadden Place in Hollywood. They separated on January 4, 1920. Dunaew claimed Byron deserted him. It was during the time she was a member of the Hitchykoo troupe that he did not see her again. Dunaew made reference to Byron's reprehensible conduct which he later became aware of through his friends. She later married cinematographer Harold Rosson (1924-26), and set designer Frank Hotaling (July 5, 1939 - April 13, 1977) until his death.

Dancer

Byron was a member of the Ziegfeld Follies in 1925, after she was out of movies. Her fellow dancers included Ruth Fallows, Helen MacDonald, and Doris Lloyd. In February 1925 they performed at the Moulin Rouge. Byron was a musical comedy theater performer on Broadway and was associated with Eddie Cantor. She was among the 100 travelers who returned to Los Angeles aboard the Dollar around-the-world liner President Wilson in March 1929. Others included John Barrymore and his bride, Dolores Costello. Byron was featured in the Florenz Ziegfeld show, Woopee, in 1929. The cruise she returned from was a trip through the tropics and up the west coast.

Filmography

Actress
1919
The Broken Butterfly as
Marcène's Sister
1919
The Boomerang as
Rose Cameron
1919
Johnny Get Your Gun as
Janet Burnham
1919
The Dub as
Enid Drayton
1918
The Cruise of the Make-Believes as
Enid Crane
1918
The Source as
Ruth Piggins
1918
Nemesis and the Candy Man (Short) as
Honoria
1917
Heir of the Ages as
Abby Hope
1917
Truthful Tulliver as
Daisy Burton

References

Nina Byron Wikipedia