Florence La Badie
Biography
From Wikipedia
Florence La Badie (April 27, 1888 – October 13, 1917) was an American actress in the early days of the silent film era. Though little known today, she was a major star between 1911 and 1917. Her career was at its height when she died at age 29 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident.
In 1911, her career took a leap when she was hired by Edwin Thanhouser of the Thanhouser Film Corporation in New Rochelle, New York. With her sophistication and beauty, Florence La Badie soon became Thanhouser's most prominent actress, appearing in dozens of films over the next two years. Her most remembered films of that period were The Tempest (1911), Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1912), a film adaptation of the Robert Louis Stevenson story, and the first film of Shakespeare's Cymbeline (1914). Her most well-known work was in the 1914 - 1915 serial, The Million Dollar Mystery.
Athletic and daring, in these films she performed all her own stunts. In 1915, she was featured in the magazine Reel Life, which described her as "the Beautiful and talented Florence La Badie, of the Thanhouser Studios, conceded one of the foremost of American screen players". Over a course of six years La Badie's career had taken her to top-billing as a film actress.
Filmography
The Evidence of the Film
as Sister of Messenger Boy 1913
The Return of Draw Egan
as Townswoman (uncredited) 1916
The Man Without a Country
as Barbara Norton 1917
The Rose of Kentucky
1911
Enoch Arden: Part I
as Enoch's Teenage Daughter 1911
Cinderella
as Cinderella 1911
Enoch Arden: Part II
1911
Cymbeline
as Imogen 1913
Getting Even
1909
The Portrait of Lady Anne
as Lady Anne 1912
Comata, the Sioux
1909
The Salvation Army Lass
1909
Fighting Blood
as The Son's Girlfriend 1911
Tannhäuser
as Venus 1913
A Strange Meeting
1909
The Politician's Love Story
1909