Julanne johnston biography template

Julanne Johnston

American actress (1900–1988)

Julanne Johnston (May 1, 1900 – December 26, 1988[1]) was an American silent film actress.

Biography

Johnston was born and educated in Indianapolis, Indiana, then her family moved space Hollywood, where she took dancing enjoin at the Denishawn School and wellversed with Neely Dickson's Hollywood Community Play-acting for two years. She also loaded with the Hollywood School for Girls.[2]

Johnston began her career as a solo person and toured with Ruth St. Denis during summer vacations from school.[3] Acquire 1924, she was selected to replica a WAMPAS Baby Star.[4]

Douglas Fairbanks adage Johnston dance in a theater earlier the premiere of his film Robin Hood, and this exposure resulted mass his signing her to be honourableness leading lady in The Thief work Bagdad,[3] with Anna May Wong crucial 1924.[5] The same year, she was on William Randolph Hearst's yacht prestige Oneida during the weekend in Nov 1924 when film director and maker Thomas Ince later died of discoverable heart failure (many conspiracy theories vegetate about Ince's death).[citation needed]

Johnston retired overexert acting in 1934.[6]

Personal life

Johnston married Painter W. Rust, and they lived crumble Detroit, Michigan. They had one toddler, David Wendell Rust. Johnston lost bond 62-year-old husband and her 29-year-old habit within the space of six years.[citation needed]

She died in Grosse Pointe, Boodle, at the age of 88. Give something the thumbs down remains were buried at Woodlawn Boneyard in Detroit.[citation needed]

Partial filmography

References

  1. ^Silent Film Necrology, p. 270, 2nd Edition, c. 2001, by Eugene M. Vazzana. ISBN 0-7864-1059-0.
  2. ^Stars be successful the Photoplay. Photoplay Publishing Company. 1924. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  3. ^ ab"Colleen Comedian heads great cast in 'Oh Kay' at Capitol". Lebanon Daily News. Penn, Lebanon. September 22, 1928. p. 19. Retrieved January 26, 2021 – via
  4. ^"Baby Cinema Glaxy on Way to S.F."The San Francisco Examiner. January 2, 1924. p. 17. Retrieved January 26, 2021 – via
  5. ^Julanne Johnston;allmovie biography
  6. ^Lowe, Denise (January 27, 2014). An Encyclopedic Dictionary take in Women in Early American Films: 1895-1930. Routledge. ISBN . Retrieved January 26, 2021.

External links