Virginia Valli Explained

Virginia Valli
Birth Date:18 January 1895[1] [2]
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Place:Palm Springs, California, U.S.
Resting Place:Welwood Murray Cemetery, Palm Springs
Birth Name:Virginia McSweeney
Spouse:
    Yearsactive:1916-1931 (film)

    Virginia Valli (January 18, 1895 – September 24, 1968)[3] was an American stage and film actress whose motion picture career started in the silent film era and lasted until the beginning of the sound film era of the 1930s.

    Early life

    Born January 18, 1895, as Virginia McSweeney[4] in Chicago, Illinois, she got her acting start in Milwaukee with a stock company. She also did some film work with Essanay Studios in Chicago, starting in 1916.

    Film career

    Valli continued to appear in films throughout the 1920s. She was an established star at the Universal studio by the mid-1920s. In 1924 she was the female lead in King Vidor's southern gothic Wild Oranges, a film now recovered from film vault obscurity. She also appeared in the romantic comedy, Every Woman's Life, about "the man she could have married, the man she should have married and the man she DID marry." Most of her films were made between 1924 and 1927, and included Alfred Hitchcock's debut feature, The Pleasure Garden (1925), Paid to Love (1927), with William Powell, and Evening Clothes (1927), which featured Adolphe Menjou. In 1925 Valli performed in The Man Who Found Himself with Thomas Meighan.

    Her first sound picture was The Isle of Lost Ships with Jason Robards Sr. and Noah Beery Sr. in 1929. Her last film was in Night Life in Reno, in 1931.

    Personal life

    Valli was first married to George Lamson and the two shared a bungalow in Hollywood, near the Hollywood Hotel.

    In 1931, she married her second husband, actor Charles Farrell.[5] They moved to Palm Springs, where she was a social fixture for many years.

    She suffered a stroke in 1966, and died two years later, aged 73, in Palm Springs. She was buried in the Welwood Murray Cemetery of that city. She had no children.

    Filmography

    References

    Notes
    Bibliography

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. https://thetombstonetourist.com/graves/virginia-valli/ Virginia Valli | The Tombstone Tourist
    2. https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/dictionaries-thesauruses-pictures-and-press-releases/valli-virginia-1895-1968 Valli, Virginia (1895–1968)
    3. http://www.pscemetery.com/pdfs/interments.pdf Palm Springs Cemetery District "Interments of Interest"
    4. Book: Room. Adrian. Dictionary of Pseudonyms: 13,000 Assumed Names and Their Origins. 5th . 2012. McFarland. 978-0786457632. 488. 9 March 2018. en.
    5. News: Recently a Bride. Detroit Free Press. March 1, 1931. Detroit, MI. 4–1. Newspapers.com. March 8, 2018.