What can we learn about early Hollywood culture when we veer from stardom and spectatorial uplift to explore female responses defined by struggle, disenchantment, and failure? Focused on the suicide letters of aspiring screen actresses printed in newspapers and movie magazines during the 1910s, this essay traces an unexamined form of silent film cinephilia where pleasure blurs with pain. This autobiographical archive of Hollywood-related injury and complaint supplies insight into the experiences of uprooted, immigrant, and contingent female players, ultimately spotlighting how class—and attendant notions of power, agency, and belonging—subtended women’s engagement with the US film industry from its very beginning.
Diana W. Anselmo (Wed,) studied this question.
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