
Douglass, Kansas, USA
From Wikipedia Phyllis Haver (January 6, 1899 – November 19, 1960) was an American actress of the silent film era. Haver auditioned for comedy producer Mack Sennett on a whim. Sennett hired her as one of his original Sennett Bathing Beauties. Within a few years, she appeared as a leading lady in two-reelers for Sennett Studios. Later, while signed with DeMille-Pathé, Haver played the part of Roxie Hart in the first film adaptation of Chicago in 1927, opposite Hungarian film actor Victor Varconi. One reviewer called her performance "astoundingly fine," and added that Haver "makes this combination of tragedy and comedy a most entertaining piece of work." She performed in the comedy film The Battle of the Sexes (1928), directed by D. W. Griffith, and appeared with Lon Chaney in his last silent film, Thunder (1929). Haver retired from the industry with two 'sound' films to her credit. In 1929, she married millionaire William Seeman with a service performed by New York Mayor James J. Walker at the home of Rube Goldberg, the cartoonist. The couple divorced in 1945. Haver retired in Sharon, Connecticut. She died at age 61 from an overdose of barbiturates in 1960, a suspected suicide. Haver left no survivors.
as Dallas O'Meara
as Lyla Mason
1928

as The Modest Maid
1921

as Dallas O'Meara
1924

as Alice Atkins
1926

1925

as Young Bee Adams
1917

as Myra Fuller
1925

as Lily
1926

as Imperia (uncredited)
1926

as Herself - in Prologue
1920

as The Young Woman
1923

as The Temptress
1927
as Mary Brown
1939

as (archive footage)
1949

as (archive footage)
1943

as Mary Brown
1939

as Showgirl
1930

as Zella
1929

as Jerry Cullen
1929

as Lola Mantell
1928

as Sal
1928

as Marie Skinner
1928
as Lyla Mason
1928

as Roxie Hart
1927

as Helen Blaisdell
1927

as The Temptress
1927

as Countess de Launay
1927

as Martha Rankin
1927
as Phyllis Warren
1927

as Victoria Stoddard
1927

as Nancy Flood
1927

as Betty Johnson
1927

as Shanghai Mabel
1926

as Sally Morgan
1926

as Lily
1926

as Alice Atkins
1926

as Imperia (uncredited)
1926