Jacqueline Dyris

Jacqueline Alexandra Dyris (February 28, 1899 in Belgium March 14, 1962 in Los Angeles, California[1][2]) was a petite stage actress and silent film star, a native of Brussels, Belgium. Her father was of English and Dutch descent and her mother was Spanish and French. Jacqueline was educated in Europe and later Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Chicago, Illinois, and New York, New York.

Career

She was initially associated with Jack Norworth of Norworth and Bayes in Odds and Ends. Soon she participated in several vaudeville sketches. She relocated from New York to California due to health reasons in the early 1920s. In 1925 the actress appeared in the stage play, White Collars. The play continued more than a year at the Egan Theater in Los Angeles, California.

Movies

Jacqueline's most noted movies are The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1922) and The Godless Girl (1929). The latter was directed by Cecil B. Demille and starred Marie Prevost, Noah Beery, George Duryea, and Lina Basquette. She acted with Ina Claire in The Awful Truth (1929).

gollark: (in any case, it's probably less than the resource waste from Electron etc. by rather a lot)
gollark: I do vaguely feel this way about encryption and whatever - if people were trustworthy and nice™, we could save some amount of system resources and key distribution hassle and whatever. As it turns out, though, they aren't, so it isn't very relevant, and even if everyone suddenly did stop being antagonistic, this is a ridiculously unstable state.
gollark: What of the GTech™ contrasocietous chambers™?
gollark: You don't get secure systems by saying "let's just trust Jeff here".
gollark: Well, the energy thing is separate, but this is good security design, yes.

References

  1. "California Death Index, 1940-1997". FamilySearch. Retrieved 4 November 2018.
  2. "California, County Birth and Death Records, 1800-1994". FamilySearch. Retrieved 4 November 2018.
  • Los Angeles Times, Feminine Wiles, January 4, 1925, Page 29.
  • Los Angeles Times, She Has Love Cure, January 4, 1925, Page 37.
  • Los Angeles Times, An Addled Ancestry, April 5, 1925, Page 31.
  • Ogden Standard Examiner, Ogden, Utah, Comedy Drama At Egyptian, October 7, 1929, Page 9.




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