Zalla Zarana | |
Birth Date: | July 16, 1897 |
Birth Place: | Žužemberk, Austria-Hungary |
Birthname: | Rozalija Sršen |
Death Place: | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Othername: | Zala Zorana, Zalla Zeranno |
Occupation: | Actress |
Yearsactive: | 1917–1928 |
Spouse: | Theodore G. Lohman (1930–1944; his death) |
Zalla Zarana, born Rozalija Sršen (July 16, 1897 – July 12, 1967), was an American actress in the silent era. She is considered to be the first Slovenian actress to have succeeded in Hollywood.
Zarana was born on July 16, 1897 in Žužemberk, in the region of Lower Carniola in Austria-Hungary. She left for the United States at age seventeen and moved in with her aunt in San Francisco. She went to night classes to learn English, typing and accounting. She accompanied her German-born friend Isabelle Grenner to Los Angeles in 1917 and sought to become an actress. She went from studio to studio and eventually succeeded with a bit part as a Spanish dancer in The Flame of the Yukon. She worked as an extra in westerns with William S. Hart and earned high-profile roles in 1922 as the femme fatale in two low-budget shoot-em-ups, Back Fire, with Jack Hoxie, and Silver Spurs, starring Lester Cuneo. For the latter film, she was promoted in ads as Hollywood's "First Jugo-Slav Beauty." She preferred exotic characters, dancers and vamps and played in at least 20 films. Her career was modest, but she shared scenes with future stars, like Stan Laurel and Gary Cooper, and was cast in small roles in major productions, such as Mae Murray's flashy friend in The Merry Widow, directed by Erich von Stroheim, and a freak show half-lady opposite John Gilbert in The Show, directed by Tod Browning. With the advent of sound films, she retired from the screen and married in 1930. She occasionally performed on stage and wrote plays.[1]