Inez Plummer (between 1884 [1] and 1887 [2] – October 1964 [2]) was a Syracuse, New York native [3] and a leading lady of the Burbank, California stock company, in the second decade of the 20th century. [4] Plummer's father managed a theater for thirty-five years. He disapproved of his daughter becoming an actress. Plummer rehearsed her first role in her father's theater with a stock company, without his knowledge. After finding out he was shocked but decided to let her continue. [3]
She played her first stage role when she was two years old. Until mid 1906, she was content acting in ingenue roles, [5] until beginning her professional acting career. This began on August 29, 1906 as a performer in The Price of Money, and endured until March 1929. Her final show was The Octoroon, in which she played the character of Zoe. [6]
In November 1916 she appeared at the Alhambra Theater in a production of The High Cost of Living. [4] She became the leading woman of the Belasco Theatre [7] in Los Angeles, California. There she starred in The Fortune Hunter in the fall of 1916. [8]
From 1920 to 1921, she and Charles Trowbridge starred in The Broken Wing, a play written by Paul Dickey. [9]
Inez Plummer (between 1884 [1] and 1887 [2] – October 1964 [2]) was a Syracuse, New York native [3] and a leading lady of the Burbank, California stock company, in the second decade of the 20th century. [4] Plummer's father managed a theater for thirty-five years. He disapproved of his daughter becoming an actress. Plummer rehearsed her first role in her father's theater with a stock company, without his knowledge. After finding out he was shocked but decided to let her continue. [3]
She played her first stage role when she was two years old. Until mid 1906, she was content acting in ingenue roles, [5] until beginning her professional acting career. This began on August 29, 1906 as a performer in The Price of Money, and endured until March 1929. Her final show was The Octoroon, in which she played the character of Zoe. [6]
In November 1916 she appeared at the Alhambra Theater in a production of The High Cost of Living. [4] She became the leading woman of the Belasco Theatre [7] in Los Angeles, California. There she starred in The Fortune Hunter in the fall of 1916. [8]
From 1920 to 1921, she and Charles Trowbridge starred in The Broken Wing, a play written by Paul Dickey. [9]