Reina Valdez

Reina Valdez (sometimes credited as Rena Valdez; born December 1890) was a silent film actress active in Hollywood in the 1910s.[1]

Reina Valdez
BornDecember 1890
Springfield, Massachusetts, US
OccupationActress

Biography

Although some publicity reports claimed she was born in and raised in Mexico, she was a native of Springfield, Massachusetts, where she grew up before she moved to New York City to pursue an interest in acting.[2][3][4] After a few appearances on Broadway, eventually she found herself in Los Angeles, where she worked for a number of film companies over the course of her short career, including the Santa Barbara Motion Picture Company, the New York Motion Picture Company, and Essanay.[5][6][7] Little is known about her life before or after her film career. It is likely that "Reina Valdez" was her stage name.

Selected filmography

  • Mismated (1916)
  • Good Out of Evil (1915)
  • A Brother's Redemption (1915)
  • The Woman He Married (1915)
  • The Keeper of the Flock (1915)
  • Beating Father to It (1915)
  • The Call of the Sea (1915)
  • The Boob's Racing Career (1915)
  • Dan Cupid: Assayer (1914)
  • The Atonement (1914)
  • Single Handed (1914)
  • The Conquest of Man (1914)
  • The Arm of Vengeance (1914)
  • Italian Love (1914)
  • The Weaker's Strength (1914)
  • A Gambler's Way (1914)
  • A Night on the Road (1914)
  • Through Trackless Sands (1914)
  • The Trail of the Snake Band (1913)
  • The Weaker Mind (1913)

References

  1. "Reina Valdez Attains Ambition". The Moving Picture World. XXIV. April 1915.
  2. Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual, 1919.
  3. "Today's Best Photo Play Stories". Chicago Tribune. 2 Apr 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  4. "New England, the Merry Widow, and a Spanish Beauty". Photoplay. December 1914.
  5. "In Movie Land". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. 11 Nov 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  6. "Perils of Photoplaying". The Wilmington Morning Star. 18 Jan 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  7. "Gossip of the Film World". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 19 Nov 1914. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
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