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Anita Page  Dies


 
LOS ANGELES -Anita Page, an MGM  actress who appeared in films with Lon 
Chaney, Joan Crawford and Buster Keaton  during the transition from silent 
movies 
to talkies, has died. She was 98.
Page died in her sleep early  Saturday morning at her home in Los Angeles, 
said actor Randal Malone, her  longtime friend and companion.
Page's career, which spanned 84  years, began in 1924 when she started as an 
extra.
Her big break came in 1928 when  she won a major role — as the doomed bad 
girl — in "Our Dancing Daughters," a  film that featured a wild Charleston by 
Crawford and propelled them both to  stardom. It spawned two sequels, "Our 
Modern 
Maidens" and "Our Blushing Brides."  Page and Crawford were in all three 
films.
Page's daughter Linda Sterne  said her mother had been good friends with 
Marion Davies and Jean Harlow, and  for about six months in the 1930s lived as 
a 
guest in William Hearst's massive  castle on the Southern California coast.
"She was the best mother I  could have," Sterne said. "She was wonderful."
In 1928, the New York-born Page  starred opposite Chaney in "While the City 
Sleeps."
The following year, she was  co-star of "The Broadway Melody," the 1929 
backstage tale of two sisters who  love the same man. The film made history as 
the 
first talkie to win the  best-picture Oscar and was arguably the first true 
film musical.
In his 1995 book "A Song in the  Dark: The Birth of the Musical Film," author 
Richard Barrios reserved much of  his praise for Bessie Love, the veteran 
actress who played the other sister. But  he called Page "intensely likable — 
sincere, well-meaning, endearing, in much  the same fashion as Ruby Keeler 
several years later — and, of course, quite  beautiful."
Variety wrote in 1929 that  Page "is also apt to bowl the trade over with a 
contribution that's natural all  the way, plus her percentage on appearance. 
... She can't dance, (but) the  remainder of her performance is easily 
sufficient to make this impediment  distinctly negligible."
Among Page's other films were  two of Keaton's sound films, "Free and Easy" 
in 1930, and "Sidewalks of New  York" in 1931; "Night Court," with Walter 
Huston in 1932; and "The Easiest Way"  in 1931, in which Clark Gable had a 
small 
role.
For a short time Page was  married to composer Nacio Herb Brown, who wrote 
songs for "The Broadway Melody,"  but the marriage was annulled within a year, 
Sterne said.
Page stopped acting in 1936  when she fell in love with Herschel House, a 
Navy aviator. The couple married  six weeks later and Page happily adapted to 
life as an officer's wife, hosting  many parties at their home in Coronado, a 
city peninsula in the San Diego Bay,  Sterne said.
The couple had two daughters,  Linda and Sandra.
After House died in 1991, Page  went on to return to films. In 1994, she 
appeared in the suspense thriller  "Sunset After Dark."
Most recently, she had a cameo  in the horror film "Frankenstein Rising," due 
out later this year.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights  reserved. This material may 
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or  redistributed.




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