Dorothy Mackaill (March 4, 1903 Dorothy Mackaill birth registration (2nd Quarter (April–May–June), 1903, England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837–1915; accessed May 19, 2018. Dorothy Mackaill entry, 1911 England Census, search.ancestrylibrary.com; accessed May 19, 2018. – August 12, 1990) was a British-American actress, most active during the silent film era and into the pre-Code era of the early 1930s.
In one account of her teenage years, Mackaill ran away to London to pursue a stage career as an actress. Another version of this period of her life describes Mackaill as teaching a Saturday evening dancing class at her father's academy when her talent was recognised by visitors who persuaded her father to send her to London to learn elocution and dancing. This she did at the Thorne Academy of Dramatic Art and Dancing in Wigmore Hall, attending the first year of a two-year course before leaving to start her paid career.
At age 16, Mackaill danced in Joybelles at London's Hippodrome and worked in Paris acting in a few minor Pathé films. She met a Broadway theatre stage choreographer who persuaded her to migrate to New York City at 17, where she became active in the Ziegfeld Follies, dancing in his Midnight Frolic revue.
Mackaill rose to leading-lady status in the drama The Man Who Came Back (1924), opposite rugged matinee idol George O'Brien. In 1924, she also starred in the western film The Mine with the Iron Door, shot on location outside of Tucson, Arizona. That same year, the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers of the United States presented Mackaill with one of its WAMPAS Baby Stars awards, which each year honored thirteen young women whom the association believed to be on the threshold of movie stardom. Other notable recipients of the award in 1924 were Clara Bow, Julanne Johnston and Lucille Ricksen. Her career continued to flourish throughout the remainder of the 1920s, as she made a smooth transition to sound with the part-Talkies The Barker (1928).
She occasionally came out of retirement to appear in television productions, including two episodes of Hawaii Five-O in 1976 and 1980.
Mackaill had no children.
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| Alternative title: The Girl from Coney Island An incomplete copy is held at the UCLA Film and Television Archive | |
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| Copies are held at the Cineteca Italiana and the UCLA Film and Television Archive | |
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| Produced in Technicolor, which is now lost, only a black-and-white edited copy survives Alternative title: Adventures in Africa | |
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| Episode 202: "Target–A Cop"; Episode 271: "School for Assassins" | |
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