Mignon Anderson

Birthday: 1892-03-31
Deathday: 1983-02-25
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Gender: Female
Owned By: Unowned

From Wikipedia

Mignon Anderson (March 31, 1892 – February 25, 1983) was an American silent film actress. Her career was at its peak in the 1910s.

Born in Baltimore, Anderson's parents, Hallie Howard and Frank Anderson, were also actors. In 1911 she joined Thanhouser Studios in New Rochelle, New York. She was very diminutive and a blonde. Anderson starred alongside William Garwood in a number of short films including A New Cure for Divorce in 1912. Playing in Thanhouser films brought about an acquaintance with Morris Foster, also of that company. She was married to Foster from 1915 until his death in 1966. Anderson died in Burbank, California at the age of 90.

Credits

Year Title Character
1919-01-12 The Midnight Stage Mary Lynch
1917-07-30 A Wife on Trial Phyllis Narcissa
1917-06-04 The Circus of Life Kate
1917-05-14 The Phantom's Secret Jeanne de Beaulieu
1917-04-01 Even as You and I Selma
1916-01-01 The City of Illusion
1915-12-16 The Mill on the Floss Maggie Tulliver
1915-10-24 At the Patrician Club Eileen
1915-10-17 John T. Rocks and the Flivver Watson's Sweetheart
1915-07-27 Outcasts of Society Meg - the Accused
1915-07-08 Madam Blanche, Beauty Doctor Betty
1915-06-27 Innocence at Monte Carlo Alice Brownell
1915-06-01 The Girl of the Sea Lydia Starr - the Girl of the Sea
1914-05-25 Pamela Congreve
1914-05-19 A Dog of Flanders Alois - the Miller's Daughter
1914-01-22 An Elusive Diamond Bettina
1913-09-23 Robin Hood Ellen
1913-04-01 The Woman Who Did Not Care
1913-03-10 Just a Shabby Doll The Wife
1913-02-25 Sherlock Holmes Solves the Sign of the Four
1913-01-10 The Evidence of the Film Secretary
1912-11-27 Lucile Constance
1912-06-06 Her Secret The Loyal Sister with a Secret
1912-04-30 Dora Thorne Dora's Mother
1912-04-01 The Star of the Side Show Mignon, the Snake Charmer
1912-03-18 Nicholas Nickleby Madeline Bray
1911-10-17 David Copperfield Dora Spenlow
1911-07-31 The Pied Piper of Hamelin The Little Lame Boy
1910-05-27 The Winter's Tale