Lillian Hall-Davis
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Lillian Hall-Davis (23 June 1898 – 25 October 1933) was an English actress during the silent film era, featured in major roles in English film and a number of German, French and Italian films.
Born Lilian Hall Davis, the daughter of a London taxi driver, her films included a part-colour version of I Pagliacci (1923), The Passionate Adventure (1924), Blighty (1927), The Ring (1927), and The Farmer's Wife (1928), the latter two both directed by Alfred Hitchcock, who at the time considered her his "favourite actress." She had a lead role in a "lavish production" of Quo Vadis (1924), an Italian film directed by Gabriellino D'Annunzio and Georg Jacoby.
Hall-Davis also appeared in a comedy short film made in the Lee DeForest Phonofilm sound-on-film process, As We Lie (1927), co-starring and directed by Miles Mander.
Hall-Davis did not make the transition to talkies; in 1933 her "sharp career decline and health problems" prompted her to commit suicide by turning on the gas oven and cutting her own throat at home in the Golders Green area of London. She was 35.

The Ring

The Farmer's Wife

Liebe macht blind

Married Love
A Royal Divorce

The Unwanted
The Eleventh Commandment

Express Train of Love

The Prey of the Wind

The Passionate Adventure

Blighty
Boadicea
Just for a Song

Many Waters
Her Reputation
Wolga Wolga

Der Farmer aus Texas
Die drei Kuckucksuhren

The Wonderful Story

Little Women

Quo Vadis?

Roses of Picardy

The White Sheik

Nitchevo

Tommy Atkins
Love Maggy
The Honeypot
The Game of Life
