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  1. Natalie Talmadge (1896-1969) est une actrice du cinéma muet plus connue pour être la sœur de Norma et Constance Talmadge jusqu'à son mariage avec l'acteur Buster Keaton. Elle apparaît notamment dans Intolérance (1916) de D. W. Griffith et Les Lois de l'hospitalité (1923) de Buster Keaton, son dernier rôle.

  2. 15 de oct. de 1995 · They had two sons—Joseph, born in 1922, and Robert, born in 1924-and Natalie would pain Keaton deeply by changing the boys’ surname to Talmadge after she divorced him, in 1932.

  3. silentology.wordpress.com › 2019/02/18 › busters-wifes-relations-getting-to-knowSilent-ology | Uncovering the silent era

    18 de feb. de 2019 · Aquí nos gustaría mostrarte una descripción, pero el sitio web que estás mirando no lo permite.

  4. Natalie Talmadge: The Early Years. Written for the 2023 Silent-ology Buster Keaton Blogathon “I know he loved her very much, and I think she loved him very much in the beginning. . .” -Eleanor Keaton No matter your personal opinion of Natalie Talmadge, she was a huge part of Buster’s life during his most prominent filming years. She was ...

  5. Natalie Talmadge (April 29, 1896 – June 19, 1969) was an American silent film actress who was the wife of Buster Keaton and sister of the movie stars Norma and Constance Talmadge. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Natalie Talmadge has received more than 565,605 page views.

  6. The Academy’s newly restored 1915 Fotoplayer was unveiled for its inaugural public performance by Joe Rinaudo. Constance Talmadge, one of the silent era’s most popular stars, and the sister of fellow actress Norma Talmadge, was known for her roles in romantic comedies, usually playing a willful young woman having a misunderstanding with the man in her life.

  7. Biography. Natalie Talmadge was the middle daughter of the original "stage mother", Margaret Talmadge (Peg). Her two sisters, Constance Talmadge (the comedienne) and Norma Talmadge (the tragedian) were also in the movies, and had their own production companies, bankrolled by Norma's husband in the 1920s, Joseph M. Schenck.