Jump to content

Dorothy Cumming

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mr. Deletionist (talk | contribs) at 13:20, 27 February 2015. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dorothy G. Cumming
Publicity photo of Cumming from Who's Who on the Screen (1920)
Born1895/1899
Died(1983-12-10)10 December 1983
Occupation(s)Stage and silent film actress
Years active1915-1929

Dorothy G. Cumming (1895/1899 – 1983) was an actress of the silent film era. She appeared in 39 American, English, and Australian films between 1915 and 1929, notably appearing as the Virgin Mary in Cecil B. DeMille's 1927 film The King of Kings and the jealous wife in Lillian Gish's 1928 The Wind. She also appeared in stage productions in those same countries. After her film career ended, she became a designer of wallpapers in association with her sister Rose Cumming.

Birth

She was born in New South Wales. Her 1932 wedding announcement in the New York Times states that her family was from Morrengullen Estates in New South Wales.[dubiousdiscuss] Though her Hollywood biography gives her birth year as 1899, a ship's manifest gives Cumming's age as 26 years and 7 months, which would mean she was born four years earlier, in 1895. The 7 months also puts her birth month at odds, since it indicates that she was born in July, rather than April.

Family

The youngest daughter of Victor Cumming, a sheep rancher, and his wife, the former Sarah T. Fennell, she had two full siblings: Rose Cumming, who became a prominent American interior decorator, and Eileen Cumming, an advertising executive who married rheumatologist Dr. Russell LaFayette Cecil. She also had several half-siblings from her mother's first marriage.

Marriages

Cumming was married twice. Her husbands were:

  • Frank Elliott Dakin (married 4 April 1922, separated 1925, divorced 9 December 1927), a stage director known professionally as Frank Elliott. They had two sons, each of whom took his mother's maiden name after their parents' divorce: Anthony Cumming and Lt. Greville C. E. Cumming (1921–1942).
  • Allan McNab (born 1901), married 2 August 1932. He was a British artist and designer who became the art director of Life, worked as design director for Norman Bel Geddes, and became the director of administration of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Death

She died in New York City in 1983.

Selected filmography

Template:Persondata