- Born
- Died
- Nickname
- The Female Chaplin
- Height5′ 2″ (1.57 m)
- Often compared in looks and ability to Mabel Normand, lively, dark-haired comedienne Fay Tincher began as a vaudeville and musical comedy actress. Though she had operatic aspirations at the outset, Fay settled on an acting career. She first appeared on the Chicago stage while still finishing her studies. In 1913, she moved to the West Coast where she was discovered for film by D.W. Griffith. After a few short films she was cast as a vamp in The Battle of the Sexes (1914). However, it was soon realised that comedy, not drama, was her forte. No romantic or vixenish leads for this gal. Fay just wanted to make people laugh. She made sure that her appearance gave her a head start. Already rather short (at 5 feet 2 inches), she adopted as her trademark a purposefully unglamorous look: wearing essentially no makeup, she styled her hair with a distinctive big curl plastered to her forehead and dressed either in masculine clothes or in a black and white striped outfit which would not have looked out of place in a barber's shop.
At Reliance-Mutual, Fay was featured in the 'Komic Comedies' (1914-15), and successfully created her own regular character, a feisty stenographer named 'Ethel'. Publicity at the time touted her as 'the female Chaplin'. She gained further public notice by winning a bathing suit contest at Venice, California which led to further job offers. Between 1916 and 1919, Fay starred in two-reelers for Arts-Triangle, Keystone and Al Christie. She even briefly, and unsuccessfully, fronted her own production company. In 1923, she settled at Universal, adopting the character 'Min Gump' in the long-running 'Andy Gump' series, based on the comic strip. The coming of sound, coinciding with the end of the series in 1928, prompted Fay's sudden and permanent departure from the screen.- IMDb Mini Biography By: I.S.Mowis
- SpouseNed Buckley(August 1908 - ?) (annulled)
- Wearing a black and white striped outfit
- Interred at Silver Mount Cemetery, Staten Island, New York.
- One late night, in June 1915, Edward Dillon came home to find his bungalow on fire, as Tincher, W.E. Lawrence, Chester Withey, Irene Hunt, Walter Long, Teddy Sampson, George Siegmann, Ford Sterling, Franc Newman and George Beranger, all wearing pajamas, tried to put out the flames. Their work was praised by the Los Angeles fire department, which found that the blaze had been caused by crossed wires, causing apparently serious damage.
- Every girl who can recite a recitation, sing a song, or even do card tricks, thinks she ought to go to Hollywood.
- I make every stitch I wear in the pictures, but nowadays I'm too busy to undertake my street clothes and lingerie, tho I just love to sew.
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