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- Died
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Zeffie Tilbury
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zeffie Agnes Lydia Tilbury (November 20, 1863 – July 24, 1950) was an English actress.
Tilbury was known first on the London stage and on Broadway in New York City. In 1881, she debuted on stage in Nine Points of the Law at the Theatre Royal, Brighton, England.
She is today best known for playing wise or evil older characters in films, such as the distinguished lady gambler at dinner with Garbo in The Single Standard, as the pitiful Grandma Joad in The Grapes of Wrath and Grandma Lester in Tobacco Road.
She appeared in over 70 films. Her earliest surviving silent film is the Valentino / Nazimova 1921 production of Camille. Tilbury is probably best remembered as the old lady who is befriended by Spanky and his friends on her birthday and, as a result, is transformed from a lonely, disagreeable recluse to a happy and loving carefree soul in the 1936 Hal Roach Our Gang comedy Second Childhood. In the same year she also portrayed the Gypsy Queen in the Laurel and Hardy film The Bohemian Girl.
Tilbury was married twice. First to Arthur Frederick Lewis in June, 1887, and later to L. E. Woodthorpe, who died on April 8, 1915. She died in Los Angeles, California in 1950 at the age of 86.
As actor
Flying with Music
Tobacco Road
Sheriff of Tombstone
The Grapes of Wrath
She Couldn't Say No
Emergency Squad
The Earl of Chicago
Comin' Round the Mountain
The Story of Alexander Graham Bell
Boy Trouble
Tell No Tales
Lady of the Tropics
Balalaika
Arrest Bulldog Drummond
Bulldog Drummond's Peril
Woman Against Woman
Kidnapped
Marie Antoinette
Hunted Men
Bulldog Drummond Comes Back
Bulldog Drummond Escapes
Rhythm in the Clouds
The King Without a Crown
It Happened in Hollywood
Midnight Taxi
Hideaway
Maid of Salem
Federal Bullets
Under Cover of Night
Parnell