
Actor
Olive Thomas
Born 1894 · Charleroi, Pennsylvania, USA
Olive Thomas (born Oliva R. Duffy;[1] October 20, 1894 – September 10, 1920) was an American silent-film actress, art model, and photo model. Thomas began her career as an illustrator's model in 1914, and moved on to the Ziegfeld Follies the following year. During her time as a Ziegfeld girl, she also appeared in the more risqué show The Midnight Frolic. In 1916, she began a successful career in silent films and would appear in more than 20 features over the course of her four-year film career. That year she also married actor Jack Pickford, the younger brother of fellow silent-film star Mary Pickford. On September 10, 1920, Thomas died in Paris five days after ingesting her husband's syphilis medication, mercury dichloride, that brought on acute nephritis. Although her death was ruled accidental, news of her hospitalization and subsequent death were the subject of speculation in the press. Thomas' death has been cited as one of the early scandals in Hollywood that was heavily publicized.
Acting

Prudence on Broadway
Prudence · 1919

The Spite Bride
Tessa Doyle · 1919

The Flapper
Genevieve 'Ginger' King · 1920

Everybody's Sweetheart
Mary · 1920

The Follies Girl
Doll · 1919

Toton
Toton/ Yvonne · 1919

The Glorious Lady
Ivis Benson · 1919

Out Yonder
Flotsam · 1919

Olive Thomas: The Most Beautiful Girl in the World
Self (archive footage) · 2003

Sigrid Holmquist
Sigrid Holmquist (archive footage) · 2010

Upstairs and Down
Alice Chesterton · 1919

Betty Takes a Hand
Betty Marshall · 1918

An Even Break
Claire Curtis · 1917

Love's Prisoner
Nancy, later Lady Clevela · 1919

Tom Sawyer
Choir Member (Uncredited) · 1917

Broadway Arizona
Fritzi Carlyle · 1917

Madcap Madge
Madge Flower · 1917

Beatrice Fairfax
Rita Malone (#10 Playball) · 1916
Youthful Folly
Nancy Sherwin · 1920

Limousine Life
Minnie Wells · 1918

A Girl Like That
Fannie Brooks · 1917

Darling Mine
Kitty McCarthy · 1920

Indiscreet Corinne
Corinne Chilvers · 1917

Heiress For a Day
Helen Thurston · 1918