First Name
Virginia Brown
Last Name
Faire
Date of Birth
26 June 1904
Height
63
Star Sign
Cancer
Date of Death
30 June 1980
Claim to Fame
Tinkerbell in Peter Pan (1924), WAMPAS Baby Star of 1923
Gender
Female
Build
Slim
Place of Birth
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Place of Death
Laguna Beach, California, USA
Nationality
American
Ethnicity
White
Hair Color
Black
Couple Profile
Virginia Brown Faire (June 26, 1904 – June 30, 1980) was an American silent-film actress, appearing in mainly dramatic films and westerns.
Born Virginia Labuna in Brooklyn, New York, she was brought to Hollywood in 1919 after being the winner of the Motion Picture Classic magazine`s "Fame and Fortune" contest.
She was educated in the public, elementary and high schools of Brooklyn. It was not long after her fifteenth birthday that she presented herself at the Metro studio where she was almost immediately put on. Shortly after she appeared in pictures for Fox, she was with Universal. Miss Faire loved dogs and went in for motoring, dancing, skating, swimming, horseback riding and in fact every sport that came along. She was five feet three inches high, weighs a hundred and seven pounds and had black hair.
Between 1920 and 1935, the actress appeared in some 75 films. Her first film credit was the 1920 film Runnin` Straight, a Hoot Gibson short western at Universal. Faire was the leading lady of John Gilbert in Monte Cristo (1922). She was selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1923 and appeared with Wallace and Noah Beery in Stormswept that same year. She is most remembered for her role as Tinker Bell in the 1924 film Peter Pan. In 1926 she had a small role in the Greta Garbo film The Temptress. Faire also appeared in westerns with Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones, John Wayne, and Ken Maynard.
She made it through the transition of sound, making a successful talkie in Frank Capra`s The Donovan Affair (1929), but was soon appearing in more low-budget films.
Faire left Hollywood for Chicago, Illinois in the late 1930s. She worked in radio and several films for industries prior to retiring to the west coast.
She was married at least twice in her lifetime. She was first married to actor Jack Daugherty, and later to producer Howard Weine. Faire wed Dougherty on February 7, 1927. Citing incompatibility, the couple separated in April 1928. Following her separation from Dougherty she resided with her mother at her Beverly Hills, California home.
Virginia Browne Faire died in 1980 in Laguna Beach, California, aged 76.
Full Name at Birth
Virginia Labuna
Wikipedia Text
Virginia Brown Faire (June 26, 1904 – June 30, 1980) was an American silent-film actress, appearing in mainly dramatic films and westerns.
Age
76
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