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Lucille Hutton
Lucille Hutton
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Lucille Hutton (1898–1979) was an American film actress of the silent era.[1] She appeared in 56 films between 1916 and 1931.

Key Information

Biography

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Hutton was born in Los Angeles, California, and attended Sacred Heart Academy there.[2] Before working in films, she performed on stage in Los Angeles with the Morosco Stock Company[2] and in vaudeville[1] on the Keith and Orpheum circuits.[2]

Hutton's first feature film was The Miracle Man (1919).[2] She appeared opposite Bobby Vernon in a series of comedy films.[3]

Hutton married Donald Carlos Jacobson in March 1929 in Honolulu. They were divorced on August 26, 1930,[4] and on August 27, 1930, she married George G. Buckingham. She filed for divorce from Buckingham on February 21, 1931.[5]

Selected filmography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Lucille Hutton (November 15, 1898 – November 7, 1979) was an American film actress of the silent era. She appeared in 56 films between 1916 and 1931, including shorts and features during the transition from short subjects to longer narrative films in early Hollywood. Born in Crawfordsville, Indiana, she was married to Donald Carlos Jacobson. Basic biographical details are available from film credits and historical databases, though in-depth information about her life remains limited.

Early life

Birth and education

Lucille Hutton was born on November 15, 1898, in Los Angeles, California. She attended Sacred Heart Academy in Los Angeles, California.

Stage career

Lucille Hutton began her performing career in vaudeville, where she appeared on the Orpheum and Keith circuits for three years. She subsequently became a member of the Morosco Stock Company in Los Angeles, performing in stock productions there for some time. Her experience on the stage in vaudeville and stock theater preceded her entry into motion pictures.

Film career

Early roles and silent era entry (1913–1920)

Lucille Hutton entered the film industry with her debut in the Biograph short A Timely Interception (1913), directed by D. W. Griffith, in the role of May, Uncle James's Daughter. After a period of inactivity in film credits, she returned in 1916 with multiple short comedies, appearing in nine titles that year including His Temper-Mental Mother-in-Law as Billie's wife and Where Is My Wife? as Lucille, the wife. That same year she also received a writing credit for the scenario of the short A Strange Confession. Her most prolific year came in 1917, when she appeared in twenty-two short films, often cast in comedic supporting or lead roles with distinctive character names such as Lovely Lucille in The Joy Riders, Miss Henpeck in Chicken Chased and Henpecked, and Springboard Sally in Faking Fakirs. These one- and two-reel comedies, produced primarily by studios like Nestor and Universal, established her as a reliable player in slapstick and situational humor during the height of the silent short subject era. Hutton made her transition to features with her first credited role in a longer film as Ruth Higgins in The Miracle Man (1919), a drama starring Lon Chaney and Thomas Meighan. She also appeared in several additional shorts that year, including The Last Outlaw as Idaleen Coburn. Between 1913 and 1920, her filmography totaled 36 actress credits, the vast majority of which were short subjects with only one feature appearance.

Feature films and mid-career (1921–1926)

Lucille Hutton's mid-career in the silent film era saw her shift focus to feature-length productions and secure a series of supporting and character roles across dramas, comedies, and period pieces. She frequently portrayed young women, flappers, or secondary figures in ensemble casts, contributing to a steady presence in Hollywood features during this time. Hutton is particularly noted for several performances in this period, including her role as Nell Martin in the societal drama Ladies Must Live (1921), directed by George Loane Tucker for Paramount Pictures. She played a flapper in John Ford's The Village Blacksmith (1922), Mamie Reisner in Desire (1923), and Patsy Thorne in The Winner (1926). She also appeared in East Side – West Side (1923) as Eunice Potter, The Buster (1923) as Yvonne, Wine of Youth (1924) as Anne, The Painted Lady (1924), The Sunset Trail (1924), and Dick Turpin (1925) as Sally. These roles exemplified her versatility in supporting capacities, with her work concentrated in feature films during this period.

Prolific short subjects and retirement (1927–1931)

Lucille Hutton returned to high-volume work in comedy short subjects from 1927 to 1931. These years saw her appear in 17 shorts in 1927 and 14 in 1928, nearly all in short films. She was frequently typecast in domestic or romantic supporting roles, often billed as "The Wife," a sweetheart, or simply "Lucille." Notable examples include her performance as The Wife in the 1928 comedy short Oh, Mama!, directed by Jules White, as well as multiple other 1928 titles where she played The Wife. After this activity in 1927 and 1928, Hutton's output declined. She appeared in only two shorts in 1929, followed by two more in 1931, one of which was The Sargie's Playmate, directed by Harry Edwards and co-starring Slim Summerville and Eddie Gribbon. This drop-off reflected broader industry trends in the transition from silent to sound films, where short comedies remained a staple but opportunities for certain performers diminished. Short subjects dominated Hutton's filmography overall, comprising approximately 84 of her 92 acting credits (with only 8 features). Following her appearances in 1931, she retired from acting with no further credits recorded.

Personal life

Marriages

Lucille Hutton married Donald Carlos Jacobson in March 1929 in Honolulu. The couple divorced in August 1930 in Reno, Nevada, after she filed on grounds of cruelty. Hutton subsequently married George G. Buckingham. She filed for divorce from Buckingham in February 1931, again in Reno, though specific grounds were not publicly detailed in contemporary reports. These marriages took place between 1929 and 1931, during the final years of her screen work.

Death

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