Mary Thurman
Known for: Acting
Born: April 26, 1895 in Richfield, Utah, USA - Died: December 21, 1925
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Mary Thurman (née Christiansen, April 27, 1895 – December 22, 1925) was an American actress of the silent film era. Thurman's film career began with roles in the comedies of Mack Sennett, as one of the Sennett Bathing Beauties, and featured appearances in Bombs! (1916) and The Fool (1925). Her greatest success came when she was started working with director Allan Dwan. They collaborated on several critically acclaimed films including The Sin of Martha Queed (1921) and A Broken Doll (1921). In Dwan's still extant 1923 film Zaza, Thurman is the actress Gloria Swanson fights with. She appeared in nearly sixty Hollywood films from 1915 up until her death in 1925, frequently in those made by Pathé Studios. In 1924, while working on the movie Down Upon The Suwanee River in Florida, Thurman came down with a serious case of pneumonia. She suffered from the illness and was hospitalized for nearly a year. She died, the result of pneumonia, in New York City in 1925.
Known for
Showing 24 of 37 titles
A Bride for a Knight
Jean Hawthorne
The Prince and Betty
Betty Keith
The Necessary Evil
Hattie
Maggie's First False Step
That Night
Birdie Nightingale - a Chorus Girl
A Dog Catcher's Love
Owner of Stolen Dog
Trouping with Ellen
Lil
In the Heart of a Fool
Laura Nesbit
The Late Lamented
The Girl (unconfirmed)
The Bond Boy
Ollie Chase
Leap Year
Nurse Phyllis Brown
Double Trouble
Flirt (uncredited)
A Little Girl in a Big City
Mrs. Howard Young
A Bedroom Blunder
Mrs. Whale - a Wife Above Average
Zaza
Florianne
Sand
Margaret Young
The Green Temptation
Dolly Dunton
The Sin of Martha Queed
Martha Queed
A Scoundrel's Toll
Betty - the Railway President's Daughter
The Scoffer
Margaret Haddon
Greater Than Marriage
Venetia
A Broken Doll
Harriet Bundy
The Primal Law
Janice Webb
Bombs!
Miss O'Doherty - the Mayor's Daughter