Wanda Hawley Movies
A discovery, it was claimed at the time, of
Cecil B. De Mille, typical flapper
Wanda Hawley loved diamonds more than stolid
Wallace Reid in
The Affairs of Anatol (1921), the best of the three films she made for the flamboyant director. Actually,
Hawley had begun her screen career years before meeting
De Mille, and had appeared under the moniker of
Wanda Petit opposite both
Tom Mix and
William S. Hart. From Scranton, PA, the future screen star had entered the theatrical profession with an amateur group in Seattle, WA, and, at least according to her official bio, later toured the U.S. and Canada as a singer. She entered films in 1917 but her best years were in the early '20s when under contract to Paramount, she starred or co-starred opposite the likes of
Milton Sills,
Jack Holt, and
Wallace Reid. Like so many of her contemporaries,
Hawley's career waned in the latter part of the 1920s and her only sound films were a couple of Grade-Z Westerns opposite
Buffalo Bill Jr. (aka
Jay Wilsey), released in 1931. She reportedly later became a call girl in San Francisco. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi