Muriel Ostriche
Muriel Hennrietta Ostriche (born May 24, 1896 – May 3, 1989) was an American silent film actress.
Following tryouts with the Biograph and Pathe studios, Ostriche signed with Eclair for $5 per day. After a year and a half with Eclair, she joined Reliance for a higher salary. Following that experienced, she was signed by the Thanhouser Company based in New Rochelle, New York, and starred in 134 films in her career. Ostriche told author Michael G. Ankerich that A Daughter of the Sea (1915) was her best performance and her favorite film.
In 1920, Ostriche was featured in advertising for Bonnie-B veils.
She was living in Florida in the mid-1980s when author Q. David Bowers began researching a biography on Ostriche, which became Muriel Ostriche: Princess of Silent Films. He was shocked to discover that she was still living and a willing interview subject. She enjoyed a revival in her fame in the later portion of her life which she relished and because of this renewed interest, her own insights into her life are preserved today.

A Square Deal

The Volunteer
Her Awakening

For the Honor of the Crew
Leap to Fame

The Road to France

A Daughter of the Sea

When It Strikes Home

Kennedy Square

A Circus Romance

Who Killed Simon Baird

The Birth of Character

The Men She Married

The Social Leper

Sally in Our Alley

Oh, You Ragtime!

The Decoy

The Farmer's Daughters
The Dormant Power

Mortmain

An Elevator Romance

The Sacred Flame
Tinsel

Robin Hood
Superstitious Sammy
The Strike
Her First Lesson
A Circumstantial Nurse

The Law of Humanity
The Hand Invisible

Hitting the Trail

The Good for Nothing
