Bessie Learn

Bessie Learn (30 August 1888 – 5 February 1987) was an American actress who appeared in 86 films between 1911 and 1919.

Bessie Learn
Born(1888-08-30)August 30, 1888
San Diego, California, USA
DiedFebruary 20, 1987(1987-02-20) (aged 98)
Burbank, Los Angeles, California, USA
OccupationActress
Years active1911–1919 (film)

Biography

Elizabeth “Bessie” Learn was born in San Diego[1] the middle of three daughters raised by Eugene and Lizzie Learn. Her father was a native of New York who served in the U.S. Army before marrying Lizzie MacBride on October 11, 1883, in Buffalo County, Nebraska.[2][3] Eugene Learn was a house painter by trade and by the time of the birth of his first daughter he and Lizzie were living in California. Soon after Bessie's birth her family relocated to Chicago where her father found work as a printer. A few years later Bessie's mother died in Chicago leaving her father to care for three young daughters.[4][5]

Bessie Learn’s first known stage appearance came at age eight with Amelia Bingham, in Hearts are Trumps; playing a baby in a stroller. She later played in The Little Princess, with Millie James, Lover's Lane on Broadway, with Mary Ryan and had a two-year run with Edwin Arden in Home Folks. She next appeared with Harry Brodribb Irving in Paola and Francesca and Midsummer Night's Dream and in vaudeville with Robert Hilliard and William Harcourt as the boy, and in the stage play Polly of the Circus.[1]

She became the ingenue of the Edison Company at the age of 22, and in her short time before the camera made an enviable record for vivacious and appealing comedy. Little Miss Learn was featured in some of the best comedies Edison released, and was considered a serious player with marked ability.[6] Her death was recorded on February 5, 1987, in Los Angeles under the name Betty Robbins, aged 98.[7]

Selected filmography

Fan magazine Photoplay, December 1915
gollark: μsec (yay for having an ancient Greek keyboard installed)
gollark: Which is totally high resolution enough to map the entire thing well enough to emulate near-perfectly.
gollark: It's probably easier.
gollark: If you can somehow replace a clump of neurons with a perfect emulation fast enough it probably wouldn't cause a problem.
gollark: It still *works*, but those things cause problems.

References

  1. Photoplay: the Aristocrat of Motion Picture Magazines, Volume 9 by Ruth Waterbury
  2. Nebraska Marriage Records
  3. US Army Recruitment Records
  4. Bessie Learn There's Something About Bessie by James Trottier
  5. US Census Records 1880 - 900
  6. "Bessie Learn". Stars of the Photoplay. Chicago: Photoplay magazine. 1916.
  7. California Death Index
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