• Home

    Movies

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Now Playing
  • Upcoming
  • Top Rated

    TV Shows

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Airing Today
  • On The Air
  • Top Rated

    People

  • Popular

    Trending

  • Movies
  • TV Shows

© 2025 Oktay Colakoglu — All rights reserved.

Built with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui. Powered by Vercel Vercel.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource codeSubmit a bug
    Pauline Garon
    An image from By Appointment Only, one of the productions that also features Pauline Garon.
    Pauline Garon

    Pauline Garon

    September 9, 1901 — Montreal, Quebec, Canada

    From Wikipedia

    Pauline Garon (September 9, 1900 – August 30, 1965) was a

    Canadian-born American silent film, feature film and stage actress.

    She was associated with D.W. Griffith when she first came to

    Hollywood in 1920. Garon's first important role came in 1921's The Power

    Within. She also played the body double for Sylvia Breamer in Doubling for

    Romeo (1921).

    In 1923, she was hailed as Cecil B. DeMille's big new

    discovery. He cast her in only two films. One was Adam's Rib (1923). She was

    selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1923. Even before her

    "discovery", Garon had been a steadily rising star. She appeared

    opposite Owen Moore in Reported Missing (1922). Garon received much praise for

    her role in Henry King's adaptation of Sonny (1922 film) (1922). She had been

    chosen for this role by King after he saw her portray the role in the stage

    production on Broadway.

    In 1922 she played with Richard Barthelmess in the First

    National Pictures release, Sonny. Her role as Florence Crosby brought her to

    the brink of stardom. However the ingénue professed no real desire to be a

    celebrity. Garon admitted that the thought of the responsibilities of being a

    star frightened her.

    Garon was making at least five films a year after her

    popularity soared. She was playing many lead roles in B movies and supporting

    roles in more glamorous films. The 1920s was a wonderful decade for the

    actress. She co-starred with Gloria Swanson and John Boles in The Love of Sunya

    which opened the lavish Roxy Theatre in New York City on March 11, 1927.

    By 1928 Garon's career began to decline dramatically. By the

    end, She appeared mostly in French renditions of Paramount Pictures movies. She

    was cast in less popular English films as well.

    By the early 1930s, Garon was given very small uncredited

    roles. By 1934 she had vanished from film. Garon played a bit part in How Green

    Was My Valley (1941). She was in two westerns, Song Of The Saddle (1936) and

    The Cowboy and the Blonde (1941).

    Garon married three times. She wed actor Lowell Sherman in

    February 1926. Sherman's influence led Garon to refuse a long-term contract

    with Paramount. In February 1928 Garon became a citizen of the United States.

    She separated from Sherman in August 1927. In February 1940 she eloped with

    radio star and actor, Clyde Harland John Alban, to Yuma, Arizona. Garon and

    Alban divorced in 1942. She wed comedian Ross Forester and remained with him

    until she died.

    Garon died at Patton State Hospital, a psychiatric

    institution in San Bernardino, California, in 1965. The cause of death was a

    brain disorder. She was 63 years old.

    The Love of Sunya

    The Love of Sunya

    1927

    The White Cockatoo

    The White Cockatoo

    1935

    By Appointment Only

    By Appointment Only

    1933

    Lost in the Stratosphere

    Lost in the Stratosphere

    1934

    The Phantom Broadcast

    The Phantom Broadcast

    1933

    The Thoroughbred

    The Thoroughbred

    1930

    One Year Later

    One Year Later

    1933

    The Average Woman

    The Average Woman

    1924