Anita Stewart

Anita Stewart (born Anna Marie Stewart; February 7, 1895 – May 4, 1961) was an American actress and film producer of the early silent film era.[1]

Anita Stewart
Stewart c. 1920
Born
Anna Marie Stewart

(1895-02-07)February 7, 1895
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
DiedMay 4, 1961(1961-05-04) (aged 66)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale
Occupation(s)Actress, film producer
Years active1911–1932
Spouses
Rudolph Cameron
(m. 1917; div. 1928)
    George Peabody Converse
    (m. 1929; died 1946)
    RelativesLucille Lee (sister)

    Early years

    Anita Stewart was born in Brooklyn, New York as Anna Marie Stewart on February 7, 1895, the middle child of three to parents William and Martha Stewart. Her elder sister Lucille Lee, and younger brother George also acted in films.[2][3][4]

    Vitagraph Studios

    Stewart began her acting career in 1911 at the age of 16 while still attending Erasmus Hall High School[5][6] Stewart’s brother-in-law, director Ralph Ince at Vitagraph film studios, married to Lucille Lee, arranged for the teen-aged Stuart to appear as a juvenile extra at their New York City studio location.[3]

    Stewart was one of the earliest film actresses to achieve public recognition in the nascent medium of motion pictures and achieved a great deal of acclaim early in her acting career. Within a year of joining Vitagraph, Stewart was playing lead roles, notably as the child-like Olympia in The Wood Violet (1912).[7]

    When Vitagraph publicity personnel accidentally published Stewart’s name as “Anita Stewart” rather the hitherto “Anna M. Stewart”, and she adopted it as her professional name.[3][7] By 1914, with the release of the melodramatic romance A Million Bid (1914), in which she played the long-suffering Agnes Belgradin, Stewart was elevated to a veritable screen icon.[7] Film historian Hugh Neely describes the phenomenon:

    “Soon, Stewart was being promoted as “America’s daintiest actress,” and her image was featured on sheet music, souvenir plates, silver spoons, and a collection of paper dolls published in Ladies’ World Magazine. In 1915, Munsey's Magazine noted that, though she had appeared in but two features and a serial and had never appeared on the theatrical stage, “her face is perhaps familiar to as wide a circle as Maude Adams’s”.[7]

    Stewart’s success at Vitagraph proceeded unabated through 1915, where she was gratified with working with director and brother-in-law Ralph Ince.[7] Vitagraph began assigning Stewart vehicles to directors other than Ince in 1916. The screen star objected, questioning the professionalism of one director, Wilfred North. Stewart walked off the set, reporting that she needed to convalesce after suffering injuries in an automobile accident—effectively canceling the production.[7] This legal contretemps signaled the end of Stewart’s six-year tenure at Vitagraph and her recruitment as a business associate and co-producer with aspiring movie mogul Louis B. Mayer in 1917.[7]

    Anita Stewart Productions: 1918-1922

    Motion Picture Magazine, April 1919. Anita Stewart: "America's daintiest actress" and "a slender screen fairy." Publicity portrait.[8][7]

    In 1917, Louis B. Mayer, then a successful New England movie exhibitor, wished to engage in producing independent films under the aegis of First National Exhibitors Circuit.[7] As a prerequisite, he needed to bring a high-profile screen personality into the enterprise to attract investors.[7] Mayer approached Stewart, who was still under contract to Vitagraph, and proposed they establish “Anita Stewart Productions.”[7]

    Anxious to move to Hollywood, and promised opportunities to acquire quality directors and film roles, she contractually formed Anita Stewart Productions with Mayer in 1917.[7] Steward’s husband and former co-star Rudolph Cameron, who she had married secretly in 1917, was enlisted as her business manager.[7]

    Vitagraph moved quickly to open litigation against Stewart for breach of contract, claiming that she was under obligation to the studio until 31 January 1918. Stewart’s claims of illness or disability were rejected by the court, and she was made liable for all the days absent from the set. The settlement included $70,000 compensation to Vitagraph and a loss of revenue from her films.[7] The decision is still cited today in actor-studio legal disputes.[3]

    Despite this initial setback, Anita Stewart Productions proceeded to make Virtuous Wives (1918). This was the first of the seventeen feature films that her production outfit completed between 1918 and 1922.[7] After this successful production, Stewart and Mayer moved to Hollywood in 1919, operating at the facilities of the Selig Polyscope Company.[7]

    As actress-producer, Stewart enlisted filmmaker Lois Weber as a writer-director. At the time, Weber enjoyed her own studio provided by Universal Pictures, where she “controlled every aspect of production” creating films that advanced her “conservative moral universe.” [9] The Stewart-Weber collaboration produced the “unapologetically commercial” A Midnight Romance (1919), an adaption of a Marion Orth mystery-romance and Mary Regan (1919), another romance.[7] An accomplished pianist and composer, Stewart wrote the music and lyrics for both films.[7]

    Stewart and Mayer obtained the services of some of Hollywood’s most talented directors of that era. Marshall Neilan, who had directed and starred opposite Mary Pickford in several productions,[10] made two pictures with Stewart: In Old Kentucky and Her Kingdom of Dreams (1919). Neilan's own recent attempt at independent filmmaking had failed.[11] Among her other directors at Anita Stewart Productions were Edward José (The Fighting Shepherdess) (1920), Edwin Carewe (Playthings of Destiny) (1921) and John Stahl (Sowing the Wind) (1921).[7]

    Although the extent of Stewart’s oversight as co-producer at Anita Stewart Productions is not clearly documented, historian Hugh Neely surmises that, as she was “consistently present on the set of her films, it seems logical to conclude that Stewart was in position to make the daily production decisions that might be required of her, as well as other creative decisions.”[7]

    Stewart’s increasing disaffection in her role as co-producer arose over Mayer’s veto power over subject matter and the treatment of scenarios. Stewart championed adapting films that presented socially significant topics, including realistic literary treatments of prostitution (e.g. Theodore Dreiser’s sexually provocative Sister Carrie). Mayer’s “moralistic” outlook allowed only for features that would be suitable for family entertainment: “The sort of mature stories that appealed to Anita Stewart were out of the question.”[7] Stewart declined to renew her contract with Mayer in 1922 to resume a career in acting.[7]

    Shortly after closing Anita Stewart Productions, Stewart received news that her younger brother, actor George Stewart, suffered brain damage in a physical assault by their brother-in-law, director Ralph Ince. Ince was indicted for the assault. Invalided, Stewart would ultimately assume responsibility for George’s care.[7][12]

    Final years in Hollywood: 1923-1928

    Stewart returned to acting at William Randolph Hearst’s Cosmopolitan Productions in 1923, where she starred in Frank J. Marion’s The Love Pilot (1923).[7] She completed two more Cosmopolitan pictures: The Great White Way (1924), directed by E. Mason Hopper, and Never the Twain Shall Meet (1925), directed by Maurice Tourneur. Stewart regarded the latter, in which she plays Tamea, her personal favorite, now a lost film. [7] After leaving Cosmopolitan, Stewart began accepting roles offered by Poverty Row studios in order to stay employed. [7]

    The final film of her career was Romance of a Rogue (1928), in which she played opposite H. B. Warner and directed by King Baggot.[7][3]

    Retirement and death

    Stewart divorced Rudolph Cameron shortly after retiring from film, and married George Converse, an heir of a United States Steel president and they settled in Beverly Hills, California. Stewart made a number of appearances on film and radio and in 1932 made a brief appearance in The Hollywood Handicap. Stewart and Converse divorced in 1946.[7][13]

    On May 4, 1961, Stewart died of a heart attack in Beverly Hills, California.[1]

    Writing

    Stewart authored the murder mystery novel The Devil's Toy, published in New York in 1935 by E.P. Dutton. Though the book's dust jacket traded on the author's Hollywood connection, the plot concerned the killing of a stage actor and was set in San Francisco.[14]

    Recognition

    For her contribution to motion picture industry as an actress, Anita Stewart was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6724 Hollywood Boulevard.[15]

    Selected filmography

    The Combat (1916)
    Year Title Role Notes
    1911 Prejudice of Pierre Marie Credited as Anna Stewart
    Lost film
    1912 Her Choice May – The Vain Niece
    Billy's Pipe Dream Pert Dawson Lost film
    1913 The Swan Girl The Swan Girl Lost film
    1914 The Girl from Prosperity Bessie Williams Lost film
    A Million Bid Agnes Belgradin Lost film
    1915 The Awakening Jo Lost film
    The Juggernaut Viola Rushin/Louise Hardin Incomplete film
    Two of five reels survive
    1916 My Lady's Slipper Countess Gabrielle de Villars Lost film
    The Suspect Sophie Karrenina Lost film
    The Daring of Diana Diana Lost film
    The Combat Muriel Fleming Lost film
    1917 The Glory of Yolanda Yolanda Lost film
    The Girl Philippa Philippa Lost film
    The Message of the Mouse Wynn Winthrop
    Clover's Rebellion Clover Dean Lost film
    1918 Virtuous Wives Amy Forrester Lost film
    1919 The Painted World Yvette Murree Lost film
    Human Desire Bernice
    The Mind the Paint Girl Lily Upjohn/Lily Parradell Lost film
    In Old Kentucky Madge Brierly
    1920 The Fighting Shepherdess Kate Prentice Alternative title: Vindication
    Producer
    1921 Playthings of Destiny Julie Arnold Producer
    1922 Rose o' the Sea Rose Elton Producer
    Lost film
    1923 The Love Piker Hope Warner Lost film
    Mary of the Movies herself Incomplete film
    1924 The Great White Way Mabel Vandegrift Lost film
    1925 Never the Twain Shall Meet Tamea Lost film
    The Boomerang Virginia Zelva
    Go Straight Self Lost film
    1926 The Prince of Pilsen Nellie Wagner Lost film
    The Lodge in the Wilderness Virginia Coulson
    1927 Wild Geese Lind Archer Lost film
    1928 Sisters of Eve Beatrice Franklin Lost film
    Romance of a Rogue Charmain
    Name the Woman Florence

    Notes

      Footnotes

      1. "Anita Stewart, Silent-Film Star. Actress, 65, Dies on Coast. Won Fame in 'Goddess'". The New York Times. May 5, 1961. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
      2. Bodeen, 1976, p. 119
      3. Slide, 1970 p. 42.
      4. Neely, Hugh. "Profile: Anita Stewart". Women Film Pioneers Project at Columbia University. Archived from the original on July 30, 2017. Retrieved July 30, 2017.
      5. Slide, 1970 p. 42: Stewart “started with Vitagraph as a bit player in 1911.”
      6. Eyman, Scott (2008). Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781439107911. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
      7. Neely, 2013.
      8. Koszarski, 1976 p. 99
      9. Koszarski, 1976 p. 49.
      10. Robinson, 1970 p. 109.
      11. Robinson, 1970 p. 109-110.
      12. Bodeen, 1976, p. 126
      13. "Anita Stewart Weds George P. Converse. Marriage of Film Actress and New York Banker Recorded in Sound and on Film". The New York Times. July 25, 1929. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
      14. www.bibliopolis.com. "The Devil's Toy by Anita STEWART on Yesterday's Gallery and Babylon Revisited Rare Books". Yesterday's Gallery and Babylon Revisited Rare Books.
      15. "Anita Stewart". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Archived from the original on July 30, 2017. Retrieved July 30, 2017.

      Sources

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