All Movies List
Queen Kelly

as Queen Regina V

1932
Officer Thirteen

as Trixi Du Bray

1932
The Marriage Playground

as Rose Sellers

1929
Faint Perfume

as Richmiel Crumb

1925
I Am the Man

as Julia Calvert

1924
For Woman's Favor

as June Paige

1924
Unseeing Eyes

as Miriam Helston

1923
Back Pay

as Hester Bevins

1922
Lavender and Old Lace

as Ruth Thorne

1921
Sooner or Later

as Edna Ellis

1920
Victory

as Alma

1919
The Fall of Babylon

as Attarea

1919
A Man And His Money

as Betty Dalrymple

1919
The Lamb

as Mary

1915
The Fox Woman

as The Fox Woman, Alice Carroway, a.k.a. Ali-San

1915
The Craven

as May Walton

1915
A Yankee from the West

as Gunhild, a Norwegian Girl

1915
Seena Owen Seena Owen

Birthday

1894-11-14

Place of Birth

Spokane, Washington, USA

Biography

From Wikipedia Seena Owen (November 14, 1894 – August 15, 1966) was a Danish-American silent film actress. Born Signe Auen at Spokane, Washington, the youngest of three children raised by Jens Christensen and Karen (née Sorensen) Auen. Her father and mother came from Denmark in the late 1880s and settled in Minnesota where they married in 1888. Within a short period of time they relocated to Portland and then Spokane, where her father became proprietor of the Columbia Pharmacy. Her first important film was A Yankee From the West (1915) under the name Signe Auen at the age of 21. She was later convinced to change her name and settled on Seena Owen, the phonetic spelling of her real name. In 1916 she performed in D. W. Griffith's Intolerance. The same year she married George Walsh whom she had met on the set of Intolerance. The marriage lasted until their divorce in 1924. A regular player for the rest of the silent era, Owen appeared in films such as Maurice Tourneur's Victory in 1919 where she was photographed to great effect by Tourneur's cameraman, Rene Guissart. In 1920, she appeared in "The Gift Supreme" with Lon Chaney, who appeared with her in Victory. She co-starred with Gloria Swanson and Walter Byron in the ill-fated Queen Kelly (1928), as the mad Queen who whips Swanson in one scene. With the arrival of sound in movies, Owen's weak voice became a problem and forced her to retire from the silver screen in 1933. After her retirement, she worked on a number of films in the 1930s/40s as a screenwriter including two starring Dorothy Lamour: Aloma of the South Seas and Rainbow Island, both in 1941. The former was written in part with her sister, Lillie Hayward, a successful Hollywood screenwriter, Seena Owen died on August 15, 1966 at Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital, aged 71, and was interred at Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
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