

Lenore Ulric
ActorFrom Wikipedia Lenore Ulric (July 21, 1892 – December 30, 1970) was a star of the Broadway stage and Hollywood films of the silent-film and early sound era. Her father, Franz Xavier Ulrich, was a United States Army hospital steward. He reportedly named his daughter Lenore due to his fondness for the Edgar Allan Poe poem, "The Raven". She later dropped the "h" from her surname, using the name Lenore Ulric as her acting name. She worked briefly as a film actress for Essanay Studios and joined another stock company in Schenectady, New York. She found work in The First Man (1911), A Polished Burglar (1911), Kilmeny (1915), and The Better Woman (1915). In 1915 she went to work for Pallas Pictures starring in several pictures that survive today at the Library of Congress. Lenore came to Hollywood in 1929 and appeared in Frozen Justice and South Sea Rose. She signed with Fox Film Corporation to make several films with an approximate salary of $650,000. Frozen Justice was directed by Allan Dwan. Some of the scenes were filmed in Alaska. She was successful in a supporting role in Camille, which starred Greta Garbo. Ulric returned to Broadway in 1940, acting in The Fifth Column by Ernest Hemingway and again in 1947, in a revival of Antony and Cleopatra.
More details at TMDB
KNOWN FOR
FILMOGRAPHY
ACTOR12

Northwest Outpost
1947
Baroness Kruposny

Temptation
1946
Marie

Two Smart People
1946
Maria Ynez

Notorious
1946
Horsewoman with Sebastian (uncredited)

Camille
1936
Olympe

Frozen Justice
1929
Talu

South Sea Rose
1929
Rosalie Dumay

Tiger Rose
1923
Rose Bocion - Tiger Rose

The Heart of Paula
1916
Paula Figueroa (as Lenore Ulrich)

The Intrigue
1916
Countess Sonia Varnli

The Road to Love
1916
Hafsa

Kilmeny
1915
Doris Calhoun - aka Kilmeny





