Barbara La Marr(1896-1926)
- Actress
- Writer
Barbara La Marr was born in Yakima, Washington, on July 28, 1896, as
Reatha Watson. Her childhood was mostly uneventful, mainly because
Yakima--today a medium-sized city with a population of over 50,
000-wasn't exactly a beehive of activity. Her parents eventually moved
to the Los Angeles area, where she began to explore the show business
lifestyle in whatever form she could. Barbara loved the L.A. way of
living and was forced to grow up fast. She was still Reatha at the
time, but her arrest for dancing in burlesque while still a teen caused
her to change her name to Barbara La Marr to avoid being associated
with her past. Her passion was dancing and writing, but the
powers-that-be in the movie industry thought she was meant for other
things--her dazzling beauty captured the imagination of all who came
across her path. Moving to New York, she was ultimately lured into the
film world, her first picture being Harriet and the Piper (1920). She was still going by her
married name of Barbara Deely (already working to shed her fourth
husband) and was being dubbed "The Girl Who Is Too Beautiful." The
next year she appeared in The Three Musketeers (1921) and Desperate Trails (1921). That same year, her role as Claudine Dupree in The Nut (1921)
sent Barbara into super-stardom. Hordes of fans flocked to theaters to
see this beautiful actress in movies such as Arabian Love (1922), Trifling Women (1922), Domestic Relations (1922)
and The Prisoner of Zenda (1922) whose beauty kept them enthralled. In 1923, she kept up her
frenzied filming pace with such pictures as Poor Men's Wives (1923), The Brass Bottle (1923) and
Souls for Sale (1923). The public adored her, as evidenced by the volumes of fan mail
she received, but Barbara was more interested in the late-night
partying she was involved with. The combination of alcohol and drugs
was, clearly, beginning to wear her down. She made four films in 1924
and three in 1925. Her last picture was The Girl from Montmartre (1926). On February 2, 1926,
Barbara died of tuberculosis in Altadena, California. Her demise was,
no doubt, brought about by her constant late-night partying. She had
lived a lifetime and had made 30 films, but was only 29 when she
died.