Priscilla Bonner

American actress (1899–1996)
title: "Priscilla Bonner" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["actresses-from-washington,-d.c.", "american-film-actresses", "american-silent-film-actresses", "1899-births", "1996-deaths", "20th-century-american-actresses"] description: "American actress (1899–1996)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priscilla_Bonner" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary American actress (1899–1996) ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Priscilla Bonner |
| image | Silent film actress Priscilla Bonner (SAYRE 9485).jpg |
| caption | Bonner in 1923 |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| death_date | |
| other_names | Priscilla B. Woolfan |
| occupation | Actress |
| years_active | 1920–1929 |
| spouse | {{Plain list |
| * {{marriage | Dr. E. Bertrand Woolfan |
| :: |
| name = Priscilla Bonner | image = Silent film actress Priscilla Bonner (SAYRE 9485).jpg | caption = Bonner in 1923 | birth_name = | birth_date = | birth_place = Washington, D.C., U.S. | death_date = | death_place = | death_cause = | resting_place = | other_names = Priscilla B. Woolfan | occupation = Actress | years_active = 1920–1929 | spouse = {{Plain list|*
- }}
Priscilla Bonner (February 17, 1899 – February 21, 1996) was an American silent film actress who specialized in portraying virginal, innocent heroines.
Early years
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/31/Priscilla_Bonner_02.jpg" caption="Priscilla Bonner"] ::
Priscilla Bonner was born in Washington, D.C. on February 17, 1899. Her father, John S. Bonner, worked for Page Fence and served as an officer in Company B of the local National Guard Unit. At the start of World War I the company was activated for service, and her father started his career as an Army officer. The family often moved, and she spent much of her life in different places. She often play-acted to amuse herself, playing all the parts and shifting the sets. While her father was stationed in Chicago, assigned to the staff of General Leonard Wood, she received a call from someone connected with Chicago Photoplay, insisting she come to their studio for photographs. Although she realized it was likely a wrong number, Bonner went. Intrigued by her bold initiative and photogenic charisma, the studio took portraits of her and sent them to film studios in California.
Career
In 1916, when living in Adrian, Michigan, Bonner answered an open call to audition for the movie The Romance of Miss Adrian. Using her dance skills, she won a part in the picture.
In Los Angeles, she met Charles Ray, and appeared in the 1920 film Homer Comes Home, after being signed by MGM that year. She went on to co-star with Jack Pickford in The Man Who Had Everything (1920), Lon Chaney, Sr. in Shadows (1922), Colleen Moore in April Showers, and comedian Harry Langdon in The Strong Man. In 1925, she successfully sued Warner Bros. and won a substantial cash settlement when she was originally chosen and then dropped as the leading lady from John Barrymore's The Sea Beast in favor of Barrymore's new real life love interest Dolores Costello.
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4f/Priscilla_Bonner_01.JPG" caption="Priscilla Bonner, scene from ''Drusilla with a Million'' (1925)"] ::
That same year, she starred in the controversial independent film The Red Kimono produced and directed by Dorothy Davenport, the widow of Wallace Reid. In 1927, Bonner was loaned to Paramount Pictures to co-star in the box office hit It, starring Clara Bow.
Personal life
In 1921, she married writer and author Allen Wynes Alexander. A little over a year later, he left her. She filed for divorce but later dismissed the case.
In 1928, Bonner married Dr. E. Bertrand Woolfan. She retired from film the following year. The couple were popular hosts to the burgeoning Los Angeles literary and film community, and particularly befriended Preston Sturges, the writer and director. On February 21, 1996, Bonner died at the age of 97.
Her younger sister was actress and writer Margerie Bonner.
Filmography
::data[format=table]
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1920 | Homer Comes Home | Rachel Prouty | |
| Honest Hutch | Ellen | Preserved at MGM archives | |
| The Man Who Had Everything | Prue Winn | Copies are held at the George Eastman Museum and Library of Congress | |
| Officer 666 | Sadie | Lost film | |
| 1921 | The Son of Wallingford | Mary Curtis | Lost film |
| Bob Hampton of Placer | Schoolteacher | Lost film | |
| Home Stuff | Susan Deep | Lost film | |
| 1922 | Shadows | Mary Brent | |
| 1923 | Gallopin' Through | Lost film | |
| The Purple Dawn | Ruth Ketchell | Lost film | |
| Where's My Wandering Boy This Evening? | Lost film | ||
| Short film | |||
| Pitfalls of a Big City | Alternative title: The Pitfalls of a Great City | ||
| Lost film | |||
| April Showers | Shannon O'Rourke | Lost film | |
| 1924 | A Desperate Adventure | ||
| Hold Your Breath | The Sister | ||
| Tarnish | Aggie | Lost film | |
| Chalk Marks | Betty Towner | Lost film | |
| 1925 | Charley's Aunt | Kitty | |
| The Mansion of Aching Hearts | A City Girl | Lost film | |
| Proud Flesh | San Francisco Girl | ||
| The White Desert | Mrs. Foster | ||
| Drusilla with a Million | Sally May Ferris | ||
| Eyes of Hollywood | Lost film | ||
| The Red Kimono | Gabrielle Darley | ||
| 1926 | The Earth Woman | Sally | |
| 3 Bad Men | Millie Stanley | ||
| The Strong Man | Mary Brown | ||
| The False Alarm | Bessie Flannigan | Lost film | |
| 1927 | It | Molly | |
| Long Pants | His Bride (Priscilla) | ||
| Paying the Price | |||
| The Prince of Headwaiters | Faith Cable | Lost film | |
| Broadway After Midnight | Queenie Morgan/Gloria Livingston | Alternative title: Gangsters on Broadway | |
| Lost film | |||
| 1928 | Outcast Souls | Alice Davis | Lost film |
| Golden Shackles | Lucy Weston | ||
| 1929 | Girls Who Dare | Sally Casey | Lost film |
| :: |
References
;Notes
;Bibliography
References
- (2010). "Silent Players: A Biographical and Autobiographical Study of 100 Silent Film Actors and Actresses". University Press of Kentucky.
- (7 September 1920). "News Notes from Movie Land". The Rock Island Argus and Daily Union.
- (1 August 1920). "Washington Society Girl Proves Star of Films". The Washington Times.
- {{harvnb. Villecco. 2001
- (18 May 1921). "Priscella Bonner to Wed; Plans Aerial Honeymoon". Evening Public Ledger.
- (27 August 1922). "Pretty Priscella Bonner Appeals to Los Angeles Judge". The Washington Times.
- (2 September 1922). "Movie Actress Sues Manager". The Fairmont West Virginian.
- {{harvnb. Villecco. 2001
- (October 4, 1988). "Margerie Lowry, 83, Actress and a Writer". The New York Times.
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