Place of Birth:
Port Huron, Michigan, USA
Date of Birth:
8/18/1899
Colleen Moore (born Kathleen Morrison, August 19, 1899 – January 25, 1988) was an American film actress who began her career during the silent film era. Moore became one of the most fashionable and highly-paid stars of the era and helped popularize the bobbed haircut. A huge star in her day, approximately half of Moore's films are now considered lost, including her first talking picture from 1929. What was perhaps her most celebrated film during her lifetime, Flaming Youth (1923), is now mostly lost as well, with only one reel surviving. Moore took a brief hiatus from acting between 1929 and 1933, just as sound was being added to motion pictures. After the hiatus, her four sound pictures released in 1933 and 1934 were not financial successes. Moore then retired permanently from screen acting.
The Scarlet Letter
The Devil's Claim
Lilac Time
The Power and the Glory
Ella Cinders
Orchids and Ermine
The Sky Pilot
Success at Any Price
Social Register
A Roman Scandal
Irene
The Busher
Why Be Good?
Synthetic Sin
Come on Over
The Little American
Broken Hearts of Broadway
Fragments: Surviving Pieces of Lost Films
So Big
Naughty But Nice
Broken Chains
Through the Dark
Flaming Youth
The Nth Commandment
Her Bridal Night-Mare
Little Orphant Annie
Twinkletoes
The Ninety and Nine
Footlights and Fools
The Bad Boy
Hands Up!
An Old Fashioned Young Man
Her Wild Oat
We Moderns
The Perfect Flapper
Painted People
The Huntress
The Lotus Eater
His Nibs
The Cyclone
Dinty
When Dawn Came
Oh Kay!
So Long Letty
The Savage
The Man in the Moonlight
Why Be Good?: Sexuality & Censorship in Early Cinema
April Showers
Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ
Sally
Flirting with Love
A Hoosier Romance
The Prince of Graustark
The Wilderness Trail
The Egg Crate Wallop
The Wall Flower
Common Property
Forsaking All Others
Smiling Irish Eyes
The Wampas Baby Stars of 1922
Affinities
Look Your Best
Slippy McGee
It Must Be Love
Happiness Ahead
The Desert Flower
Life in Hollywood No. 2