Reina Valdez
Appearance
Reina Valdez | |
---|---|
Born | December 1890 Springfield, Massachusetts, US |
Occupation | Actress |
Reina Valdez (sometimes credited as Rena Valdez; born December 1890) was a silent film actress active in Hollywood in the 1910s.[1]
Although some publicity reports claimed she was born in and raised in Mexico, she was a native of Springfield, Massachusetts, where she grew up before she moved to New York City to pursue an interest in acting.[2][3][4] After a few appearances on Broadway, eventually she found herself in Los Angeles, where she worked for a number of film companies over the course of her short career, including the Santa Barbara Motion Picture Company, the New York Motion Picture Company, and Essanay.[5][6][7] Little is known about her life before or after her film career. It is likely that "Reina Valdez" was her stage name.
Selected filmography
[edit]- Mismated (1916)
- Good Out of Evil (1915)
- A Brother's Redemption (1915)
- The Woman He Married (1915)
- The Keeper of the Flock (1915)
- Beating Father to It (1915)
- The Call of the Sea (1915)
- The Boob's Racing Career (1915)
- Dan Cupid: Assayer (1914)
- The Atonement (1914)
- Single Handed (1914)
- The Conquest of Man (1914)
- The Arm of Vengeance (1914)
- Italian Love (1914)
- The Weaker's Strength (1914)
- A Gambler's Way (1914)
- A Night on the Road (1914)
- Through Trackless Sands (1914)
- The Trail of the Snake Band (1913)
- The Weaker Mind (1913)
References
[edit]- ^ "Reina Valdez Attains Ambition". The Moving Picture World. XXIV. April 1915.
- ^ Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual, 1919.
- ^ "Today's Best Photo Play Stories". Chicago Tribune. 2 Apr 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
- ^ "New England, the Merry Widow, and a Spanish Beauty". Photoplay. December 1914.
- ^ "In Movie Land". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. 11 Nov 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
- ^ "Perils of Photoplaying". The Wilmington Morning Star. 18 Jan 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
- ^ "Gossip of the Film World". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 19 Nov 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.