Lina Basquette

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Lina Basquette
Born
Lena Copeland Baskette

(1907-04-19)April 19, 1907
DiedSeptember 30, 1994(1994-09-30) (aged 87)
Other namesLena Basquette
OccupationActress
Years active1916-1943; 1991
Spouse(s)Sam Warner
(m.1925-1927; his death)
J. Peverell Marley
(m.1929-1930; divorced)
Ray Hallam
(m.1931; died 19031)
Theodore Hayes(3 times)
(m.1933-1935; divorced)
Henry Mollison
(m.1937-46divorced)
Warner Gilmore
(m.1948-1950; divorced)
Frank Mancuso
(m.1959-?-never divorced or lived together

Lina Basquette, born Lena Copeland Baskette, (April 19, 1907 - September 30, 1994) was an American actress noted as much for her tumultuous personal life and nine marriages,[1] as her more than 75 years in entertainment beginning in the silent film era.

Early years

She was born to shop owner Frank Baskette and Gladys Rosenberg in San Mateo, California. After the death of her father and subsequent marriage of her mother to dance director Ernest Belcher, she and half-sister Marge Champion got an early start in dance and entertaining. She danced in the Ziegfeld Follies in New York City,[2] and secured her first film contract at the age of nine in 1916 with Universal Studios for the silent film series, Lena Baskette Featurettes.[1]

Career

Early success

In 1923, Ziegfeld Follies producers officially dubbed her "America's Prima Ballerina."[2] Basquette was named one of thirteen WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1928 and the following year made The Younger Generation with Frank Capra.

In 1929, she also made The Godless Girl with Cecil B. DeMille, arguably the role for which she was best remembered, for she named her 1990 autobiography Lina: DeMille's Godless Girl. In this film, made at the transition from the silent era to the talkies, she played the title character. Judith is based on Queen Silver, a child prodigy and socialist orator.[3] The character, leader of a high school atheist society, forces members to renounce The Bible while placing a hand on the head of a live monkey. In the climactic scene, DeMille insisted on realism in filming a last shot of the reformatory going up in flames.

Sound years

After appearing in The Godless Girl, Basquette soon became a star in future DeMille films. While working for DeMille, Basquette began an affair with DeMille's chief cameraman, J. Peverell Marley.[2] After this, she agreed to marry Marley, and the two were married in 1928.[2] By 1930, Basquette was broke and spent a good amount of her time partying with fellow actresses Jean Harlow, Clara Bow and Carole Lombard.[2]

Later years

In 1991, Basquette was cast as Nada in filmmaker Danny Boyd's Paradise Park.[4] She played a grandmother who dreamed God was coming to grant a wish to residents of an Appalachian trailer park. The film features Porter Wagoner, as the governor of West Virginia, and Johnny Paycheck. Boyd was a communications professor at West Virginia State University.

According to her obituary in The New York Times, "from 1947 to 1974, she ran Honey Hollow Kennels in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. She became one of the best-known breeders and handlers of champion Great Danes in American dog-show history, and also wrote several books on dog breeding."[5][6]

Personal life

In 1925, Basquette began an affair with Sam Warner of Warner Brothers and the couple married on July 4, 1925. She was the mother of a daughter, Lita, at 19, and a widow at 20 when Sam Warner died from a brain abscess complicated by pneumonia. Warner left her $100,000.00 of his money and $40,000 from a life insurance policy, a car, the household goods, and $85 a week from one of Warner's trust funds.[2]

When Basquette began to neglect her family, Warner's older brother, Harry, filed for legal guardianship of Lita Warner and it was awarded on March 30, 1930. Basquette was never financially stable enough to regain custody of her daughter. In 1931, Basquette, now divorced from Marley and depressed without her daughter, tried to commit suicide by taking poison. Basquette would only see Lita on two occasions over the next twenty years: in 1935, when Harry Warner and his family moved to Los Angeles, and when Lita was married to Dr. Nathan Hiatt in 1947.[2]

In her autobiography, Lina: Demille's Godless Girl (1990), Basquette recounts her tempestuous affair with former world heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey. The relationship came after Basquette discovered that her current husband, Theodore Hayes, whom she married on October 31, 1931, was a bigamist. Hayes was Dempsey's former trainer and Basquette's manager in theatrical affairs. On September 10, 1932, the actress was granted a Mexican divorce from Hayes. The divorce was granted on a plea of desertion for more than six months in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.[7]

In 1943, Basquette was raped by an AWOL serviceman who trespassed onto her Pennsylvania farm. The highly-publicized crime led to the soldier getting 20 years in prison.

Death

Basquette died of cancer at her home in Wheeling, West Virginia. She was 87.[8] For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Lena Basquette has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 1529 Vine Street.

Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1916 The Dumb Girl of Portici Child Uncredited
Juvenile Dancer
Brother Jim Margie Marsh Credited as Lena Basquette
The Grip of Crime Credited as Lena Basquette
Shoes Undetermined role Uncredited
The Human Cactus Credited as Lena Basquette
The Caravan Credited as Lena Basquette
1917 Polly Put the Kettle On Nellie Vance
His Wife's Relatives
The Gates of Doom Agatha as a child
The Star Witness Credited as Lena Basquette
A Dream of Egypt Credited as Lena Basquette
A Romany Rose Credited as Lena Basquette
A Prince for a Day Credited as Lena Basquette
Little Mariana's Triumph Credited as Lena Basquette
1919 The Weaker Vessel Jessie
1922 Penrod
1927 Ranger of the North Felice MacLean
Serenade The Dancer
1928 The Noose Dot
Wheel of Chance Ada Berkowitz
Celebrity Jane
Show Folks Rita Carey
1929 The Godless Girl Judy Craig - The Girl
Come Across Mary Houston
The Younger Generation Birdie Goldfish
1930 The Dude Wrangler Helen Dane Alternative title: Feminine Touch
1931 Goldie Constantina
Pleasure
Arizona Terror Katherine "Kay" Moore
Hard Hombre Senora Martini
Morals for Women Claudia Alternative titles: Big City Interlude
Farewell Party
Trapped Girl Reporter Alternative title: The Shadow #2: Trapped
Mounted Fury Nanette LeStrange
1932 Arm of the Law Zelma Shaw, a Dancer
The Midnight Lady Mona Alternative title: Dream Mother
Hello Trouble Janet Kenyon
The Phantom Express Betty
1934 The Chump
1936 The Final Hour Belle
1937 Souls at Sea Brunette in Saloon Uncredited
Ebb Tide Attwater's Servant
1938 The Buccaneer Roxanne Uncredited
Rose of the Rio Grande Anita
Four Men and a Prayer Ah-Nee
1942 Who Calls
1943 A Night for Crime Mona
1991 Paradise Park Nada Alternative title: Heroes of the Heart

References

  1. ^ a b Staff writers (6 October 1994). "Lina Basquette, Silent-Film Star And Dog Breeder, Is Dead at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Sperling, Cass Warner (1998). Hollywood Be Thy Name: The Warner Brothers Story. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 96–98, 115, 135–136, 161–164 265. ISBN 0-8131-0958-2. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ “Queen Silver: The Godless Girl” by Wendy McElroy, Prometheus Books
  4. ^ "1920s silent film star returns to movies with Paradise Park." The Daily Herald. October 3, 1991, Section 5, Page 8.
  5. ^ no author."Lina Basquette, Silent-Film Star And Dog Breeder, Is Dead at 87"The New York Times, October 6, 1994
  6. ^ Smith, Linell.She's 84, doggone stylish and a rare breed"The Baltimore Sun, April 22, 1991
  7. ^ "Lina Basquette Is Divorced From Business Agent." Zanesville Signal. September 11, 1932, Page 1.
  8. ^ "Lina Basquette, Silent-Film Star And Dog Breeder, Is Dead at 87". The New York Times. 1994-10-06. Retrieved 2009-09-08. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

External links

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