Olive Wyndham | |
|---|---|
Olive Wyndham, from a 1912 publication. Portrait by Sarony. | |
| Born | Olive Frances Wyndham Meysenburg (1886-06-16)June 16, 1886 Philadelphia,Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Died | November 24, 1971(1971-11-24) (aged 85) Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
| Occupation | Actress |
| Years active | 1904–1927 |
| Spouse(s) | Andrew White Newberry (m. 1925–?), Lucien Hamilton Tyng (m. 1933–?), Harry Gaze (m. ?–1959) |
Olive Frances Wyndham Meysenberg (June 16, 1886 – November 24, 1971) was an American actress on stage and in silent films.
Meysenburg was born inPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania,[1] the daughter of E. A. von Meysenburg, a German diplomat, and Oral Josephine Wyndham. Her older sisterJanet Beecher was also an actress.[2] The sisters were related toHarriet Beecher Stowe on their mother's side.[3]
Her father's work as a vice-consul for Germany led to her growing up inChicago.[4]

Wyndham's stage credits included roles inThe Ruling Power (1904),She Stoops to Conquer (1905),Sir Anthony (1906),The Aero Club (1907),The Man From Home (1908),[5]Blue Grass (1908),[6]The Cottage in the Air (1909),The School for Scandal (1909),Sister Beatrice (1910),The Thunderbolt (1910),Nobody's Daughter (1911),The Only Son (1911),Chains (1912),Oliver Twist (1912),[7]What Happened to Mary (1913),[8]Countess Julia (1913),The Last Resort (1914),Children of Earth (1915),[9]The Greatest Nation (1916),The Sweetmeat Game (1916),[10]The Knife (1917),[11]Nothing But Lies (1918),A Voice in the Dark (1919),[12]The Green Goddess (1921),The Charlatan (1922),Thin Ice (1922),The Steam Roller (1924),Dinner at Eight (1932). In 1927, she was acting inMassachusetts, including inCradle Snatchers with her sister Janet Beecher.
Wyndham appeared in two silent films,Your Girl and Mine, a 1914 suffrage film backed by theNational American Woman Suffrage Association, andFighting Bob (1915).[13] Her striking fashion choices were a matter of press interest, as in the 1907 headline "Olive Wyndham's Hat Biggest in United States".[14]
Olive Wyndham was engaged to marry lawyer Walter Kirkpatrick Brice in 1915,[15] but the engagement was broken a few months later.[16] She married mining engineer Andrew White Newberry in 1925.[17] After they divorced, she married a second time to Lucien Hamilton Tyng in 1933.[18] She was married a third time to theNew Thought metaphysician and writer Harry Gaze (1878–1959) who died in a car accident en route to a speaking engagement at the Hollywood Church of Religious Science. She died inSanta Monica, California in 1971, aged 85 years.