Anita Page

Her paternal grandmother Anna Muñoz was Venezuelan, of Castilian Spanish and French descent.

A photo of Page was spotted by a man who handled Bronson's fan mail who was also interested in representing actors.

With the encouragement of her mother, Page telephoned the man who arranged a meeting for her with a casting director at Paramount Studios.

"[12] Page's first film for MGM was the 1928 comedy-drama Telling the World, opposite William Haines.

"[13] When not working on films, she was busy with studio photographer George Hurrell creating publicity shots.

[2] She was the leading lady to Lon Chaney, Buster Keaton, Robert Montgomery, Clark Gable and others.

[4] Later, Page claimed that Irving Thalberg had offered her the starring role in three movies if she would sleep with him, which she refused.

[18][19] Page came back to acting and portrayed a nun in The Runaway, completed in 1961, but she cut short her comeback.

[4] Page was the last living attendee of the first Academy Awards ceremony in 1929,[20] and frequently gave interviews as the "last star of the silents", appearing in documentaries about the era.

Page died in her sleep at the age of 98 on September 6, 2008, at her home in Los Angeles,[4] where she had lived with long-time companion Randal Malone.

[22] Page said she dated Ramon Novarro, her co-star in the 1929 silent film The Flying Fleet, and he asked her to marry him but she turned him down.

Page featured in the Argentine magazine Cinelandia , January 1929