Clarine Seymour Explained

Clarine Seymour
Birth Date:9 December 1898
Birth Place:Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
Death Place:New York City, U.S.
Resting Place:Greenwood Union Cemetery (Rye, New York, U.S.)
Occupation:Actress
Yearsactive:1917 - 1920

Clarine E. Seymour (December 9, 1898 – April 25, 1920) was an American silent film actress.

Early life

Seymour was the eldest of two children born to Albert V. Seymour and Florence Seymour in Brooklyn, a wealthy couple who were devout Methodists.[1] She had one younger brother.[2] Albert Seymour ran a prosperous ribbon manufacturing business. Seymour began appearing in entertainments at the family's church as a child.[1] In early 1916, Albert Seymour became ill and was forced to close his business.

The family moved to New Rochelle, New York, where Seymour found work at the Thanhouser Film Company as a film extra to help support her family.[1] While at Thanhouser, she appeared in two shorts, Pots-and-Pans Peggy and It Happened to Adele.[2] As a result of her work through the company, she was hired through Pathé in a Pearl White serial.[1]

Career

In 1917, Seymour appeared in Pathé's Mystery of the Double Cross opposite actress Mollie King. Hal Roach saw her performance and offered her a film contract with his Rolin Film Company. Seymour accepted and relocated to Los Angeles to perform as the leading lady in the Toto the Clown (played by Armando Novello) film comedy serials.[1] Throughout 1918, she appeared in the Toto serial and also had a supporting role in the comedy short Just Rambling Along (1918), opposite Stan Laurel. The deal with Roach soon soured after Seymour claimed she was fired for refusing to do her own stunts. She filed suit against the company and was awarded $1,325 (approximately $ today) in damages. While the case was pending, Seymour appeared in comedy shorts for Al Christie.[2]

In 1918, Seymour met Victor Heerman. Heerman directed a screen test featuring Seymour and one of D.W. Griffith's Artcraft stock company actors Robert Harron. Griffith was pleased with the pairing and with Seymour's knack for light comedy and hired her as member of his stock company. Griffith cast Seymour with Harron, Richard Barthelmess and Carol Dempster in the drama The Girl Who Stayed at Home (1919). Although the film was not well received by critics, Seymour's performance was and the public interest in her began to grow. Later that year, she was paired with Robert Harron again in True Heart Susie (1919) which also featured Lillian Gish. Seymour followed with role in Scarlet Days (1919), also opposite Richard Barthelmess and Carol Dempster. In 1920, Griffith cast Seymour in the lead role in The Idol Dancer. The film was not well received by audiences but they were taken by Seymour's performance. Shortly after the film's release, Seymour was featured on the cover of Motion Picture Magazine.

Literary and film critic Edward Wagenknecht provides this portrait of Clarine Seymour: “Miss Seymour was a real discovery. A tiny girl with enormous eyes, she was as dark and vivacious as Griffith’s heroines had been blonde and wistful, a delightful girl of excellent character, whom everybody in the studio loved…” Wagenknecht laments her passing in 1920, and “what almost certainly [would] have been an important film career.”[3]

Death

In early 1920, Griffith again cast Seymour, this time in Way Down East. Halfway through filming, on April 21, Seymour fell ill due to intestinal strangulation. She was taken to Misericordia Hospital in New York City for treatment, but her condition did not improve and she underwent emergency surgery. She developed pneumonia and died on April 25, 1920.[4] Seymour is buried in Greenwood Union Cemetery in Rye, New York.

Actress Mary Hay was cast in Seymour's role for Way Down East, and her part was reshot. Footage of Seymour in long shots can be seen in the finished film. On September 26, a memorial service for Seymour, Ormer Locklear, Olive Thomas, and Robert Harron, who died of an accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound two days after the premiere of Way Down East, was held at the Robert Brunton Studios. All four died that year and were eulogized by director William Desmond Taylor. Taylor was murdered less than 18 months later; his killer was never caught.

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1917The Mystery of the Double CrossSerial
1917Pots-and-Pans Peggy
1917It Happened to AdeleMary
1918A One Night Stand
1918Fare, PleaseShort subject
1918His Busy DayShort subject
1918The Furniture MoversShort subject
1918Fire the CookShort subject
1918Beach NutsShort subject
1918Do Husbands Deceive?Short subject
1918Nipped in the BudShort subject
1918The Dippy DaughterShort subject
1918Just Rambling AlongPretty LadyShort subject
1918An Enemy of SoapShort subject
1918Check Your BaggageShort subject
1919Hustling for HealthMr. Spotless's DaughterUncredited
Short subject
1919Toto's TroublesShort subject
1919The Girl Who Stayed at HomeCutie Beautiful
1919True Heart SusieBettina Hopkins Alternative titles: The Story of a Plain Girl
True Heart Susie the Story of a Plain Girl
1919Scarlet DaysChiquita aka Little Flameheart
1920The Idol DancerMary
1920Way Down EastKate, the Squire's nieceFootage removed/reshot

References

. Eve Golden. Golden Images: 41 Essays on Silent Film Stars. 2000. McFarland. 0-786-48354-7.

. Anthony Slide. The Griffith Actresses. 1973. A. S. Barnes. 0-498-01018-X. registration.

. Edward Wagenknecht. The Movies in the Age of Innocence. 3. 2014. McFarland. 978-1-476-61764-0.

Notes and References

  1. Shannon. Betty. July 1920. An Unfinished Story. Photoplay. Macfadden Publications. 18. 2. 81. 0732-538X.
  2. Web site: Seymour, Clarine - Actress (1916-1917). Bowers. Q. David. 1995. thanhouser.org. February 1, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150607035250/http://www.thanhouser.org/tcocd/Biography_Files/3hbgaf.htm. June 7, 2015. dead.
  3. Wagenknecht, 1962 p. 118
  4. News: Real Chatter. April 29, 1920. The Pittsburgh Press. 12. February 1, 2015.