
Actor
Lina Basquette
Born 1907 · San Mateo, California, USA
Lina Basquette (born Lena Copeland Baskette), was an American actress. She is noted for her 75-year career in entertainment, which began during the silent film era. Talented as a dancer, she was paid as a girl for performing and gained her first film contract at age nine. In her acting career, Basquette may have been best known for her role as Judith in The Godless Girl. The film was based on the life of Queen Silver, known as a 20th-century child prodigy, and feminist and socialist activist. Basquette also was noted for her several marriages, including her first, to the much older noted producer, Sam Warner, founder of Warner Bros. film studio. She had several marriages and a tumultuous personal life. When her film career declined, she returned for a period to dancing and stage performances. After she retired from the entertainment world, in 1947 Basquette moved to Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where she became a noted breeder of Great Danes; her dogs won numerous professional show prizes. She wrote several books on dog breeding as well. Later living in West Virginia, she also served as a judge for the American Kennel Club, and wrote a column.
Acting

The Dude Wrangler
Helen Dane · 1930

The Godless Girl
Judy Craig · 1928

Trapped
Girl Reporter · 1931

Celebrity
Jane · 1928

Come Across
Mary · 1929

The Younger Generation
Birdie Goldfish · 1929

Shoes
Eva's Sister (uncredited) · 1916

Souls at Sea
Brunette in Saloon (uncredited) · 1937

Four Men and a Prayer
Ah-Nee · 1938

The Buccaneer
Roxanne · 1938

The Noose
Dot · 1928

The Arizona Terror
Katherine 'Kay' Moore · 1931

Wheel of Chance
Ada Berkowitz · 1928

Serenade
The Dancer · 1927

The Weaker Vessel
Jessie · 1919

The Final Hour
Belle · 1936

Ebb Tide
Attwater's Servant · 1937

Show Folks
Rita Carey · 1928

Hello Trouble
Janet Kenyon · 1932

The Midnight Lady
Mona Sebastian · 1932

The Mike Douglas Show
Self · 1961

Rose of the Rio Grande
Anita · 1938

Mounted Fury
Nanette LeStrange · 1931

Ranger of the North
Felice MacLean · 1927