Lillian Rich(1900-1954)
- Actress
English silent screen siren Lillian Rich was 19 when she arrived
in New York, courtesy of her Canadian husband Lionel Edward Nicholson.
The couple had met while "Leo" was on active duty as a fighter pilot
with the Royal Naval Air Service during World War I. He came from a
well-to-do middle-class family and was both able and keen to bankroll
Lillian's entry into Hollywood with a stake of $1000. Prior to entering
films, the dimple-chinned, auburn-haired Londoner had briefly made a
name in musical comedy on the stage. In 1919, she started out on the
screen playing sultry leads in westerns opposite stalwart
sagebrush heroes like Jack Hoxie and
Harry Carey. By the end of 1922, Lillian had
already amassed 19 feature film credits on her resume. Following
a divorce from Leo, she took a year's sabbatical from the screen before
resuming her career with renewed vigor in 1924. The next year she was
cast by the ever-extravagant
Cecil B. DeMille in her defining role,
as an aristocratic social-climbing, impecunious vamp in Paramount's
The Golden Bed (1925). Attired in
sables and bedecked with diamond bracelets, Lillian added to the
general opulence (and excess) of the proceedings. She then gave what is
considered her other notable performance, opposite
H.B. Warner in the western railroad drama
Whispering Smith (1926). There
was also a minor Christie comedy,
Seven Days (1925), a crime thriller
with Boris Karloff and a host of
low-budget B-pictures for independent producers and Poverty Row outfits
like Chesterfield and Tiffany.
Between 1928 and 1930, Lillian unsuccessfully attempted a comeback in sound pictures, filming in England at Beaconsfield and at Nettlefold Studios (Walton-on-Thames, Surrey). Alas, these low-budget "quota quickies" were made for the mass market and did nothing to reboot her career. Back in the States she found herself relegated to the bottom of the bill in "Our Gang" shorts. She saw out the rest of the 1930's in uncredited, no-name bits as "nurse", "nun", "telephone operator", and so on, before fading into relative obscurity.
Between 1928 and 1930, Lillian unsuccessfully attempted a comeback in sound pictures, filming in England at Beaconsfield and at Nettlefold Studios (Walton-on-Thames, Surrey). Alas, these low-budget "quota quickies" were made for the mass market and did nothing to reboot her career. Back in the States she found herself relegated to the bottom of the bill in "Our Gang" shorts. She saw out the rest of the 1930's in uncredited, no-name bits as "nurse", "nun", "telephone operator", and so on, before fading into relative obscurity.