Jacqueline Medura Logan (November 30, 1902[1][2] – April 4, 1983) was an American actress and silent film star.
Together with the Ziegfeld venture, Logan modeled as a Dobbs Girl in Alfred Cheney Johnston photographs.
Working for Associated Producers, Logan was featured opposite Jane Peters, the future Carole Lombard in the film A Perfect Crime (1921).
Other features she starred in during the early 1920s include Burning Sands (1922), A Blind Bargain (1922), Sixty Cents an Hour (1923), Java Head (1923), and A Man Must Live (1924).
Among her co-stars were Thomas Meighan, Milton Sills, Ricardo Cortez, Leatrice Joy, Richard Dix, Lon Chaney Sr., and William Powell.
"[8] In 1926, Logan made Footloose Widows with Louise Fazenda and The Blood Ship in 1927 with Richard Arlen.
When talking pictures began, Logan's voice was recorded to accompany her acting part in the original silent film.
Columbia Pictures production chief Harry Cohn was complimentary of her work but unwilling to sign a female director.
Upon learning she could face a bigamy charge if she returned to the United States, the couple lived separately until the interlocutory decree expired.
Logan's divorce from Gillespie became final in March 1928, and she married Winston in June of that year.
She spent her winters in Florida where she visited friends such as Lila Lee and Dorothy Dalton, both former actresses.
The remainder of the year she resided in Bedford Hills, New York with her prize Great Dane from the Lina Basquette Kennels.