- Edith Fellows - Wikipedia
Edith Marilyn Fellows (May 20, 1923 – June 26, 2011) [1] was an American actress who became a child star in the 1930s Best known for playing orphans and street urchins, Fellows was an expressive actress with a good singing voice [ 2 ]
- Edith Fellows - Biography - IMDb
Edith Fellows Actress: And So They Were Married Edith Fellows was born on May 20, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts When she was a year old, she and her father and grandmother moved to Charlotte, North Carolina As a toddler, Edith was pigeon-toed and had trouble walking, and one doctor suggested that dance lessons might cure this condition
- Edith Fellows - IMDb
Although she never become a child star, Edith appeared in many popular films of the 1930s, most notably Pennies from Heaven (1936) She also proved herself to be a very versatile actress, playing roles ranging from a spoiled rich girl, as in Heart of the Rio Grande (1942), to a poor orphan girl, as in Pennies from Heaven
- Edith Fellows - The Movie Database (TMDB)
Between 1929 and 1954, Edith appeared in some fifty films, mostly in juvenile roles due to her short 4' 10" stature But her career suddenly slowed down in the mid-1950s Between 1955 and 1980, she appeared in only one film, Lilith (1964), in which she had a bit part
- Edith Fellows: Child star who was forced in court to choose between
Edith was forced in court to choose which relative to go with and, though not fond of her fiercely ambitious grandmother, she elected to stay with "the devil she knew", though she was later to
- Edith Fellows - NNDB
Edith Fellows appeared in dozens of movies as a child actress, including The Rider of Death Valley with Tom Mix and Mrs Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch with W C Fields, and a series of films based on the Five Little Peppers children's books
- Edith Fellows - The Telegraph
Edith Fellows, who died on June 26 aged 88, was a popular child actress during the 1930s and early 1940s ; the real story of her life, however, replete with con men, scheming
- Edith Fellows, Child Star Shadowed by Dickensian Troubles, Dies at 88 . . .
Edith Fellows, a child star of the 1930s who was known for playing orphans and urchins but whose own life was more Dickensian than that of any character she portrayed, died on June 26
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