Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mildred Hillary Davis [1] (February 22, 1901 [citation needed] [note 1] [2] – August 18, 1969) was an American actress who appeared in fifteen of Harold Lloyd's classic silent comedies and eventually married him.
Mildred B. Davis is an American novelist whose books generally fall into the suspense/mystery genre. Katherine ( née Davis) Roome, her daughter, and a published author herself, helped Mildred break a 30-year publishing silence by working with her to turn some previously unpublished manuscripts into the Murder in Maine series.
From Hand to Mouth (1919). From Hand to Mouth is a 1919 American short comedy film featuring Harold Lloyd.This was the first film Lloyd made with frequent co-star (and future wife) Mildred Davis.
Davis designed her own make-up for the scenes depicting the final stages of Mildred's illness, changed from syphilis to tuberculosis to satisfy the demands of the Hays Code, [9] which, under Joseph Breen, was beginning to expand and rigidly enforce an all-encompassing Production Code. On July 1, 1934, three days after the film was released, the ...
Film still of Harold Lloyd and his future wife Mildred Davis in A Sailor-Made Man (1921) In 1919, Bebe Daniels declined to renew her contract with Hal Roach, leaving the Lloyd series to pursue her dramatic aspirations. Later that year, Lloyd replaced Daniels with Mildred Davis after being told by Roach to watch Davis in a movie. Reportedly, the ...
Mildred Davis Lloyd, for whom the theatre prize was named, and little theatre co-founder Harold Lloyd For three years, from 1932 to 1935, with its partner Vine Street Theatre, it also produced films under the name Mirror.
When Marshall Davis decide to rename the African Heritage Cultural Arts Center in the early ‘90s, he wanted the community to understand that this was a haven for all Black Americans.
Too Many Crooks is a lost [2] [3] 1927 American silent comedy film directed by Fred C. Newmeyer, written by E.J. Rath and Rex Taylor, and starring Mildred Davis, Lloyd Hughes, George Bancroft, El Brendel, William V. Mong, John St. Polis and Otto Matieson. It was released on April 2, 1927, by Paramount Pictures. [4] [5]