
Marion Byron
Acting · Born 1911-03-16 · age 74 at death · Dayton, Ohio, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Marion Byron (born Miriam Bilenkin; March 16, 1911, Dayton, Ohio – July 5, 1985, Santa Monica, California) was an American movie comedian. After following her sister into a short stage career as a singer/dancer, she was given her first movie role as Buster Keaton's leading lady in the film Steamboat Bill, Jr. in 1928. From there she was hired by Hal Roach to co-star in short subjects with Max Davidson, Edgar Kennedy, and Charley Chase, but most significantly with Anita Garvin, where tiny (4'11" in high heels) Marion was teamed with the 6' Anita for a brief three-film series as a "female Laurel & Hardy" in 1928–1929. She left Roach before they made talkies, but she went on working, now in musical features, like the Vitaphone film Broadway Babies (1929) with Alice White, and the early Technicolor feature, Golden Dawn (1930). Her parts slowly got smaller until they were unbilled walk-ons in films like Meet the Baron (1933), starring Jack Pearl and Hips Hips Hooray (1934) with Wheeler & Woolsey. Her final screen appearance was as a baby nurse to the Dionne Quintuplets in their film, Five of a Kind (1938).
Titles

Steamboat Bill, Jr.

Trouble in Paradise

Love Me Tonight

The Crime of the Century

So Long Letty

They Call It Sin

College Humor

A Pair of Tights

Working Girls

Playing Around

Only Yesterday
Going Ga-Ga

Broadway Babies

Feed 'em and Weep

The Boy Friend

Meet the Baron

The Show of Shows

The Matrimonial Bed

The Heart of New York

Golden Dawn

Gift of Gab

His Captive Woman

The Tenderfoot

Susie's Affairs

Swellhead

Girls Demand Excitement
Plastered in Paris
Running Hollywood

Song of the West

The Bad Man

The Forward Pass

It Happened One Day

Children of Dreams

Breed of the Border
The Hollywood Handicap
The Curse of a Broken Heart

The Unkissed Man