Ramona Langley (July 9, 1893 – November 11, 1983) was an American film actress who was active in Hollywood during the silent era. She was known primarily for her work in comedies for Universal and Nestor.[1][2][3]
A native of Los Angeles, Ramona was born in 1893 to John Langley and Mary Niles.[4] She would later tell reporters she was named after Helen Hunt Jackson's novel Ramona.[1]
In 1913, the same year she began appearing in one-reel films for the Nestor Comedy Company, she married industrialist Clarence English, and the pair relocated to a large ranch near Chihuahua, Mexico. Less than a year later, the pair evacuated their home and returned to Hollywood as a result of the Mexican Border War.[1]
Ramona was severely injured in 1914 on the set of the Universal Pictures film, She Was Only a Working Girl, after she and her male co-stars fell on a slippery concrete floor. Crushed under the weight of the men, Ramona suffered major internal injuries and was reportedly urged by director Al Christie to continue the shoot.[5] Despite lingering injuries that kept her in a sanatorium bed for months, the studio refused to compensate her for her suffering, and she was replaced in the finished film by Victoria Forde.[5][6]
After her recovery, she retired from filmmaking and focused on raising her three children. Eventually, in 1938, she and English separated.[7] That same year, Langley married her second husband, politician Clare Woolwine, in Lake Tahoe.[8] Woolwine died a year later after suffering a heart attack.[9]
Ramona died on November 11, 1983, in Los Angeles.
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