Georgia Hale(1900-1985)
- Actress
- Additional Crew
Georgia Theodora Hale was born on June 27, 1900 in St. Joseph, Missouri. Her parents were George Washington Hale and Laura Imbrie, and her two older sisters were Eugenia and Helen. Soon, her family moved to Illinois. In 1922, she won a beauty contest in Chicago and despite strong disapproval from her father, she used the award money to go to New York City to break into theater. Unsuccessful, she left New York for Hollywood. She immediately found work as a bit player in By Divine Right (1924), and she danced in the chorus of Vanity's Price (1924). Josef von Sternberg was an assistant director on both of these films, and he gave Georgia her first break came when
he cast her for the film that he directed titled The Salvation Hunters (1925). It was from this picture that
Charles Chaplin hired her to play the Georgia, the dance-hall girl who
wins Charlie's heart, in The Gold Rush (1925). With a very successful film, Georgia
became an instant celebrity and was signed by Paramount Pictures. Her
big film with Paramount was The Great Gatsby (1926) where she played the role of Myrtle
Wilson. But her career never went anywhere and her last silent picture would
be the film The Last Moment (1928). Deemed unsuitable for talkies, she was one
of the first to be released in 1931. She found solace in Christian Science. She never married and remained loyal to Chaplin, who had her on his payroll on-and-off until 1953. She ran a dance school for a while. She also wrote her two versions of her autobiography in the 1960s but couldn't find a publisher at the time. She eventually went into real estate that made her wealthy and also found a companion, who had no idea of her film career, until she gave an interview about Charlie Chaplin in the PBS documentary Unknown Chaplin (1983). He received most of her estate when she died at the age of 85 on June 17, 1985. Her second version of her autobiography, which was more detailed than her first, that she had written in the 1960s, would finally be published ten years after her death in 1995, and it's title is "Charlie Chaplin: Intimate Closeups".