Rhea Mitchell
Actor/Actriz
44
Movies
0
TV Shows
From Wikipedia
Rhea Mitchell (December 10, 1890 – September 16, 1957) was an American film actress who began her career during the silent film era. She earned the name of "the little stunt girl" because of her willingness to attempt thrilling scenes in motion pictures.
Mitchell began her career in 1909 playing in the Baker Theatre Stock Company in her hometown of Portland, Oregon. She followed with a season in the Orpheum Circuit and a run at the Alcazar Theatre in San Francisco. Mitchell made her film debut in 1912 with the New York Motion Picture Corporation and would eventually appear in over 100 films during her career. She appeared a number of times with Western star William S. Hart playing a leading role in those films. In 1916 she played in The Brink with Forrest Winant and Arthur Maude.
After 1917, her roles became smaller and she appeared in a handful of films through the mid-30s and in several bit parts during the early 1950s which often went uncredited.
As Actor/Actress
Dial 1119
Muro de tinieblas
Texas Carnival
Dealer (uncredited)
Oro en el barro
Reporter (uncredited)
La señora Parkington
Mrs. Humphrey (uncredited)
The Devil
Milli
Annie Get Your Gun
Minor Role (uncredited)
Stars in My Crown
Mrs. Backett (uncredited)
The Next Voice You Hear...
Woman in Church (uncredited)
In the Good Old Summertime
Woman at Window (uncredited)
The Romance of Rosy Ridge
Wife (uncredited)
Social Ambition
Rose
The Texas Rangers
Passenger (uncredited)
I Take This Woman
Decker's Secretary (uncredited)
The Unknown Man
(uncredited)
Bannerline
The Goat
Bijou Lamour
The Three Musketeers
Constance Bonacieux
The Ship That Died
Passenger on Mary Celeste
Unexpected Places
Ruth Penfield
The Devil's Claim
Virginia Crosby
Whither Thou Goest
Maizie
The Gilded Youth
Mary
On the Night Stage
Belle Shields
The Money Corral
Janet Collins
The Hawk's Trail
Jean Drake
Good Women
Natalie Shelby
The Blindness of Divorce
Florence Langdon
The Ghost of the Rancho
Mary Drew
Boston Blackie's Little Pal
Mary