Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
Only includes names with the selected topics
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
1-3 of 3
- Actress
Donna Drew was born Donna A. Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her British father, Walter Anderson, worked for the railroad. Donna attended Salt Like City high school. At the age of eighteen she married twenty-seven year old actor Arthur Moon. The couple worked together in several stage productions before moving to Los Angeles. She quickly landed several bit parts. In 1917 she was signed by Universal and appeared in the drama The Flame Of Youth. Then she starred in The Lair Of The Wolf and Madame Spy with Jack Mulhall. Her performances got rave reviews and she seemed destined for stardom.
Meanwhile her husband Arthur had also become a successful film actor. During the Summer of 1918 she and Arthur went on a vaudeville tour together. While performing in Helena, Montana they both contracted Spanish influenza. Tragically on October 17, 1918 Arthur passed away. Donna was so sick that she was not told about her husband's death. Just one week later, on October 24, she died from acute pneumonia caused by influenza. She was only twenty-one years old. Donna and Arthur were both buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her final film, The Ghost Girl, was released in 1919.- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Einar Zangenberg was stage-trained in Copenhagen but soon found steady and fun-filled employment in silent films from 1908. He was known as a dare-devil in early Danish silent cinema. As a swimmer, motorist and even airman he dazzled the audience. Never one to settle down he worked as an actor, director and writer in Denmark, Sweden and finally Germany, where he took residence in 1914. His films in Germany and Austria are lost and forgotten today but in his heyday, he made quite a few action/adventure films that thrilled the movie-going public. In Germany he was associated with Flora-Film. He was married to actress Alfi Zangenberg when he died in Vienna, Austria from the dreaded Spanish Influenza - aged 35.- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Charles Lecocq was born on 3 June 1832 in Paris, France. Charles is known for Airs de France (1955), La fille de Madame Angot (1935) and Moi et l'impératrice (1933). Charles was married to Marie Cinquin. Charles died on 24 October 1918 in Paris, France.