Malvina Virginia Longfellow (March 30, 1889 – November 2, 1962) was an American stage and silent movie actress of the early 20th century.
Written by Cora Maynard, the presentation featured the actors Cathrine Countiss, Percy Haswell, Thurlow Bergen, and John Emerson.
[4] In January 1910 the theatrical drama of spiritism played the Shubert Theater on 41st Street between Broadway (Manhattan) and 6th Avenue.
Her many film appearances include parts in Adam Bede (1918), The Romance of Lady Hamilton (1919), Calvary (1920), Moth and Rust (1921), Possession (1922), The Wandering Jew (1923), The Indian Love Lyrics (1923), and The Celestial City (1929).
The coroner's jury found Reggie de Veulle guilty of supplying British actress Billie Carleton with cocaine.
[8] In 1911, Longfellow won a prize 10,000 Francs offered by Le Matin of Paris for "the most beautiful girl on earth".
During the night the machinery turns off the power, but the skin is called upon for ventilation to throw off waste and absorb fresh materials.
[10] In 1921 and 1922 Longfellow lent her name to a preparation called Phosferine: "Miss Malvina Longfellow writes - The travelling, concentration, and intensity, of characterisation demanded by Film, Drama and Comedy, are a very severe tax upon one’s stock of nervous vitality, and in my own case, I find Phosferine enables me to recover nerve force and energy in a very short time.
It is accurate to say Phosferine is a reliable safeguard against that jaded appearance and condition which follows prolonged professional exertions..."[11] Longfellow's mother, Julia Langfelder died in 1938.