Charlie Chaplin (1951)

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CC 94 To finish the Harris saga, her last days of glory after the Mayer pictures were in De Mille's 'Tool's Paradise" (1921)^ From this she slipped down through roles in minor films to the status of an "extra." Hers was the type of beauty which blossoms in the teens. She matured into a rather commonplace woman. She filed a petition for bankruptcy in 1922. The following year she married Everett T. MacGovern, a Florida real estate man by whom she had a son. After divorcing him she secured a few minor parts in the talkies, then went into vaudeville. In 1936 she married William P. Fleckenstein, a vaudeville producer. Finally she appeared in burlesque, not in strip tease but as a singer "fully gowned." One of her turns was a Greta Garbo imitation. In 1 944, at the age of fortyone, she died of pneumonia after an operation, an unfortunate end to a rather unfortunate career.