Louise Huff (November , â€" August , ) was an American actress of the
silent film era.Huff was supposedly a relative of former President
James Knox Polk. She began her acting career at the age of and toured
in stage productions of Ben-Hur and Graustark. She made her motion
picture debut in with In the Bishop's Carriage and Caprice. Louise
joined Lubin Studios in where she worked with actor and director
Edgar Jones. She married Jones in and they had a daughter, Mary
Louise in . In she secured the ingenue role opposite Jack Pickford in
the Booth Tarkington comedy Seventeen.Huff was featured in motion
pictures produced by Famous Players-Lasky and Paramount Pictures, and
continued in films until . Her later silent films included roles in
Great Expectations (), Mile-a-Minute Kendall (), Oh, You Women! (),
Disraeli () and her final film, The Seventh Day ().A biography by Hans
J. Wollstein states:
silent film era.Huff was supposedly a relative of former President
James Knox Polk. She began her acting career at the age of and toured
in stage productions of Ben-Hur and Graustark. She made her motion
picture debut in with In the Bishop's Carriage and Caprice. Louise
joined Lubin Studios in where she worked with actor and director
Edgar Jones. She married Jones in and they had a daughter, Mary
Louise in . In she secured the ingenue role opposite Jack Pickford in
the Booth Tarkington comedy Seventeen.Huff was featured in motion
pictures produced by Famous Players-Lasky and Paramount Pictures, and
continued in films until . Her later silent films included roles in
Great Expectations (), Mile-a-Minute Kendall (), Oh, You Women! (),
Disraeli () and her final film, The Seventh Day ().A biography by Hans
J. Wollstein states:
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