- Ruth Hiatt
Ruth Hiatt (
January 6 ,1906 –April 21 ,1994 ) was an actress in motion pictures beginning in thesilent film era. She is especially remembered for performingin 1920s comedies directed by Jack White,Norman Taurog , andMack Sennett .Child actress
She was born in
Cripple Creek, Colorado . Hiatt made her film debut at the age of 9 with the Western Lubin Company inSan Diego, California . She made two two-reelcomedies, "The Inner Chamber" (1915) and "The Vigilantes" (1918). Afterward she reuturned to high school which shecompleted around 1922.Film comedian
As teenager she was "discovered" by comedian
Lloyd Hamilton . She became hisleading lady atUnited Artists studios in 1922. Hiattwas a former "classic" dancer who was Hamilton's successor toIrene Dalton . Their first work together is the short comedy "The Speeder"(1922). It is a production of the Hamilton Comedy Film Company.Hiatt played a street urchin in support of Hamilton in "Lonesome" (1924). In the role she wears high top shoes which were once worn by
United States Senator Harry Lane ofOregon . Lane discarded them at the home of his cousin, cartoonist Pinto Colvig. The shoes were brought in by Colvig to add humour when Hiatt put them on.In "Smith's Baby" (1925) Hiatt, "Mrs. Jimmy Smith", is the female lead with Raymond McKee as "Jimmy Smith". Sennett cast Hiatt and McKee with child star
Mary Ann Jackson in 1927. The short comedies continued the "Jimmy Smith" series with titles like "Smith's Pony" (1927), "Smith's Cook" (1927), "Smith's Cousin" (1927), and "Smith's Modiste Shop" (1927). The movies were produced byPathe Pictures . Jackson and McKee teamed with Hiatt andHoot Gibson in "TheFlying Cowboy" (1928).Hiatt appeared in the second chapter of the
Ken Maynard "Sunset Trail" (1932) serial entitled "Battling WithBuffalo Bill ". Maynard's horse, "Tarzan", was in this story of the open range before the army and law enforcement established themselves in western cattle towns.Comedies were sometimes dangerous to make. Actor Lee Moran was forced to "choke" Hiatt into unconsciousness in order to save herlife while they were filming a sequence in which an automobile is wrecked between two trains. Hiatt raised her head at the wrong moment when both actors were supposed to lie flat and let trains pass over them. Moran held Hiatt's feet down with his legs but shecontinued to wriggle. Once the trains passed he shook her. On camera she appears to be laughing and talking, thoughshe is unconscious. She was taken hastily to a hospital when the sequence was completed.
Hiatt's film career endured through 1941. Some of her later motion pictures are "Men In Black" (1934), "Beginner's Luck" (1935), "Just Speeding" (1936), and "Double Trouble" (1941).
Model (person) In August 1922 Hiatt modeled for Beckman Furs of West 7th Streetin
Los Angeles, California . She won first prize for beauty at the annualVenice Beach bathing beauties parade in August 1923. She wore a costume of black and white checkered silk, with hat and slippers that matched. The Western Association of MotionPicture Advertisers (WAMPAS) selected Hiatt among its thirteen "baby star" actresses for 1924. Blanche Mahaffey,Carmelita Geraghty , andClara Bow were also chosen. Hiatt was blonde but one reporter covering the WAMPAS banquet inSan Francisco ,in December 1923, wrote that she was brunette.Private life
Hiatt had a toy poodle known professionally as "Georgette". She maintained a
Hollywood diet of lamb chops and pineapple together with strenuous daily exercise. Her favorite hobby was reading. She especially enjoyed reading short funny stories basedon personal experiences. Hiatt's personality was vivacious, yet "modest, almost to the point of being shy."Ruth Hiatt died in
Montrose, California in 1994 ofcongestive heart failure .References
*cite news|publisher=Cedar Rapids Tribune |title=Ruth Is A Permanent Wife-In The Movies |date=May 20, 1927 |page=2
*cite news|publisher=Fresno Bee |title=How They Suffer for Their Art |date=September 5, 1926 |page=36
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Lloyd Hamilton Busy |date=July 2, 1922 |page=III17
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Miss Ruth Hiatt |date=August 12, 1922 |page=VIII4
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=New Leading Woman |date=August 13, 1922 |page=III30
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Girls Reveal Well--What? |date=August 20, 1923 |page=II1
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Bevy of Baby Stars of Filmland |date=December 17, 1923 |page=II1
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Actress Dons Vacated Shoes of Statesman |date=March 30, 1924 |page=31
*cite news|publisher=Los Angeles Times |title=Mack Sennett's Trio |date=July 2, 1925 |page=A9
*cite news|publisher=Oakland Tribune |title=Child Actress Grows Up To Film Success |date=December 3, 1922
*cite news|publisher=Sheboygan Press |title=Ken Maynard And Thrilling Serial Chapter At Majestic |date=February 6, 1932 |page=13
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