Ruthelma stevens biography of barack

          Ruthelma Stevens, later committed suicide in Miami after ending up penniless....

          Ruthelma Stevens

          American actress

          Ruthelma Stevens

          Born(1903-10-23)October 23, 1903
          DiedJune 1, 1984(1984-06-01) (aged 80)
          OccupationActress
          Years active1932–1957 (film)
          SpouseWaldo H.

          Logan (1933-1933)[1]

          Ruthelma Stevens (1903–1984) was an American film actress.[2]

          Stevens's mother was Mrs. Beatrice Stevens.[3]

          Stevens's film debut came in Life Begins.

          Film's title.

        1. TRIAL WITHOUT JURY, from left, Barbara Billingsley, Robert Rockwell, Ruthelma Stevens, Available for Editorial use only.
        2. Ruthelma Stevens, later committed suicide in Miami after ending up penniless.
        3. His secretary (Ruthelma Stevens) tells him of a new commission for Gail Wynand.
        4. Includes portraits of Ruthelma Stevens (by Maude Stinson), Eleanor Noteware, the hand of Henriette Blanding (by Johan Hagemeyer), Hawaiian "hula girls" ('s.
        5. She was signed to a long-term contract after acting on the Broadway stage.[4] Broadway plays in which she appeared included Speak Easy (1927), Jarnegan (1928), Hotel Universe (1930), Roadside (1930), Anatol (1931), Life Begins (1932), and A Red Rainbow (1953).[5]

          Stevens married Waldo H.

          Logan, a "wealthy young sportsman" in Yuma, Arizona, in November 1933. The marriage was disclosed in June 1934.[3]

          Filmography

          References

          Bibliography

          • Solomon, Aubrey.

            The Fox Film Corporation, 1915-1935: A His