Difference between revisions of "Adele Fillis"

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== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
  
Gutsche, Thelma - The history and social significance of motion pictures in South Africa 1895-1940
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[[Thelma Gutsche]].  ''The History and Social Significance of Motion Pictures in South Africa 1895-1940''
  
van der Merwe, Floris - Frank Fillis: the story of a circus legend
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[[Floris van der Merwe]]  - ''Frank Fillis: The Story of a Circus Legend''.
  
Stage & Cinema, 5 May 1917
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[[Stage & Cinema]], 5 May 1917
  
S.A. Pictorial, 19 April 1919
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[[S.A. Pictorial]], 19 April 1919
  
S.A. Pictorial, 13 March 1920
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[[S.A. Pictorial]], 13 March 1920
 
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[[
S.A. Pictorial, 29 April 1922
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S.A. Pictorial]], 29 April 1922
  
 
https://sites.google.com/site/mnrrdgcmntyasctn/history-of-manor-gardens
 
https://sites.google.com/site/mnrrdgcmntyasctn/history-of-manor-gardens
 
  
 
== Return to ==
 
== Return to ==

Revision as of 06:47, 25 February 2019

Adele Fillis (b. Calcutta, 01/01/1891 – d. Durban, **/**/1960) was a circus equestrienne, actress.

Born Adele Vicenta Fillis, she was the daughter of Frank Fillis, a prominent circus proprietor and showman who toured South Africa and the Far East during the turn of the 19th century. Her mother was Elisa Maria Vicenta Mayol, a Spanish-born circus performer. Born in India, she performed as a highly regarded and popular equestrienne, first in her father’s shows and thereafter in her divorced mother’s rival circus. Subsequently she appeared in four silent features: Fallen Leaves (Dick Cruikshanks/1919), Copper Mask (Joseph Albrecht/1919), Prester John (Dick Cruikshanks/1920) and The Vulture’s Prey (Dick Cruikshanks & William Bowden/1922), all for African Film Productions. S.A. Pictorial reported that for Copper Mask she did her own stunt work, taking a four-metre dive into a river in order to rescue a “drowning man”. In 1913 she had married Harry Vine Gandar, who acted with her in The Vulture’s Prey. Their son, Laurence Gandar, was to become the crusading anti-apartheid editor of the Rand Daily Mail. Cecil Fillis, who acted in The Man Who Was Afraid (1920), was her brother, while Frank Fillis Jr, who appeared in King Solomon’s Mines (1918), was her half-brother. (FO)

Sources

Thelma Gutsche. The History and Social Significance of Motion Pictures in South Africa 1895-1940

Floris van der Merwe - Frank Fillis: The Story of a Circus Legend.

Stage & Cinema, 5 May 1917

S.A. Pictorial, 19 April 1919

S.A. Pictorial, 13 March 1920 [[ S.A. Pictorial]], 29 April 1922

https://sites.google.com/site/mnrrdgcmntyasctn/history-of-manor-gardens

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