Jane Novak
Jane Novak was born Johana B. Novak in St. Louis,
Missouri. Her father, Joseph, was an immigrant from Bohemia. He
died when she was a child leaving her mother with five children
to raise. An aunt took her to California where she began acting
in motion pictures in 1913. It is believed she appeared in a movie
on her very first day in southern California. Her entrance into
motion pictures came as a result of meeting leading man Frank
Newburg whom she married in 1915. They had one daughter and divorced
in 1918. During her career, she played with such stars as Wallace
Beery, Tom Mix, Hobart Bosworth, Alan Hale, Thomas Moore, and
Lewis Stone. She made five films with Wiliam S. Hart and was reported
to be engaged to marry him at one time, but the marriage never
took place. engaged to marry Western star William S. Hart, although
their marriage never took place. Although she never truly reached
the top rank of silent stars, by 1922 she had her own company
and was making $1,500 per week. She is credited with over 90 shorts
and features between 1913 and 1929 with her final starring role
opposite Richard Dix in the Technicolor production Redskin (1929).
During the 1930's, 1940's and 1950's, she only appeared in 14
more pictures, all in secondary roles. In 1974, she published
a cookbook entitled Treasury of Chicken Cooking. The volume is
a collection of 300 recipes compiled by Novak over the years,
all of them her own. Her last appearance on camera was in 1988
for Kevin Brownlow's documentary "Harold Lloyd: The Third
Genius." Her sister, Eva, was also a very successful silent
movie star. Novak died in Woodland Hills, California of a stroke
in 1990 at the age of 94.
Selected films of this star available for viewing:
Wagon Tracks (1919)
Three Word Brand (1921)
The Barbarian (1921)
Lazybones (1925)
The Walloping Kid (1926)
Redskin
(1929)
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