De Sacia Mooers

De Sacia Mooers (November 19, 1888 – January 11, 1960) was a film actress, disputably from Los Angeles, California.

At the time, it was common for the various studios to exaggerate or fabricate an actor's biography to make them seem more exotic and interesting to the general public.

Mooers made Lonesome Ladies (1927), a First National Pictures comedy-drama about romance and marital strife.

Mr. Mooers' family disapproved of her career from the time she left her home on Alvarado Terrace, barely out of her teens.

An agreement was made in which representatives of the wealthy husband's family accompanied him to Mooers' studio once a month.

The union between actress and mining scion became fractured and collapsed after the inquisitors decided Mooers had become less "lovely, charming, and conventional".

"[citation needed] Mooers signed as a witness on the contract that Rock made with "America's First Supermodel", Audrey Munson, that led to Munson's syndicated 1921 newspaper series and its spin-off movie "Heedless Moths" (1921) [2] Mooers later married actor Harry Lewis.

Mooers resided at the Canterbury Inn on Westlake Avenue in Los Angeles while she performed her investigation.

In 1960 De Sacia Mooers died following a six-week illness in Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center.

Mooers on poster for The Blonde Vampire (1922)
The Blonde Vampire 1922