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Peggy Shanor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American actress in silent films (1895–1935
Peggy Shanor
Shanor, from a 1918 publication.
Born1895 (1895)
DiedMay 30, 1935(1935-05-30) (aged 39)
OccupationActress
Shanor, January 1920

Peggy Shanor (November 1895 – May 30, 1935) was an American actress in silent films.

Early life

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Margaret Marion Shanor was fromSistersville, West Virginia, and raised in thePittsburgh area, the daughter of Perry Absalom Shanor and Etta Kate Leasure Shanor.[1][2] Her father, who was elected to represent Sistersville in the West Virginia legislature soon after Peggy was born,[3] was a leader in the Loyal Order of Moose,[4][5] and theInternational Order of Odd Fellows.[6]

Career

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Shanor appeared in several silent films, notably in vamp roles[7] in serials, includingThe House of Hate (1918),The Queen of Hearts (1918),The Echo of Youth (1919),The Lurking Peril (1919),The Mystery Mind (1920),The Man Who Stole the Moon (1921), andThe Prodigal Judge (1922).[8] "Peggy Shanor distinguished herself, inThe House of Hate, by her ability to go upstairs in a truly regal manner," noted one film magazine of her day.[9] She declined an offer to make films for an English production company in 1919.[10] Shanor commented on her typecasting as a "vamp" in a 1920 interview: "I don't know why the public persists in calling any woman character in a play or picture who has red blood, brains or allurement a 'vamp'. The word irritates me excessively."[11]

Stage roles, mainly inSomerville, Massachusetts, includedYes or No? (1917),Behind the Screen (1922),[12]The Goldfish (1923),[13]Very Bright Green (1923),[14]Grumpy (1923),[15] andLove 'Em and Leave 'Em (1926).[16]

Shanor was one of the entertainers donating their talents at a "smoke fund" benefit in New York in 1918, raising money to send cigarettes to American troops inWorld War I.[17] In 1921, she visited orphans in the Jewish Foster Home of Germantown, with colleaguesVera Gordon andStanley Price.[18] In 1922 she was in the news for her role in a "hospital mystery", as fellow film actorEarle Foxe collapsed in her apartment at theKnickerbocker Hotel.[7][19] They were rumored to be romantically involved.[20]

Personal life

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Peggy Shanor was engaged to marry Harry Caplan in 1923.[21] She died inNew York City in 1935, aged 39 years, "after a brief illness", according to her obituary inVariety.[4]

References

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  1. ^Untitled society item,Daily Republican (September 10, 1894): 1. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  2. ^"Theatre Party and Supper",Pittsburgh Press (November 27, 1910): 42. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  3. ^Untitled news item,Butler Citizen (November 19, 1896): 2. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  4. ^ab"Peggy Shanor",Variety (June 5, 1935): 54.
  5. ^"Perry A. Shanor"New York Times (November 7, 1939): 26.
  6. ^"Odd Fellows Pay Tribute to Dead",York Daily (May 19, 1917): 3. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  7. ^ab"Mystery Remains",Daily News (January 16, 1922): 25. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  8. ^John T. Soister, Henry Nicolella,Down from the Attic: Rare Thrillers of the Silent Era through the 1950s (McFarland 2016): 34, 44, 50.ISBN 9781476625447
  9. ^"Peggy Shanor",Picture-Play Magazine (September 1918): 21.
  10. ^"British Bid for American Star",Motion Picture News (November 8, 1919): 3472.
  11. ^"Peggy Shanor an Unwilling Vamp",Exhibitors Herald (January 31, 1920): 66.
  12. ^"Mr. Crosby's Play Acted in Somerville",Boston Globe (December 19, 1922): 4. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  13. ^"Somerville Theatre",Boston Globe (April 1, 1923): 53. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  14. ^"Sheffield's Merry Play at the Somerville Theatre",Boston Globe (May 1, 1923): 8. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  15. ^"Somerville Players",Boston Globe (February 6, 1923): 6. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  16. ^"Merry Comedy at the Castle Sq",Boston Globe (November 30, 1926): 17. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  17. ^"Smokes Will Go Right to Germany",New York Herald (November 25, 1918): 4. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  18. ^"Actress Visits Orphans",Philadelphia Inquirer (March 4, 1921): 8. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  19. ^"Screen Stars Figure in Hospital Mystery",Washington Times (January 16, 1922): 3. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon
  20. ^"Peggy Shanor's Forgettery",Broadway Brevities (December 1921): 28.
  21. ^Untitled brief news item,Boston Globe (June 2, 1923): 5. viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peggy_Shanor&oldid=1313453482"
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