Marguerite Snow

Snow attended Loretta Heights Academy and acted in local summer stock plays.

Her first engagement was with James O'Neill in a revival of The Count of Monte Cristo,[2] at the Crawford Theatre in Wichita, Kansas, on February 11, 1907.

Some of her later feature pictures are Baseball and Bloomers (1911), A Niagara Honeymoon (1912), The Caged Bird (1913), The Silent Voice (1915), A Corner in Cotton (1916), Broadway Jones (1917), The Veiled Woman (1922), and Kit Carson Over The Great Divide (1925).

In 1933 Snow's daughter, Julie Jane Cruze, was given nine pieces of property by her father at a time when he feared he might die of a heart ailment.

Julie Jane shared some of the $150,000 in income derived from the bequest with her mother, who was destitute and was living in a trailer.

The daughter filed a cross complaint in October 1938 to block a suit by James Cruze to quiet title to the property and return it to him.

Julie Jane stated that her father originally gave her the property to avoid losing it to creditors.

Complications occurred, and she died, aged 68, at the Motion Picture Country Home on February 17, 1958, in Los Angeles, California.