Marguerite Snow
Actor/Actriz
65
Movies
0
TV Shows
From Wikipedia
Marguerite Snow was an American silent film actress. Her father was a comedian. She was educated in Denver, Colorado at the Loretta Heights Academy. Miss Snow became an actress at an early age. She gained prominence in movies following a successful stage career. One of her theatrical efforts was a Broadway production. Marguerite Snow starred in motion pictures for the Thanhouser Film Company in New Rochelle, New York and the old Metro Pictures studio before it became MGM.
Her film career began early in the silent era; 1911. Some of her feature pictures are Baseball and Bloomers (1911), A Niagara Honeymoon (1912), The Caged Bird (1913), The Silent Voice (1915), A Corner in Cotton (1916), Broadway Jones (1917), The Veiled Woman (1922), and Kit Carson Over The Great Divide (1925). In Broadway Jones Marguerite played a pretty stenographer at the Jones' gun factory as the movie's leading lady. This was the first Artcraft photoplay of George M. Cohan. She never made a movie after the introduction of sound to films.
As Actor/Actress
Felix O'Day
Lady Barbara O'Day
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Extra
The Eagle's Eye
Dixie Mason
Joseph in the Land of Egypt
Potiphar’s wife
Rejuvenation
The Lighthouse Keeper's Friend's Fiancée
The Lady from the Sea
The Lady from the Sea
Carmen
Carmen
The Million Dollar Mystery
Countess Olga Petroff
Notorious Gallagher; or, His Great Triumph
Peggy Winters
Zudora
Zudora
The Faded Flower
Lillian Hill
Dora Thorne
Dora Thorne
The Marble Heart
Marco
In His Brother's Place
Kitty Judd
Chalk Marks
Angelina Kilbourne
A Corner in Cotton
Peggy Ainslee
Young Lochinvar
Lochinvar's Bride
The Marble Heart
The Woman in Room 13
Edna Crane
The Forest Rose
The Forest Rose
Undine
Lady Bertalda, Undine's Rival
Rouge and Riches
Dodo
Tannhäuser
Princess Elisabeth
The Saleslady
The Saleslady
The Slave Mart
Maria Gramada
The Second in Command
Muriel Mannering
The Silent Voice
Marjorie Blair
The Tiniest of Stars
The Mother
The Half Million Bribe
Miriam Challoner
When the Studio Burned
Self