Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery
Encyclopedia
Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery is located at 10621 Victory Boulevard
Victory Boulevard (Los Angeles)
Victory Boulevard is a major east-west arterial road that runs traversing the entire length of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles County. Through much of the San Fernando Valley, Victory Boulevard divides the affluent communities at the southern end of the Valley , from the less affluent...

 in North Hollywood, California
North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
North Hollywood is a district in the San Fernando Valley region of the city of Los Angeles, California, along the Tujunga Wash. It is bounded on the south by Moorpark Street and the Ventura Freeway, on the southwest by Burbank Blvd...

.

The cemetery has a special section called the Portal of the Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation
Portal of the Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation
The Portal of the Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation is in Burbank, California. The shrine is a structure of marble, mosaic and sculpted figures, and is the burial site for 13 pioneers of aviation. It was built in 1924 as the entrance to Pierce Brothers Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery...

 that is the final resting place for a number of aviation pioneers — barnstormers, daredevils and sundry architects of aviation. There is a memorial to Amelia Earhart
Amelia Earhart
Amelia Mary Earhart was a noted American aviation pioneer and author. Earhart was the first woman to receive the U.S. Distinguished Flying Cross, awarded for becoming the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean...

 and others, honoring their accomplishments.

Among those interred here are some celebrities from the entertainment industry.

The shrine, with a colorful tile dome and female figures stretching their arms to the heavens, originally was built as an impressive entrance to Valhalla Memorial Park cemetery. It was named for the palace of Odin
Odin
Odin is a major god in Norse mythology and the ruler of Asgard. Homologous with the Anglo-Saxon "Wōden" and the Old High German "Wotan", the name is descended from Proto-Germanic "*Wodanaz" or "*Wōđanaz"....

, the Norse god of slain heroes.

Founding

Valhalla was founded in 1923 by two Los Angeles financiers, John R. Osborne and C. C. Fitzpatrick. The Spanish Mission Revival entrance structure was designed by architect Kenneth McDonald Jr. For the decorative stone castings, McDonald hired Italian-born sculptor Federico A. Giorgi, who had created 30 feet (9.1 m)-tall statues of elephants and lions for the 1917 epic film Intolerance and crafted the exterior of downtown's Million Dollar Theater. The gateway to the new cemetery cost $140,000.

The rotunda was dedicated March 1, 1925, with a concert by English contralto Maude Elliott. Picnickers spread blankets on the surrounding grassy expanse between three reflecting pools and flat cemetery markers, which were a new concept at the time. It became a tourist attraction and was used for concerts that were broadcast over radio station KELW by station owner Earl L. White. Just five months after the dedication, Osborne and Fitzpatrick were convicted of fraud. They had sold the same burial plots repeatedly — as many as 16 times — and netted a profit of $3 million to $4 million, according to Los Angeles Times stories of the era. They were fined $12,000 each and sentenced to 10 years in prison but served less than half the sentence.

State control

The cemetery was taken over by the state. It is unclear how long the state owned the 63 acres (254,952.2 m²) cemetery, but Pierce Brothers bought it in 1950 and, within two years, closed the rotunda to vehicle traffic and moved the entry to the cemetery from Valhalla Drive in Burbank to Victory and Cahuenga boulevards in North Hollywood. There, they opened a two-story office and mortuary.

On Dec. 17, 1953 — the 50th anniversary of Orville and Wilbur Wrights' 12-second powered hop at Kitty Hawk — the rotunda was rededicated as the Portal of the Folded Wings. During the ceremony, the cremated remains of Walter R. Brookins were interred there. Brookins, the first aviator to take a plane to an altitude of a mile, had been the Wright brothers' first civilian student.

When sculptor Giorgi died in 1963, he was buried outside the structure, near his masterpiece. Gillette was also buried outside, near the shrine he helped found.

Earthquake

The cube-like shrine building was damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake but restored and rededicated in 1996. Two years later, it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places
The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation...

.

Sale of property

In 1958, Pierce Brothers sold its family-owned chain of Southern California mortuaries and cemeteries to Texas financier Joseph L. Allbritton, who sold off 20 acres (80,937.2 m²) of Valhalla for development. In 1991, the cemeteries and mortuaries were acquired by Service Corp. International in Houston, but the Pierce Brothers sign remains at Valhalla.

Pioneers' resting place

Beneath the memorial tablets rest the remains of other aviation pioneers, including:
  • Augustus Roy Knabenshue (1876–1960), who in 1904 became America's first dirigible pilot. He also founded a dirigible passenger service, from Pasadena to Los Angeles, in 1912.

  • Evelyn "Bobbi" Trout
    Bobbi Trout
    Evelyn "Bobbi" Trout was an early female aviator notable for her pioneering flying activities. Trout began her aviation career at the age of 16 however her first solo flight and solo certificate was only given on April 30, 1928. In the spring of 1928, Trout’s mother bought her an International K-6...

     (1906–2003), who held numerous records for endurance, mileage and altitude.

  • James Floyd Smith (1884–1956), who built and flew his own plane in 1912 and invented the free-type manually operated parachute for the Army in 1918.

  • Hilder Florentina Smith (1890–1977), who became a parachute jumper in 1914. Two years later, she became the first female pilot to fly out of the bean patch that later became Los Angeles International Airport. She was married to James Floyd Smith.

  • Matilde Moisant, the second American woman to earn her pilot certificate — two days after her friend, journalist Harriet Quimby. In 1911, Moisant let Quimby be first, because Quimby needed the extra acclaim: She wrote about air races and the thrill of flight.

  • John B. Moisant (1868–1910), who designed and built the first metal plane. Matilde Moisant was his sister.

List

Note: this is a partial list. Use the following alphabetical links to find a name.
Nick Cravat(1912–1994), an American actor who appeared alongside Burt Lancaster in several films most notable among them are The Crimson Pirate and The Flame and the Arrow.

A

  • Fred Abbott
    Fred Abbott
    Harry Frederick Abbott was a Major League Baseball catcher. Born Harry Frederick Winbigler, he played three seasons of Major League baseball for the Cleveland Naps and the Philadelphia Phillies. His interment was located at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.-External links:...

    , Major League baseball player
  • Bertrand Blanchard Acosta, aviation pioneer
  • Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff was an American actor. His best-known recurring role is that of Mr. Beasley, the postman, in the Blondie movie series that starred Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake....

    , actor
  • Luis Alberni, actor
  • Betty Alden (1891–1948), actress
  • Mary Alden
    Mary Alden
    Mary Maguire Alden was an American motion picture and stage actress. She was one of the first Broadway actresses to work in Hollywood.-Career:Born in New York City, Alden began her career on the Broadway stage...

    , actress
  • Harry Antrim
    Harry Antrim
    Harry Antrim was an actor in vaudeville, film and television.By 1906, Antrim was working in vaudeville. During the early 1930s, he moved to Los Angeles and secured uncredited parts in several films, beginning with 1936's Small Town Girl...

     (1884–1967), actor (unmarked)
  • Johnny Arthur
    Johnny Arthur
    Johnny Arthur was an American stage and motion picture actor.-Early years:Born John Lennox Arthur Williams in Scottdale, Pennsylvania, Arthur was a veteran of twenty-five years on stage before he made his screen debut in 1923's The Unknown Purple...

    , actor
  • Edwin August
    Edwin August
    Edwin August was an American actor, director and screenwriter of the silent era. He appeared in 152 films between 1909 and 1947. He also directed 52 films between 1912 and 1919....

    , actor, director, screenwriter

B

  • Frankie Bailey (1859–1953), actress
  • Lee Baker (1875–1948), actor
  • Jill Banner
    Jill Banner
    Jill Banner was an American film actress, possibly best recalled for her role as Virginia, the "spider baby" in the 1964 cult horror-comedy film Spider Baby...

    , actress
  • Lyle Barton (1889–1971), actress
  • Lionel Belmore
    Lionel Belmore
    Lionel Belmore . When he was born, Wimbledon was in Surrey. He was an English character actor and director on stage for more than a quarter of a century, appearing with Wilson Barrett, Sir Henry Irving, William Faversham, Lily Langtry and other famous actors. He entered in films from 1911...

    , actor, director
  • Bea Benaderet
    Bea Benaderet
    Bea Benaderet was an American actress born in New York City and raised in San Francisco, California. She is best remembered for her wide variety of television work, which included a starring role in the 1960s television series Petticoat Junction and Green Acres as Shady Rest Hotel owner Kate...

    , actress
  • Belle Bennett
    Belle Bennett
    Belle Bennett was a stage and screen actress who started her professional career in vaudeville. She was born in Milaca, Minnesota.-Stage actress:...

    , actress
  • Steve Benton (1896–1976), actor
  • Willie Best
    Willie Best
    William "Willie" Best sometimes known as Sleep n' Eat was an American television and film actor....

    , actor
  • Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans was a character actor best remembered for playing eccentric, grumpy old men.Bevans had a very long career, starting in vaudeville in 1900 in an act with Grace Emmett. He progressed to burlesque, Broadway, and even light opera, before making his film debut at the age of 55 in Way Down...

    , actor
  • John G. Blystone
    John G. Blystone
    John G. Blystone was an American film director. He directed 100 films between 1915 and 1938.He was born in Rice Lake, Wisconsin and died in Los Angeles, California from a heart attack. His grave is located at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.-Relatives:John Blystone's brother was actor Stanley...

    , director
  • Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone was an American film actor who made over 500 films appearances between 1924 and 1956.-Career:Born in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Blystone's full name was William Stanley Blystone...

    , actor
  • Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface was an American film actress. She appeared in 120 films between 1925 and 1956.-Career:...

    , actress (unmarked)
  • Marshall Bradford (1885–1971), actor (unmarked)
  • Al Bridge
    Al Bridge
    Al Bridge was an American character actor who played mostly small roles in over 270 films between 1931 and 1954...

    , actor
  • Shirley Ann Bridgeford (1933–1958), second murder victim of Harvey Glatman
  • Buster Brodie (1885–1948), actor, Winged Monkey in The Wizard of Oz
    The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
    The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical fantasy film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was directed primarily by Victor Fleming. Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf received credit for the screenplay, but there were uncredited contributions by others. The lyrics for the songs...

  • Tyler Brooke
    Tyler Brooke
    Tyler Brooke, real name Victor Hugo de Bierre, was an American film actor. He appeared in 92 films between 1915 and 1943....

    , actor, Ozmite in The Wizard of Oz
    The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
    The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical fantasy film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was directed primarily by Victor Fleming. Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf received credit for the screenplay, but there were uncredited contributions by others. The lyrics for the songs...

  • Walter Richard Brookins
    Walter Richard Brookins
    Walter Richard Brookins was the first pilot trained by the Wright brothers for their exhibition team.-Biography:...

    , aviation pioneer
  • Charles D. Brown (1887–1948), actor
  • Arthur Quirk Bryan, comedian, voice actor best known as the original voice of Elmer Fudd
    Elmer Fudd
    Elmer J. Fudd/Egghead is a fictional cartoon character and one of the most famous Looney Tunes characters, and the de facto archenemy of Bugs Bunny. He has one of the more disputed origins in the Warner Bros. cartoon pantheon . His aim is to hunt Bugs, but he usually ends up seriously injuring...

     in the Looney Tunes
    Looney Tunes
    Looney Tunes is a Warner Bros. animated cartoon series. It preceded the Merrie Melodies series and was Warner Bros.'s first animated theatrical series. Since its first official release, 1930's Sinkin' in the Bathtub, the series has become a worldwide media franchise, spawning several television...

     cartoon series.
  • Nana Bryant
    Nana Bryant
    Nana Bryant was an American film actress. She appeared in over 100 films between 1935 and 1955.She was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and died in Hollywood, California. Her grave is located at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery....

    , actress
  • Georgette Simon Burns (1897-1983), French opera singer
  • Paul E. Burns (1881–1967), actor
  • Frederick Burton
    Frederick Burton (actor)
    Frederick Burton , was an American actor. He appeared in 122 films between 1914 and 1947.He was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA and died in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles...

    , actor

C

  • Georgia Caine
    Georgia Caine
    Georgia Caine was an American actress who performed both on Broadway and in over 80 films in her 51 year career.-Early career:...

    , actress
  • Colin Campbell (1883–1966), actor
  • Yakima Canutt
    Yakima Canutt
    Yakima Canutt , also known as Yak Canutt, was an American rodeo rider, actor, stuntman and action director.-Biography:...

    , actor, stuntman, director
  • Naomi Childers
    Naomi Childers
    Naomi Childers was a silent film actress whose career lasted until the mid-20th century.-English ancestry, child actress:...

    , actress
  • Ken Christy (1894–1962), actor
  • Steve Clark (1891–1954), actor
  • Mae Clarke
    Mae Clarke
    Mae Clarke was an American actress most noted for playing Frankenstein's bride, chased by Boris Karloff in Frankenstein, and having a grapefruit smashed into her face by James Cagney in The Public Enemy, both released in 1931.-Early life and career:Clarke was born Violet Mary Klotz in...

    , actress
  • Chester Clute
    Chester Clute
    Chester Clute , was an American actor familiar in scores of Hollywood films from his debut in 1930. Diminutive, bald-pated with a bristling moustache, he appeared in mostly unbilled roles, consisting usually of one or two lines, in nearly 250 films. He died of a heart attack aged 65...

    , actor
  • Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Fessenden Cobb was an American actor. He appeared in 623 films between 1912 and 1966.He was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico and died in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles from a heart attack...

    , actor
  • John Collum
    John Collum
    John K. Collum was an American child actor of the 1930s.-Career:Born in Illinois, Collum was the son of Hal Roach's casting director, Joseph Collum, and appeared in twenty-six of Roach's Our Gang comedies from 1932 to 1938...

    , actor
  • Baldwin Cooke
    Baldwin Cooke
    Baldwin Cooke, also known as Baldy Cooke , was a comedic American actor. Born in New York, Cooke and his wife, Alice, toured in vaudeville with Stan Laurel, remaining close friends over the years. He appeared in some thirty Laurel and Hardy comedies...

    , comedic actor who worked with Hardy's co-star Stan Laurel
    Stan Laurel
    Arthur Stanley "Stan" Jefferson , better known as Stan Laurel, was an English comic actor, writer and film director, famous as the first half of the comedy team Laurel and Hardy. His film acting career stretched between 1917 and 1951 and included a starring role in the Academy Award winning film...

  • Melville Cooper
    Melville Cooper
    George Melville Cooper , best known as Melville Cooper, was a British stage, film and television actor. Among his roles are the cowardly Sheriff of Nottingham in The Adventures of Robin Hood, starring Errol Flynn, and Mr...

    , actor
  • Tex Cooper (1876–1951), actor
  • Jim Corey
    Jim Corey
    James Warren "Jim" Corey was an American actor. He appeared in 315 films between 1914 and 1948. He was born in Nebraska and died in Los Angeles, California...

    , actor
  • Gino Corrado
    Gino Corrado
    Gino Corrado was an Italian film actor. He appeared in 355 films between 1916 and 1954, almost always in small roles as a character actor.-Career:...

    , actor
  • Aneta Corsaut
    Aneta Corsaut
    Aneta Louise Corsaut was an American actress. She is best known for playing Helen Crump on The Andy Griffith Show ....

    , actress
  • Jane Cowl
    Jane Cowl
    Jane Cowl was an American film and stage actress and playwright "notorious for playing lacrymose parts". Actress Jane Russell was named in Cowl's honor.-Biography:...

    , actress
  • Richard Crane
    Richard Crane
    Richard Crane was a veteran character actor whose career spanned three decades in films and television. His early career included many uncredited performances in feature films made in the 1940's. He is best remembered for his portrayal of the title role in the TV science fiction series Rocky...

    , actor
  • Nick Cravat
    Nick Cravat
    Nick Cravat was an American film actor. His real name was Nicholas Cuccia . "Cravat" was a stage name based on a character in a play he had seen and rather liked....

    , actor

D

  • Cesare Danova
    Cesare Danova
    Cesare Danova was a television and screen actor. Born as Cesare Deitinger in Bergamo, Italy to an Austrian father and an Italian mother, he adopted Danova as his stage name after becoming an actor in Rome at the end of World War II. He emigrated to the United States in the 1950s to make the film...

    , actor
  • Richard Day
    Richard Day (art director)
    Richard Day was a Canadian art director. He won seven Academy Awards and was nominated for a further 13 in the category Best Art Direction He worked on 265 films between 1923 and 1970....

     (1896–1972), motion picture set designer
  • Curly Joe DeRita
    Curly Joe DeRita
    Joe DeRita , born Joseph Wardell, was an American comedian who is best known as Curly-Joe DeRita, the "sixth" member of the Three Stooges.-Early life:...

    , actor,comedian, member of the Three Stooges
    Three Stooges
    The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy act of the early to mid–20th century best known for their numerous short subject films. Their hallmark was physical farce and extreme slapstick. In films, the Stooges were commonly known by their first names: "Moe, Larry, and Curly" and "Moe,...

  • Don Dillaway
    Don Dillaway
    Donald Dillaway , was an American film and TV actor. In films from 1930, New York-born Dillaway had quite prominent supporting roles in several films of the 1930s, perhaps most notably opposite Laurel and Hardy in their second feature film Pack Up Your Troubles in 1932. His roles became gradually...

    , actor
  • Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille was a Canadian actor and one of the Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood.-Life and career:...

    , film and TV actor

E

  • Amelia Earhart
    Amelia Earhart
    Amelia Mary Earhart was a noted American aviation pioneer and author. Earhart was the first woman to receive the U.S. Distinguished Flying Cross, awarded for becoming the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean...

    , (memorial) first female American pilot to cross the Atlantic
  • Cliff Edwards
    Cliff Edwards
    Cliff Edwards , also known as "Ukelele Ike", was an American singer and voice actor who enjoyed considerable popularity in the 1920s and early 1930s, specializing in jazzy renditions of pop standards and novelty tunes. He had a number-one hit with "Singin' in the Rain" in 1929...

    , actor, singer known as "Ukulele Ike," voice of Jiminy Cricket
    Jiminy Cricket
    Jiminy Cricket is the Walt Disney version of "The Talking Cricket" , a fictional character created by Carlo Collodi for his children's book Pinocchio, which was adapted into an animated film by Disney in 1940...


H

  • Harry Lee Haines, Civil War and Indian Wars Veteran, Served under Generals Miles & Custer
  • Jonathan Hale
    Jonathan Hale
    Jonathan Hale was a Canadian-born film and television actor.-Career:Born Jonathan Hatley in Ontario, Canada, Hale was well known as Dagwood Bumstead's boss, Julius Caesar Dithers, in the Blondie film series in the 1940s. He is also notable for playing Inspector Farnack in various The Saint films...

    , actor
  • Florence Halop
    Florence Halop
    Florence Halop was an American actress. Best known for her role as the raspy-voiced bailiff Florence Kleiner on the sitcom Night Court, Halop was the sister of Billy Halop, one of the original Dead End/East Side Kids....

    , actress
  • Lois Hamilton
    Lois Hamilton
    Lois Hamilton was a United States model, author, actress, artist and aviatrix.-Early life and career:Hamilton was born Lois Aurino in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania...

    , model, author, actress, artist, aviatrix
  • Mahlon Hamilton
    Mahlon Hamilton
    Mahlon Preston Hamilton Jr. was an American stage and screen actor. He was the son of a bartender born in Baltimore, Maryland the eldest of three daughters and a son raised by his parents...

    , actor
  • Oliver Hardy
    Oliver Hardy
    Oliver Hardy was an American comic actor famous as one half of Laurel and Hardy, the classic double act that began in the era of silent films and lasted nearly 30 years, from 1927 to 1955.-Early life:...

    , actor, comedian, co-star of Laurel and Hardy
    Laurel and Hardy
    Laurel and Hardy were one of the most popular and critically acclaimed comedy double acts of the early Classical Hollywood era of American cinema...

  • Leigh Harline
    Leigh Harline
    Leigh Adrian Harline was a film composer.-Career:Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he worked for various radio stations before joining the Walt Disney studios in 1932 as arranger and scorer...

    , composer
  • Walter and Edna L. Helwig, early Los Angeles developers and builders
  • Colin Higgins
    Colin Higgins
    Colin Higgins was an Australian-American screenwriter, actor, director, and producer. He was best known for writing the screenplay for the 1971 film Harold and Maude. and for directing the films Foul Play and Nine to Five .-Biography:Higgins was born in Nouméa, New Caledonia to an Australian...

    , actor

K

  • Fred Kelsey
    Fred Kelsey
    Frederick Alvin "Fred" Kelsey was an American actor, film director, and screenwriter. He appeared in 404 films between 1911 and 1958, often playing policemen or detectives . He also directed 37 films between 1914 and 1920...

    , pioneer actor
  • Fred Kennedy (1909–1958), actor, stuntman
  • Crauford Kent
    Crauford Kent
    Crauford Kent was an English-born film actor. Between 1915 and 1952 he appeared in 208 films, although frequently without screen credit, including The Menace, Little Miss Marker, The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Dolly Sisters, and Pat and Mike.Kent was born in London, England and died in Hollywood,...

    , actor
  • Kathleen Key
    Kathleen Key
    Kathleen Key was an American actress who achieved a brief period of fame during the silent era. She is best remembered for playing Tirzah in the 1925 film Ben-Hur. Key was the great-great granddaughter of Francis Scott Key, composer of "The Star Spangled Banner", and a distant cousin of author F...

    , actress
  • Charles Criswell King
    The Amazing Criswell
    Jeron Criswell King , born Jeron Criswell Konig, and known by his stage-name The Amazing Criswell , was an American psychic known for wildly inaccurate predictions...

    , "The Amazing Criswell"
  • Winfield Bertrum Kinner
    Winfield Bertrum Kinner
    Winfield Bertrum "Bert" Kinner was an American aircraft engine designer and constructor. Kinner founded Kinner Airplane & Motor Corporation in Glendale, California which produced radial engines and aircraft....

    , aviation pioneer
  • Jack Kirk (1895–1948), actor
  • Fuzzy Knight
    Fuzzy Knight
    John Forrest "Fuzzy" Knight was an American film and television actor. He appeared in over 180 films between 1929 and 1967, usually as a cowboy hero's sidekick.-Biography:...

    , actor
  • June Knight
    June Knight
    June Knight was an American Broadway and film actress.Aged 19, she appeared in the last Ziegfeld Follies show, Hot-Cha!...

    , actress
  • Theodore Kosloff
    Theodore Kosloff
    Theodore Kosloff was a Russian-born ballet dancer, choreographer and film and stage actor. He was occasionally credited as Theodor Kosloff.-Career:...

    , actor, choreographer, ballet dancer

L

  • Frank Lackteen
    Frank Lackteen
    Frank Lackteen was a Lebanese-born American film actor best known for his antagonistic roles. He appeared in nearly 200 films between 1916 and 1965, including several Three Stooges shorts. He was born in Kubber-Ilias, Lebanon and died in Los Angeles, California...

    , actor
  • Alice Lake
    Alice Lake
    Alice Lake was an American film actress. She began her career during the silent film era and often appeared in comedy shorts opposite Roscoe Arbuckle.-Career:...

    , actress
  • Sheldon Lewis
    Sheldon Lewis
    Sheldon Lewis was an American actor of the silent era best known for his antagonistic roles. He appeared in 93 films between 1914 and 1936.He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died in San Gabriel, California...

    , actor
  • Robert Lowery
    Robert Lowery (actor)
    Robert Lowery was an American motion picture, television, and stage actor who appeared in over seventy films.-Early life:...

    , stage, film, and TV actor
  • Edward Ludlum (1920–2000), theatrical director
  • Sam Lufkin
    Sam Lufkin
    Samuel "Sam" William Lufkin was an American actor who usually appeared in small or bit roles in short comedy films.-Career:Born in Utah, Lufkin spent most of his career at the Hal Roach Studios where he made over 60 films...

    , actor
  • James Luisi
    James Luisi
    James A. Luisi was an American professional basketball player and actor. Luisi is perhaps best known for his role as Lt. Doug Chapman during Seasons 3 through 6 of the television series The Rockford Files.-Career:...

    , actor

M

  • Barton MacLane
    Barton MacLane
    Barton MacLane was an American actor, playwright, and screenwriter. Although he has appeared in many classic films from the 1930s through the 1960s, he was known for his role as Gen...

    , actor
  • Kermit Maynard
    Kermit Maynard
    Kermit Maynard was an American actor and stuntman. He appeared in 280 films between 1927 and 1962. He was a younger brother of actor Ken Maynard. He was born in Vevay, Indiana, and died in North Hollywood, California, from a heart attack. He is interred at Valhalla Memorial Park...

    , actor
  • Sam McDaniel
    Sam McDaniel
    Sam McDaniel was an African American actor who appeared in over 210 television shows and films between 1929 and 1950. He was the older brother of actresses Hattie McDaniel and Etta McDaniel. born in Wichita, Kansas, to former slaves. He was one of 13 children...

    , actor, brother of Oscar-winner Hattie McDaniel
  • Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald was an American actor whose career spanned 52 years. Although never really a headlining actor, he made 41 film and television appearances between 1913 and 1965, appearing in films such as The Temptress in 1926 with Greta Garbo...

    , actor
  • Sam McKim (1924–2004), actor, Disney Imagineer
  • George Melford
    George Melford
    George H. Melford was an American stage and film actor, director, producer, and screenwriter.-Career:...

    , actor, director
  • Paul Mickelson, musician and composer of religious songs
  • John Moisant, aviation pioneer
  • Matilde Moisant
    Matilde Moisant
    Matilde E. Moisant was an American pioneer aviator. She was the second woman in the country to get a pilot's license.- Early life :...

    , pioneer aviatrix
  • Mantan Moreland
    Mantan Moreland
    Mantan Moreland was an American actor and comedian most popular in the 1930s and 1940s.-Career:Born in Monroe, Louisiana, Moreland began acting by the time he was an adolescent, reportedly running away to join the circus...

    , actor
  • Mittie Morris, social reformer
  • Mae Murray
    Mae Murray
    Mae Murray was an American actress, dancer, film producer, and screenwriter. Murray rose to fame during the silent film era and was known as "The Girl with the Bee-Stung Lips" and "The Gardenia of the Screen"....

    , actress

N

  • Nels P. Nelson (1918–1994), actor, Munchkin in The Wizard of Oz
    The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
    The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical fantasy film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was directed primarily by Victor Fleming. Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf received credit for the screenplay, but there were uncredited contributions by others. The lyrics for the songs...

  • Buddy Noonan
    Buddy Noonan
    Buddy Noonan was an American cinematographer, actor, entertainer, television producer, and freelance journalist. television producer for nationally syndicatedtelevision series such as The Happy Wanderers, Wanderlust, and The Roving Kind, which were shot on location throughout the United States and...

    , producer, The Roving Kind
    The Roving Kind
    The Roving Kind was a nationally syndicated television show that was distributed by Bill Burrud Productions, which aired on KCOP-TV, Los Angeles, from 1964 to 1966. The series ran for several years, and featured producers Milas Hinshaw and Buddy Noonan, who produced, filmed, and narrated the...

     syndicated TV series
  • Fayard Nicholas
    Fayard Nicholas
    Fayard Antonio Nicholas...

    , dancer

P

  • Virginia Pearson
    Virginia Pearson
    Virginia Belle Pearson was an American stage and film actress. She made fifty-one films in a career which extended from 1910 until 1932.-Career:...

    , pioneer film actress
  • Eddy Polo, actor, stuntman, the first to parachute off the Eiffel Tower
    Eiffel Tower
    The Eiffel Tower is a puddle iron lattice tower located on the Champ de Mars in Paris. Built in 1889, it has become both a global icon of France and one of the most recognizable structures in the world...


R

  • Ruth Robinson (1887–1966), actress, Munchkin in The Wizard of Oz
    The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
    The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical fantasy film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was directed primarily by Victor Fleming. Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf received credit for the screenplay, but there were uncredited contributions by others. The lyrics for the songs...

  • "Slapsie Maxie" Rosenbloom
    Maxie Rosenbloom
    Max Everitt Rosenbloom, known as Slapsie Maxie was an American boxer, actor, and television personality.-Life and career:...

     (1904–1976), champion boxer, actor
  • Gail Russell
    Gail Russell
    Gail Russell was an American film and television actress.-Career:She was born Elizabeth L. Russell to George and Gladys Russell in Chicago, Illinois, and then moved to the Los Angeles, California, area when she was a teenager. Russell's extraordinary beauty brought her to the attention of...

    , actress

S

  • Charles Sellon
    Charles Sellon
    Charles Sellon was an American stage and film actor. He appeared in 108 films and stage acts between 1901 and 1935. He was born in Boston, Massachusetts and died in La Crescenta, California. His grave is located in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.-Selected filmography:-External links:...

    , actor
  • Thomas Seung, WWII Veteran,father 1927–1989
  • Hilder Smith, pioneer aviatrix and parachutist
  • Madame Sul-Te-Wan
    Madame Sul-Te-Wan
    Madame Sul-Te-Wan was an American actress. The daughter of freed slaves, she began her career in entertainment touring the east coast with various theatrical companies and moved to California to become a member of the fledgling film community...

    , pioneering African-American film actress
  • Mohi Sobhani
  • Charles Stevens
    Charles Stevens (actor)
    Charles Stevens was an American actor.The grandson of Geronimo, Stevens appeared in nearly 200 films between 1915 and 1961...

    , Apache/Mexican actor (unmarked)
  • Onslow Stevens
    Onslow Stevens
    Onslow Stevens was an American stage, television and film actor.-Career:Born Onslow Ford Stevenson in Los Angeles, California, he was the son of character actor Housley Stevenson...

    , actor (unmarked)
  • Barbara Lois Smith 1933–1965

T

  • Alma Tell
    Alma Tell
    Alma Tell was an American stage and motion picture actress whose career in cinema began in 1915 and lasted into the talkie era of the early 1930s....

    , actress
  • Alice Terry
    Alice Terry
    Alice Terry was an American film actress who began her career during the silent film era, appearing in thirty-nine films between 1916 and 1933.-Career:...

    , actress
  • Lyle Tayo
    Lyle Tayo
    Lyle Tayo was an American film actress who appeared in 59 films between 1921 and 1948. Tayo was born in Elmdale, Kansas and died in Hollywood, California. She is buried in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery....

    , actress
  • Elinor Troy (1916–1949), actress

W

  • George Wagner
    George Wagner
    George Raymond Wagner was an American professional wrestler best known by his ring name Gorgeous George...

    , aka "Gorgeous George", flamboyant professional wrestler
  • Rudd Weatherwax
    Rudd Weatherwax
    Ruddell Bird "Rudd" Weatherwax was an American actor and animal trainer. He and his brother Frank Weatherwax are best remembered for training dogs for motion pictures and television. Frank's collie, Pal, became the original Lassie, handled by Rudd for the 1943 MGM film Lassie Come Home...

    , renowned animal trainer
  • Dave Willock
    Dave Willock
    Dave Willock was an American character actor. Willock appeared in 181 films and television shows from 1939 to 1989. He is probably most familiar to modern audiences from his performance as Baby Jane Hudson's father in the opening scenes of the cult classic What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?...

    , actor
  • Frederick Worlcok (1886–1973), actor

Y

  • Chief Yowlachie (birth name: Daniel Simmons) (1891–1966), Native American actor who was born in Yakima, Washington
    Yakima, Washington
    Yakima is an American city southeast of Mount Rainier National Park and the county seat of Yakima County, Washington, United States, and the eighth largest city by population in the state itself. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 91,196 and a metropolitan population of...

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