Seena Owen

Seena Owen (November 14, 1894 – August 15, 1966) was an American silent film actress.

Seena Owen
Born Signe Auen
(1894-11-14)November 14, 1894
Spokane, Washington, U.S.
Died August 15, 1966(1966-08-15) (aged 71)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Spouse(s) George Walsh (1916-1924; divorced); 1 child

Early life

Owen, ca. 1917, Photoplay Magazine

Born Signe Auen in Spokane, Washington, she was the youngest of three children raised by Jens Christensen and Karen (née Sorensen) Auen. Her father and mother came from Denmark in the late 1880s and settled in Minnesota where they married in 1888. Within a short period of time they relocated to Portland and then Spokane, where her father became proprietor of the Columbia Pharmacy.[1][2][3][4]

In her youth Owen was enrolled at Brunot Hall, an Episcopalian girls' school in Spokane, founded by Bishop Lemuel H. Wells. She was also educated in Copenhagen. Her life as the daughter of an affluent business owner changed in her late teens when the family business failed and it became necessary to seek employment. She received her early inspiration to act while a student at the Pauline Dunstan Belden School of Elocution in Spokane before appearing in a stock production in San Francisco playing the part of a maid for $5 a week. Soon after she went to Hollywood to work as a film extra, and had the good fortune to run into actor-director Marshall Neilan, then a Hollywood "boy wonder" whom Owen had known in Spokane. Through Neilan she was hired by the Kalem Company, an early motion picture studio, at $15 a week.[5][6][7]

Career

Jack Holt and Seena Owen in Victory

Her first important film was A Yankee From the West (1915) under the name Signe Auen at the age of 21. She was later convinced to change her name and settled on Seena Owen, the phonetic spelling of her real name.[7] In 1916 she performed in D. W. Griffith's Intolerance. The same year she married George Walsh whom she had met on the set of Intolerance. The marriage lasted until their divorce in 1924. A regular player for the rest of the silent era, Owen appeared in films such as Maurice Tourneur's Victory in 1919 where she was photographed to great effect by Tourneur's cameraman, Rene Guissart. Victory, long lost, was recently found in 35mm print in Europe and can be seen on DVD. In 1920, she appeared in "The Gift Supreme" with Lon Chaney, who appeared with her in Victory. All but one reel of The Gift Supreme is lost. She co-starred with Gloria Swanson and Walter Byron in the ill-fated Queen Kelly (1928), as the mad Queen who whips Swanson in one scene.[5][8][9][10]

With the arrival of sound in movies, Owen's weak voice became a problem and forced her to retire from the silver screen in 1933. After her retirement, she worked on a number of films in the 1930s/40s as a screenwriter including two starring Dorothy Lamour: Aloma of the South Seas (1941) and Rainbow Island (1944). The former was written in part with her sister, Lillie Hayward, a successful Hollywood screenwriter.[5]

Death

Seena Owen died on August 15, 1966 at Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital, aged 71, and was interred at Hollywood Forever Cemetery.[11] She was survived by her daughter, Mrs. Patricia Noonan.[12]

Partial filmography

Seena Owen with Douglas Fairbanks in The Lamb (1915)

References

  1. US Census records 1900
  2. The Era Druggists' Directory, 1905
  3. Silent players: a Biographical and Autobiographical Study of 100 Silent Film Actors and Actresses by Anthony Slide (2002), pg. 439
  4. Photoplay: the aristocrat of motion picture magazines (Volume 11) by Ruth Waterbury (1917), pg. 89
  5. 1 2 3 The Spokesman Review (Spokane, WA) by Jim Kershner, February 11, 2007
  6. The Olean Evening Herald, October 16, 1918, pg. 7
  7. 1 2 The Amarillo Globe, November 14, 1930, pg. 9
  8. An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Women in early American films, 1895-1930, by Denise Lowe (2005), pg. 419
  9. The New York Times April 19, 1966, pg. 33
  10. Joseph P. Kennedy Presents: His Hollywood Years by Cari Beauchamp (2010), pg. 286
  11. The Daily Review (Hayward, California), August 17, 1966
  12. The New York Times, April 19, 1966 pg. 33
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