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・ Jean Babet
・ Jean Babilée
・ Jean Bach
・ Jean Bachelet
・ Jean Bachelot La Pylaie
・ Jean Back
・ Jean Bacon
・ Jean Badal
・ Jean Badovici
・ Jean Aberbach
・ Jean Abraham Chrétien Oudemans
・ Jean Abraham Grill
・ Jean Absil
・ Jean Accart
・ Jean Achard
Jean Acker
・ Jean Acosta Soares
・ Jean Adair
・ Jean Adam
・ Jean Adam (bow maker)
・ Jean Adebambo
・ Jean Adhémar
・ Jean Adolphe Louis Robert Flavigny
・ Jean Adrien Bigonnet
・ Jean Adrien Vanovason
・ Jean Aerts
・ Jean Agélou
・ Jean Aicard
・ Jean Aicardi
・ Jean Aileen Little


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Jean Acker : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Acker

Jean Acker (October 23, 1893 – August 16, 1978) was an American film actress with a career dating from the silent film era through the 1950s. She was perhaps best known as the estranged wife of silent film star Rudolph Valentino.
==Early life and career==
Acker was born Harriet “Hattie” Ackers on October 23, 1893 in Trenton, New Jersey. Her father was Joseph Ackers, said to be of Cherokee descent. Her mother Margaret (unconfirmed) was Irish. In the 1900 census, Hattie is with Joseph and her grandparents, but no wife of Joseph is listed. In fact, he is reported to be single. Growing up on a farm, she became an expert horsewoman. She attended the St. Mary’s Seminary in Springfield, New Jersey, for a time.
Sometime prior to 1907, the family moved to Lewistown, Pennsylvania. In the 1907 Lewistown Directory, Joseph is listed with a wife by the name of Eleanor. When he married Eleanor is not yet known, but it was after 1900 and before the family moved to Lewistown. They were divorced in 1912. Six years later, Joseph married Virginia Erb in Lewistown. He managed the Casino Bowling Alley and The Ritz restaurant, and later owned the Boston Shoe Store on Valley Street. He also managed several bowling alleys in the Philadelphia area, and it may have been that during these visits Jean was “bitten by the acting bug.”
She performed in vaudeville until she moved to California in 1919.〔Leider, Emily W. ''Dark Lover: The Life and Death of Rudolph Valentino.'' New York City, Farrar Straus Giroux, 2003. ISBN 0-374-28239-0. p. 100.〕 After arriving in Hollywood, Acker became the protegee and lover of Alla Nazimova, a film actress whose clout and contacts enabled Acker to negotiate a $200 per week contract with a movie studio. Acker appeared in numerous films during the 1910s and 1920s, but by the early 1930s she began appearing in small, mostly uncredited film roles. She made her last on-screen appearance in the 1955 film ''How to Be Very, Very Popular'', opposite Betty Grable.

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