
June Elvidge
Acting
Biography
No biography available for June Elvidge.
Born: June 29, 1893
Place of Birth: Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA
Known For

The Flash of an Emerald
The picture starts with Robert Warwick walking into the office of director Albert Capellani (the film's actual director). Capellani offers him the role of a heavy and hands him the script. The next four reels show Warwick playing a Raffles-like character, an ingenious crook who moves through society, committing robberies and even murder.

Beyond the Rocks
A young woman dutifully marries an older millionaire and then falls in love with a handsome nobleman-- who'd previously saved her life-- on her unhappy honeymoon.

Beauty's Worth
Prudence Cole is an unsophisticated Quaker girl being raised by her two aunts. Prudence is flirted with by snobbish Henry Garrison, who actually disdains the girl for her lack of worldliness and savoir faire. When Henry and his friends try to embarrass her at a posh resort, Prudence turns the tables on them.

A Girl's Folly
A restless young girl yearns to leave her rural environment and "get away from it all". One day she stumbles upon a film crew shooting a western near her home. She makes friends with the film's leading man, who encourages her to try her luck as an actress. So she leaves her small town and goes to the big city to break into the picture business. However, things don't turn out quite the way she planned.

The Whip
The story of the training of a racehorse, the Whip, of the amnesiac nobleman who loves the horse, and of the villains who attempt to keep it from racing.

The Strong Way
Eunice Torrence (June Elvidge) has wed the elderly Geoffrey Farrow (Joe Herbert) only because her mother (Isabelle Berwin) wanted her to marry money. But Farrow is a rotten character and Eunice, who really loves Don Chadwick (John Bowers), immediately regrets her decision.

Temptation
A wealthy New York City stockbroker who sets out to prove that women are corrupted by wealth.

A Square Deal
Hugh Eltinge, a struggling artist, and Mark Dunbar, a genius of the pen, whom the world has as yet failed to reward, live together in MacDougal Alley. Across the hall is Doris Golden, a reporter on the Evening Star, who enthuses over the work of both. Mark's novel is sold and Hugh and Doris see a new Mark. Mark begs Hugh to allow him to stake him until his pictures sell, but pleasure in his new clothes and new popularity dwindle as he sees his old friends will not profit by them. A happy idea strikes him and he buys all of Hugh's paintings on exhibition at a local dealer, requesting that his name be not mentioned.

The Family Honor
A 1917 silent film drama

Rasputin, the Black Monk
The story of the rise and fall of Rasputin, the so-called "mad monk" who dominated the court of the Russian czar in the period prior to the Russian revolution.
Filmography
as Ann Morton
as Mrs. Dangerfield
as Mrs. Dutton
as The Princess
as Estelle Hackett
as Lady Francis
as Mrs. Martin
as Lily Cardington
as Enid Morton
as Betsy Ann Ross
as Flora O'Hare
as Lady Clara Winsleigh
as Lady Helen Deene
as Naomi Templeton
as Amy Tillson
as Lady Anna Anningford
as Mrs. Brand
as Claire Meredith
as Patricia 'Patty' Hudson
as Lucille Vale
as Fanny Craig / Evelyn Craig
as Maida Brown
as Helene
as Ruth Le Page - as a woman
as Jennie Cox
as Marcia Fleming
as Mrs. Maria Reynolds
as Eunice Torrence
as Self - Cameo Appearance
as Grace Raymond
as Inez - Raff's wife
as Nan Westland
as Adrienne Durant
as Marcia Quesnay
as Mrs. D'Aquilia
as Adrienne Van Couver
as Vivian Carleton
as Doris Golden
as Dora Wendell
as Violet Ridgeway
as Mildred Castleman
as Madame de Rouvre
as Frances Lawton
as Phillipa Ford
as Patricia 'Patty' Hudson