Anita Page

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Aug 04, 1910 (114 years old)
Death date
Sep 06, 2008

Anita Page

Known For

The Crawling Brain
Movie 2016

The Crawling Brain

Stefan learns that his invalid grandmother was the nurse/lover of Nazi doctor Franz Kindler and that she removed his brain when the Nazis were losing WW2. Unable to successfully perform a transplant on test subjects, she needs Stefan to carry on for her now that her health is failing.

Frankenstein Rising
1h 35m
Movie 2010

Frankenstein Rising

A modern day descendent of Frankenstein becomes obsessed with his ancestor's work and seeks to replicate them and create a living man from lifeless tissue.

Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star
1h 27m
Movie 2002

Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star

In this documentary on the life of Joan Crawford, we learn why she should be remembered as the great actress she was, and not only as "mommie dearest." caricature she has become. Friends, fellow actors, directors, and others reminisce about their association with her, and numerous film clips show off her talent from her start in silents to bad science fiction/horror movies at the end of her career.

Creaturealm: From the Dead
1h 22m
Movie 1998

Creaturealm: From the Dead

Two-part anthology featuring resurrected zombie actors and a young woman whose murderous dreams may become reality.

Sunset After Dark
1h 27m
Movie 1996

Sunset After Dark

A struggling screenwriter finds himself in the middle of a murder investigation.

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Anita Page (August 4, 1910 – September 6, 2008), born Anita Evelyn Pomares, was an American film actress who reached stardom in the last years of the silent film era. She became a highly popular young star, reportedly receiving the most fan mail of anyone on the MGM lot. Page was referred to as "a blond, blue-eyed Latin" and "the girl with the most beautiful face in Hollywood" in the 1920s. She retired from acting in 1936 at the age of 23. In a 2004 interview with author Scott Feinberg, Page claimed that her refusal to meet demands for sexual favors by MGM head of production Irving Thalberg, supported by studio chief Louis B. Mayer, is what truly ended her career. She said that Mayer colluded with the other studio bosses to ban her and other uncooperative actresses from finding work. Page returned to acting sixty years later in 1996, and appeared in four films in the 2000s. She died in September 2008 at the age of 98.

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