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لینک دعوت:
Baby Mary Louise's parents owned a cleaning shop in Hollywood, down the street from FBO studios, later to become RKO. When they heard about a casting call for infants, they wheeled Mary Louise down to the studio in her carriage and she easily got her first role in the 1925 film "Drucilla with a Million." Other movie roles soon followed. Her next movie role was as the title baby in the 1925 Fred Thomson western, "The Bandit's Baby."
She came to national attention when newspapers dubbed Mary Louise "The Million Dollar Baby" after superstar Mary Pickford and her husband Douglas Fairbanks purportedly offered the Millers a large sum of money to adopt her. Tabloids put the figure at a million dollars, but Mr. and Mrs. Miller weren't interested at any price. The story came about during the filming of the 1926 film "Sparrows," the story about a millionaire's baby who is kidnapped and held for ransom at a baby farm in the swamps. Pickford portrayed the oldest orphan who acted as "mamma" to the other children. The strong attachment formed at this time between Miss Pickford and Mary Louise lasted throughout the years.
Mary Louise performed in two films with canine star Rin-Tin-Tin, "The Night Cry" in 1926, and "Jaws of Steel" in 1927. In "The Night Cry" there is a thrilling scene where a giant condor swoops down and carries Mary Louise away to its mountaintop. While a dummy was used for the aerial scene, it was she who clung on to the side of the nest while the condor stood guard.
"The Fire Brigade" (1927), staring Charles Ray and May McAvoy, was Mary Louise's last feature film. She complained to her parents about the smoke and the bright klieg lights on the set hurting her eyes. Also, talkies were beginning to replace the silents and the movie business was in transition. Despite her early retirement from films, Mary Louise continued to practice her craft. Throughout the 1930s, she studied voice, piano, drama, and dance. She did professional modeling, both as a child and a young adult. After graduating from Hollywood High School, she attended Los Angeles City College and studied drama, and performed on radio and stage.
During World War II, Mary Louise sang in Hollywood night clubs and entertained the troops on USO tours at local military bases. She continued modeling and her pin-up pictures graced many a GI's locker. Her last time in front of a motion picture camera was as an uncredited extra in the Errol Flynn film "Escape Me Never" (1947) for Warner Bros.
In 1950, she married Stephen Paziak and moved to Burbank. She had a daughter, Louise, and a son, Patrick. She continued performing locally in church and community theaters. In the 1980s she joined a group of senior citizens from the Joslyn Center in Burbank. Calling themselves the Joslyn Players, the group of retired thespians performed for senior citizen groups and at convalescent hospitals in the area.
Mary Louise Paziak developed Alzheimer's disease in the mid-eighties. She resided in a Studio City, Calif., nursing home until her death on September 7, 2003.