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Leona Hutton

Leona Hutton
Born April 8, 1892
St. Joseph, Missouri
Died January 4, 1949(1949-01-04) (aged 56)
Toledo, Ohio, USA
Occupation Actress
Years active 1913 to 1916

Leona Hutton (April 8, 1892 – April 1, 1949) was an American actress. During her brief career, between 1913 and 1916, she appeared in 48 silent era motion pictures.

Hutton's motion picture debut was in The Crimson Stain (1913), a three-reel drama short, opposite Frank Borzage and Edward Coxen. It was directed by Jay Hunt for the Mutual Film Company.

Her final role was as Beth Taylor in The Man Who Would Not Die (1916), a feature length drama starring Russell, who also directed with Jack Prescott at Flying "A" Studios, Santa Barbara, California.

During World War I, Hutton served overseas with the American and French Red Cross.

Hutton, also known as Mrs. Mary Epstein, committed suicide in 1949, by an overdose of codeine. She died in an iron lung in Maumee Hospital in Toledo, Ohio, eighteen hours after she was discovered by her husband. She had been confined to her home for ten weeks because of a leg fracture. Coroner Paul Hohly returned a suicide verdict. Hutton was one week shy of her 57th birthday.


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