Sneha Girap (Editor)

Teddie Gerard

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Teddie Gerard

Role
  
Film actress

Spouse
  
Joseph Raymond (m. 1908)


Teddie Gerard Teddie Gerard 1922 Teddie Gerard May 2 1890 August 31 Flickr

Died
  
August 31, 1942, London, United Kingdom

Movies
  
The Cave Girl, The Seventh Day

Teddie Gerard (May 2, 1890 – August 31, 1942) was an Argentine film actress and entertainer of the early 20th century. Her real name was Teresa Cabre. She was born in Buenos Aires.

Contents

Teddie Gerard TEDDIE GERARD SILENT FILM STAR CHOWTALES

Career

Gerard first performed at the Casino Theatre on Broadway in New York City, in February 1909. She appeared in the chorus of Havana. Later she followed Gaby Deslys as the dancing partner of Harry Pilcer. Gerard was in a Flo Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic production on the New Amsterdam Roof in New York City, in August 1920. In London, England and Paris, France she was a singer and dancer in revues during the 1920s. She performed in The Wedding Glide and Eclipse, written by E. Phillips Oppenheim. In 1921 Gerard was cast in the motion picture The Cave Girl. She acted in The Rat, a theatrical production taken from a work penned by David L'Estrange. The presentation was staged at the Colonial Theatre in London in 1925.

Private life

She wed Joseph Raymond, an American theatrical agent, in Newark, New Jersey, in 1908. She was engaged to actor Tom Douglas in 1926. In October 1928 Gerard announced her engagement to Captain Archie Grant of the Grenadier Guards, a son of the Scottish laird. The wedding was planned for a fortnight later, at Effingham, Surrey, where Gerard owned a cottage.

Illness and death

Gerard became seriously ill with an infection of her right lung in March 1929. She was confined to a nursing home in the West End of London. She died following an extended illness in London in 1942. She was 52 years old.

Partial filmography

  • The Real Thing at Last (1916)
  • The Cave Girl (1921)
  • References

    Teddie Gerard Wikipedia