Chrissie White

Nascimento : 1895-05-23, London, England, UK

Morte : 1989-08-18

História

From Wikipedia Chrissie White (23 May 1895 – 18 August 1989) was a British film actress of the silent era. She appeared in over 180 films between 1908 and 1933. White was married to actor and film director Henry Edwards, and in the 1920s the two were regarded as one of Britain's most famous and newsworthy celebrity couples. She starred in the 1920 film The Amazing Quest of Mr. Ernest Bliss, which as of August 2010 is missing from the BFI National Archive, and is listed as one of the British Film Institute's "75 Most Wanted" lost films.

Filmes

The Call of the Sea
Iris Tares
Lt. Cmdr. Good is a naval officer who goes on an extensive search for his long-lost friend who mysteriously disappeared on a tropical island.
The World of Wonderful Reality
Jill Dealtry
A poor author has an engaged girl pose as his wife to please his dying father.
Lily of the Alley
Lily
Bill and Lily are newly married. Bert works as a tea salesman and is of a naturally cheery disposition. Over time however, worries about the security of his job and income prey on his mind and he frets over not being able to provide for Lily. With his worries heightened by the fear that he is about to go blind, he falls into a deep depression .....
Aylwin
Winifred Wynne
A woman disapproves of her stepson's love for a girl who goes mad when her drunken father dies in a landslide.
The Kinsman
Pamela Blois
A Cockney poses as his drowned double, who is saved and poses as a chauffeur.
The City of Beautiful Nonsense
Jill Dealtry
A poor author feigns marriage to please his dying father.
Broken in the Wars
Mrs Bill
'Lady introduces wounded cobbler to Minister of Pensions, who makes him gift from King's Fund.' (British Film Catalogue)
The Poet's Windfall
The Girl
A poet struggles to get her work accepted.
The Secret
Covert operations on the home front find solutions to shortages just next door.
The Joke That Failed
The Exploits of Tubby
Señorita / Helen Smith / The Tramp
A ten-part series of comedies in which a man repeatedly gets into trouble with his wife.
Wife the Weaker Vessel
Phyllis
Chrissie White, one of Hepworth Studios' biggest stars, heads up this feisty battle-of-the-sexes comedy about an independent young lady who, for the sake of a rich husband, poses as the epitome of Victorian femininity - weak, docile and submissive. But when he steps out of line the gloves come off to reveal 'Physical Culture Phyllis', who punches well above her weight!
The Basilisk
A mesmerist, obsessed with putting a beautiful woman under his power, hypnotizes her to try to force her to kill her fiancé. His plans are altered with the appearance of a deadly serpent.
How Things Do Develop
The Fiancée
'Professor takes daughter's suitor's camera by mistake.' (British Film Catalogue)
Tilly in a Boarding House
Sally
Girls dress in boys' clothes and trick boarders.
Tilly and the Fire Engines
Sally
Tomboys drive a fire engine through a fairground and hose the firemen.
Tilly's Party
Sally
Two young men help two girls escape.
When Tilly's Uncle Flirted
Sally
Tomboys play tricks on their uncle when he flirts with a maid.
Are We Down-Hearted?
Cecil Hepworth’s Vivaphone film features Hay Plumb singing George Robins’ optimistic 1906 ditty concerning the mischievous responses of a poor family to regular visits from the bailiffs.
Tilly the Tomboy Visits the Poor
Sally
Funny how we think of the loutish behaviour of some of today's teens as a modern-day phenomenon. Here, in a short film more than one hundred years old, we see two tearaways terrorising a bed-ridden old lady, sabotaging a number of honest workmen as they go about their daily work, vandalising a bakery and taking a vehicle without consent - all in the space of six frenetic minutes.