Margie Morris (24 July 1892 – 14 January 1983) was an English stage and silent film actress, revue artist, musician, dancer and singer who worked in the Netherlands during the 1910s and 1920s.
Adopting her stepfather's surname, she joined the company of Leon Boedels, director of the Flora Theatre in Amsterdam as a dancer.
Their act was created by chance when one evening the film director Willy Mullens misplaced a movie he had planned to screen to his guests and he invited Davids and Morris to perform and they were given the nickname by the audience.
One of the duo's more famous songs from this period is De Jantjes, which was the basis for a silent film in 1922, and a full motion picture in 1934.
[6] In 1919 after her brief film career ended Morris went on tour with Louis Davids to the Dutch East Indies.