
Mignon Anderson
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Female
Birthday
1892-03-31
Day of Death
1983-02-25 (90 years old)
Place of Birth
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Mignon Anderson
Biography
From Wikipedia
Mignon Anderson (March 31, 1892 – February 25, 1983) was an American silent film actress. Her career was at its peak in the 1910s.
Born in Baltimore, Anderson's parents, Hallie Howard and Frank Anderson, were also actors. In 1911 she joined Thanhouser Studios in New Rochelle, New York. She was very diminutive and a blonde. Anderson starred alongside William Garwood in a number of short films including A New Cure for Divorce in 1912. Playing in Thanhouser films brought about an acquaintance with Morris Foster, also of that company. She was married to Foster from 1915 until his death in 1966. Anderson died in Burbank, California at the age of 90.
Known For
Acting
(1919)
The Midnight Stage
as Mary Lynch
(1917)
Even as You and I
as Selma
(1917)
The Circus of Life
as Kate
(1917)
A Wife on Trial
as Phyllis Narcissa
(1917)
The Phantom's Secret
as Jeanne de Beaulieu
(1916)
(1915)
Madam Blanche, Beauty Doctor
as Betty
(1915)
At the Patrician Club
as Eileen
(1915)
John T. Rocks and the Flivver
as Watson's Sweetheart
(1915)
Innocence at Monte Carlo
as Alice Brownell
(1915)
Outcasts of Society
as Meg - the Accused
(1915)
The Girl of the Sea
as Lydia Starr - the Girl of the Sea
(1915)
The Mill on the Floss
as Maggie Tulliver
(1914)
(1914)
A Dog of Flanders
as Alois - the Miller's Daughter
(1914)
An Elusive Diamond
as Bettina
(1914)
(1913)
Robin Hood
as Ellen
(1913)
(1913)
(1913)
Just a Shabby Doll
as The Wife
(1913)
The Evidence of the Film
as Secretary
(1912)
Lucile
as Constance
(1912)
Nicholas Nickleby
as Madeline Bray
(1912)
Dora Thorne
as Dora's Mother
(1912)
Her Secret
as The Loyal Sister with a Secret
(1912)
The Star of the Side Show
as Mignon, the Snake Charmer
(1911)
The Pied Piper of Hamelin
as The Little Lame Boy
(1911)
David Copperfield
as Dora Spenlow
(1910)