
Emma Dunn
Born: 1874-02-24
Place of Birth: Birkenhead, Cheshire, England, UK
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Emma Dunn (26 February 1875 – 14 December 1966) was an English character actress on the stage and in motion pictures. Emma Dunn appeared onstage in her early teens, graduating to the London stage for several years and later became a noted Broadway actress. She appeared in the first American production of Ibsen's Peer Gynt (1906) with Richard Mansfield as Peer. She played Peer's mother, Ase, even though she was, in real life, 20 years younger than Mansfield. She appeared in three productions for theatre impresario David Belasco: The Warrens of Virginia (1907), The Easiest Way (1909) and The Governor's Lady (1912). In The Easiest Way, Dunn portrayed Annie, who was black, in blackface. In 1913 Dunn appeared in vaudeville. Dunn made her first film in 1914, a silent film of her 1910 stage success, Mother, directed by Maurice Tourneur. This was Tourneur's first American film. Dunn's second film was 1920's Old Lady 31, reprising the role she played in the 1916 Broadway play of the same name. One more silent film followed in 1924, Pied Piper Malone, before she made her talkie debut in Side Street, co-starring the Moore brothers, Matt, Owen and Tom as her sons. Dunn wrote two books on elocution and speech: Thought Quality in the Voice (1933) and You Can Do It (1947). Emma Dunn was born 26 February 1875, in Birkenhead, England, although she sometimes gave her year of birth as 1883. Dunn married Harry Beresford, an actor who was then known professionally as Harry J. Morgan, in Chicago on 4 October 1897. They divorced on 10 February 1909, in New York City. She was awarded sole custody of their young daughter, Dorothy. On 19 May 1909, Dunn married John W. Stokes (John W. S. Sullivan), an actor, playwright and theatrical manager. They subsequently adopted a second daughter, Helen. The couple divorced sometime between 1923 and Stokes' death in 1931. After suffering a heart attack some months before, Dunn died 14 December 1966, in Los Angeles, California, aged 91.
Known For

Scattergood Pulls the Strings

Dr. Kildare Goes Home

George White's 1935 Scandals

Scattergood Meets Broadway

Private Jones

The Great Dictator

Blessed Event

Dr. Monica

Little Orvie

Ladies in Retirement

Broken Lullaby

The Texan

Second Wife

Mr. & Mrs. Smith

Scattergood Baines

Madame X

Calling Dr. Kildare

Waikiki Wedding

Minesweeper

Circus Girl

High School

Rise and Shine

The Keeper of the Bees

The Prodigal

Bad Company

I Married a Witch

Manslaughter

Son of Frankenstein

The Talk of the Town

The Glass Key

Ladies Crave Excitement

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

Life with Father

The Bad Sister

The Hoodlum Saint

The Emperor's Candlesticks

Young Dr. Kildare

Little Big Shot

The Woman in White

The Postman Didn't Ring

Babes on Broadway

Three Loves Has Nancy

Hell's House

Dance, Girl, Dance

The Mad Martindales

Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day

It Happened Tomorrow

Morals for Women

When You're in Love

Half a Sinner

The Llano Kid

The Wet Parade

Mourning Becomes Electra

Lord Jeff

The Bridge of San Luis Rey

The Monster and the Girl

Each Dawn I Die

Under Eighteen

Cowboy from Brooklyn

The Cowboy and the Lady

Varsity Show

Elmer, the Great

This Modern Age

Dr. Kildare's Strange Case

Hard to Handle

One Crowded Night

Old Lady 31

My Buddy

Pied Piper Malone

It's Tough to Be Famous

The Cohens and Kellys in Hollywood

The Secret of Dr. Kildare

Compromised

Hero for a Day

Flirtation

Dark Hazard

Thanks for the Memory

Grand Slam

This Is the Life

Hideaway

Too Young to Marry

The Penalty

Another Face

Letty Lynton

Seven Keys to Baldpate

It's Great to Be Alive

Side Street

The Quitter

The Guilty Generation

You Can't Fool Your Wife

The Duke of West Point
