Marceline Day
Marceline Day was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States on April 24th, 1908 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 91, Marceline Day biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 91 years old, Marceline Day physical status not available right now. We will update Marceline Day's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Marceline Day (born Marceline Newlin; April 24, 1908 – February 16, 2000) was an American motion picture actress whose career began as a child in the 1910s and ended in the 1930s.
Early life
Marceline Newlin was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah, the daughter of Frank and Irene Newlin and the younger sister of film actress Alice Day. She attended Venice High School.
Career
Day began her film career after her sister Alice Day became a principal actor in Sennett Bathing Beauties' one-and-reel comedies. Day made her first film appearance with her sister in 1924 Mack Sennett's Picking Peaches before being cast in a series of comedy shorts opposite Hoot Gibson, Art Acord, and Jack Hoxie. Day began to appear in more dramatic roles opposite such respected actors of the period as Lionel Barrymore, John Barrymore, Norman Kerry, Ramón Novarro, Buster Keaton, and Lon Chaney.
Day was selected one of the 13 WAMPAS Baby Stars, a promotional effort run by the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers in the United States, which named 13 young women each year who were not on the brink of film stardom. Joan Crawford, Mary Astor, Janet Gaynor, and Dolores del Ro were among the year's most notable recipients. The campaign raised Day's profile, and in 1927, she appeared alongside John Barrymore in the romantic drama The Beloved Rogue.
Day is perhaps best remembered for her appearances in the now-defunct 1927 horror film After Midnight with Lon Chaney and Conrad Nagel, her role as Sally Richards in Buster Keaton and Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and the 1929 drama The Jazz Age was certainly an important actress. In the 1929 comedy The Show of Shows, the two actors will appear together on screen again.
Arthur J. Klein, a furrier, was married in 1930 by her furrier. She was married for the second time in 1959 to John Arthur before his death on April 2, 1980. She had no children with either husband.
Although Day went from sound films to sound films with no problems, her film roles as a result have gradually decreased in quality, and she began working mostly for lower-rung film studios. Day made the change back to the Western genre in 1933, appearing in Tim McCoy, Hoot Gibson, Ken Maynard, Jack Hoxie, and John Wayne. She made The Battle Parsonage with Gibson, Gibson's last film. Day rarely spoke about her years as an actress after her retirement, and never met with reporters or granted interviews.