Marguerite Courtot

Marguerite Gabrielle Courtot (August 20, 1897 – May 28, 1986) was an American silent film actress.

Marguerite Courtot
Born
Marguerite Gabrielle Courtot

August 20, 1897
DiedMay 28, 1986(1986-05-28) (aged 88)
Other namesMiss Courtot
Years active19131924
Spouse(s)Raymond McKee (m.19231984; his death)
Children1

Early life

Marguerite Gabrielle Courtot was born in Summit, New Jersey on August 20, 1897 to Gustave Courtot (18701906), who was born in France, and Charlotte Marie Courtot (née. Kramer, 18601933[1]), who was born in Switzerland, and later followed in her daughters footsteps in becoming an actress.[2] Gustave arrived in America in 1887, and Charlotte one year later. The two married in Manhattan on July 7, 1890, and Marguerite's sister, Juliette, was born two and a half months later. Marguerite was of French and German descent.[3][4]

Courtot received her education in New York and Switzerland.[5]

Career

Courtot became a child model and in June 1912, while not yet fifteen years old, joined the Kalem Company, appearing in 1913's The Riddle of the Tin Soldier alongside star Alice Joyce and Harry F. Millarde who was making his film debut. Between then and 1916, Courtot made 37 films for Kalem, playing the starring role in The Ventures of Marguerite, a sixteen episode action/adventure serial.

Following the Kalem Company's merger with Vitagraph Studios, Marguerite Courtot starred in the Gaumont Pictures production of The Dead Alive, directed by Henri J. Vernot. After several films with Jesse L. Lasky's Famous Players Film Company and smaller independents, Courtot took most of 1918 off to use her public persona to tour the country to promote America's World War I effort in Europe. When the war ended, she returned to film, joining Pathé. Although she had a starring roles, she also worked in prominent secondary parts such as in the 1921 serials The Sky Ranger, starring June Caprice and The Yellow Arm starring Juanita Hansen.

Marriage and retirement

In 1922, while working on Down to the Sea in Ships, the film that became her most important feature-length work, Marguerite Courtot began a relationship with co-star Raymond McKee, who was her childhood sweetheart.[6] They married on April 23, 1923, and after she completed two more films, Courtot retired from the film business to raise a family with McKee. They had one child together, son Raymond Courtot McKee (born 1927). Their marriage lasted more than sixty years.

Death

Her husband, Raymond McKee, died in 1984 and Marguerite Courtot died two years later in Long Beach, California. They are buried together in the Riverside National Cemetery in Riverside, California.[7]

Partial filmography

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References

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