 (born June 28, 1897 in Brooklyn, New
York; died July 3, 1987 in Woodland Hills, California)
Dana was a child star, appearing on the stage at the age of three.
She read Shakespeare and particularly identified with the teenage
Juliet. She enjoyed a long run at the Hudson Theater in New York
City. A particular favorite of audiences was her performance in
David Belasco's Poor Little Rich Girl, when she was 16. She went
into vaudeville with Dustin Farnum in The Little Rebel and played a
bit part in The Model by Augustus Thomas.
Born Virginia Flugrath, Dana entered films in 1910 by the time she
made her final film appearance in 1929, she had appeared in almost
100 films. Her first motion picture was made for the Edison Company
at a former Manhattan (New York) riding academy on West 61st Street.
The stalls had been transformed to dressing rooms. Dana became a
star with Biograph Studios.
Unable to make a successful transition to 'talkies', she retired in
1929. Her final screen credits are roles in Two Sisters (1929), One
Splendid Hour (1929), and The Show of Shows (1929). |