Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Enid_BennettEnid Bennett - Wikipedia

    Enid Eulalie Bennett (15 July 1893 – 14 May 1969) was an Australian silent film actress, mostly active in American film. [1] Early life. Bennett was born on 15 July 1893 in York, Western Australia, the daughter of Nellie Mary Louise ( née Walker) and Frank Bennett.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0071746Enid Bennett - IMDb

    Enid Bennett. Actress: The Red Lily. Australian-born Enid Bennett (her sisters, Catherine Bennett and Marjorie Bennett, were also actresses) started her career on stage in Sydney. She became a well-regarded stage actress there, and eventually made her way to New York to conquer Broadway.

  3. Enid Bennett. Actress: The Red Lily. Australian-born Enid Bennett (her sisters, Catherine Bennett and Marjorie Bennett, were also actresses) started her career on stage in Sydney. She became a well-regarded stage actress there, and eventually made her way to New York to conquer Broadway.

  4. Feb 2, 2020 · Enid Bennett, a young Australian who arrived in the US with Fred Niblo and Josephine Cohan in June 1915, hardly qualifies as “a forgotten Australian actor.” She received widespread publicity in the early 1920s and was, at the time, one of Hollywood’s premier stars.

  5. Born in York, Western Australia, Enid Bennett started her film acting career in 1916, first starring in Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford, with two other films that same year. She married American director Sidney Franklin early in her career, but they were divorced shortly thereafter.

  6. Feb 2, 2020 · Marjorie Bennett, the younger sister of actress Enid Bennett, was born in York, Western Australia, in 1896. She travelled to the US in December 1916 to join Enid. Famous in later years for “cheerful, white haired woman” roles, by the time of her death she had over 200 film and TV appearances to her credit.

  7. Jan 13, 2018 · THE passing of Enid Bennett is truly the end of an era in the annals of Jamaica’s political history, as well as in the chronicles of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) — under whose umbrella she ...