Milla Davenport
Milla Davenport (February 4, 1871 – May 17, 1936) was a stage and film actress, born in Zurich, Switzerland. Davenport was educated in Switzerland. Davenport appeared with her husband, actor Harry J. Davenport's (not the more famous Harry Davenport) repertory company for fifteen years.[1][2] Davenport began her career in motion pictures in the silent film Trapping the Bachelor (1916). She was in Daddy-Long-Legs (1919) with Mary Pickford, The Brat (1919) with Nazimova, Sins of the Fathers (1928) with Emil Jannings, and The Wedding Night (1935). Davenport continued to make movies well into the sound film era. Her last film credits are for roles in The Defense Rests (1934), Here Comes Cookie (1935), and an uncredited part in Human Cargo (1936).[1][2]
Milla Davenport | |
---|---|
Davenport and Thomas Jefferson in Rip Van Winkle (1921) | |
Born | Zurich, Switzerland | February 4, 1871
Died | May 17, 1936 65) | (aged
Davenport died in Los Angeles, California in 1936, aged 65. She was buried in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.[1][2]
Partial filmography
- Social Briars (1918)
- Daddy-Long-Legs (1919)
- The Brat (1919)
- In Mizzoura (1919)
- Stronger Than Death (1920)
- The Forbidden Woman (1920)
- You Never Can Tell (1920)
- She Couldn't Help It (1920)
- Rip Van Winkle (1921)
- The Man from Lost River (1921)
- Patsy (1921)
- The Worldly Madonna (1922)
- Dulcy (1923)
- Daddies (1924)
- The Right of the Strongest (1924)
- The Red Lily (1924)
- Dangerous Innocence (1925)
- Wild West (1925)
- The Road to Glory (1926)
- Crazy like a Fox (1926)
- Crossed Signals (1926)
- Hey! Hey! Cowboy (1927)
- The Danger Rider (1928)
- Sins of the Fathers (1928)
- The Girl from Woolworth's (1929)
- The Wedding Night (1935)
- Here Comes Cookie (1935)
References
- "Mrs. Milla Davenport". Los Angeles Times. May 19, 1936. pp. A20.
- "Milla Davenport". The New York Times. May 19, 1936. p. 23.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milla Davenport. |