Mary Philbin
Mary Loretta Philbin was an American film actress of the silent film era, who is best known for playing the roles of Christine Daaé in the 1925 film The Phantom of the Opera opposite Lon Chaney, and as Dea in The Man Who Laughs. Both roles cast her as the beauty in Beauty and the Beast-type stories.
Early life
Philbin was born on July 16, 1902 in Chicago, Illinois, into a middle-class Irish American family and raised Catholic. Her father, John Philbin, was born in Ballinrobe, County Mayo, Ireland.Career
Philbin began her acting career after winning a beauty contest sponsored by Universal Pictures in Chicago. After she moved to California, Erich von Stroheim signed her to a contract with Universal, deeming her a "Universal Super Jewel."She made her screen debut in 1921, and the following year was honored at the first WAMPAS Baby Stars awards, a promotional campaign sponsored by the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers in the United States, which annually honored young women whom they believed to be on the threshold of movie stardom.
During the 1920s, Philbin became a film actress and starred in a number of high-profile films, most notably in D. W. Griffith's 1928 film Drums of Love. In 1927, she appeared in the horror film Surrender, though her most celebrated role was in the Universal horror film The Phantom of the Opera in 1925. Philbin's ethereal screen presence was noted in a 1924 edition of Motion Picture Classic, in which she was referred to as "one of the astonishing anomalies of motion pictures...Pat O'Malley once said of her: "If I were superstitious I would think that the spirit of some great tragedienne of a forgotten past slipped into Mary's soul."
Philbin played a few parts during the early talkie era and most notably dubbed her own voice when The Phantom of the Opera was given sound and re-released. She retired from the screen in the early 1930s and devoted her life to care for her aging parents.
Later life and death
Philbin spent the remainder of her life after leaving the film industry as a recluse, living in the same home in Huntington Beach, California. She never married and rarely made public appearances. One rare public appearance by Philbin occurred in her later years at the Los Angeles opening of the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical The Phantom of the Opera.She died of pneumonia at age 90 in 1993 and was buried at the Calvary Cemetery in east Los Angeles, California.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1921 | The Blazing Trail | Talithy Millicuddy | |
1921 | Danger Ahead | Tressie Harloow | Lost film |
1921 | Twelve Hours to Live | Short | |
1921 | No Clothes to Guide Him | Short | |
1921 | Red Courage | Eliza Fay | Lost film |
1921 | Sure Fire | Lost film | |
1921 | False Kisses | Mary | |
1922 | Foolish Wives | Crippled girl | Uncredited |
1922 | The Trouper | Mary Lee | Lost film |
1922 | Human Hearts | Ruth | |
1922 | His First Job | Jimmy's Sweetheart | |
1922 | Once to Every Boy | Jimmy's Sweetheart | |
1923 | Penrod and Sam | Margaret Schofield | |
1923 | Merry-Go-Round | Agnes Urban | |
1923 | Where Is This West? | Sallie Summers | |
1923 | The Age of Desire | Margy | Lost film |
1923 | The Temple of Venus | Moira | |
1923 | The Thrill Chaser | Herself | Cameo appearance, lost film |
1924 | Fools Highway | Mamie Rose | Lost film |
1924 | The Gaiety Girl | Irene Tudor | Lost film |
1924 | The Rose of Paris | Mitsi | |
1925 | The Phantom of the Opera | Christine Daaé | |
1925 | Fifth Avenue Models | Isoel Ludant | |
1925 | Stella Maris | Stella Maris / Unity Blake | |
1927 | Love Me and the World Is Mine | Hannerl | |
1927 | Surrender | Lea Lyon | |
1928 | Drums of Love | Princess Emanuella | |
1928 | The Man Who Laughs | Dea | |
1929 | Port of Dreams | Joan | |
1929 | Girl Overboard | Joan | Lost film |
1929 | The Last Performance | Julie Fergeron | |
1929 | The Shannons of Broadway | Tessie Swanzey | |
1929 | After the Fog | Faith Barker |