For First National, Dorothy appeared (uncredited) in The Perfect Flapper with Colleen Moore and Classified with Corinne Griffith. She barely avoided a potentially disfiguring accident during the filming of her first credited role for National, We Moderns (1925). A shower of sparks from a short-circuited light fell upon her hair and shoulders. A quick thinking assistant director grabbed a table cloth from a prop table and covered the actress' head. She made a full recovery from the burns she sustained, but unfortunately, much more dire circumstances soon followed.
In the fall of 1925, Dorothy, only twenty-two, was diagnosed with tuberculosis, "the white plague". She went to a sanatorium in California for several months, while First National, who had high hopes for her, graciously agreed to hold the starting date of her contract. In early 1926 she seem to be getting better and returned to the screen to make It Must Be Love (1926), her final appearance after only eight films. All of her appearances are believed lost.
Dorothy died of tuberculosis in Dallas in 1930.
The next three images are from Motion Picture Classic, the Feburary 1926 edition. They were featured in the article "The Girl Who Smiles". The sub-head reads "Dorothy Seastrom was on the threshold of success, now she is fighting for her life in the hills above Hollywood."


Dorothy Seastrom - What do you think - Allure?
9 comments:
Oh, yes, Allure - an ethereal beauty. Very Sad.
Hauntingly, achingly beautiful; the only consolation for the sadness I feel is that these magical spirits are waiting for me on the other side...
Wow...I'd never heard of her. What a sad story. You'd wish one of her films would show up, just so she would have a legacy.
I have never heard of her. She is a
real knockout. How sad about her
life.I am suprised she didn't
generate the same interest as Jean
Harlow did a few years later. Her
platinum blonde hair would have
been very unusual in the mid 20s.
Another tragedy. At least we have her wonderous visage to gaze upon. Someone should do a book on "The ones that almost became stars". These stories still fascinate.
I wish we would at least have one film left to look at. What a beauty! definitely allure!
I just saw her in Pretty Ladies (1925) last night.
She was beautiful, I'm sorry to hear that her life ended so soon.
Her Texas death certificate mentions pneumonia and influenza, but doesn't mention tuberculosis. Maybe she had been getting better but her weakened lungs couldn't fight off the flu and pneumonia. I have an electronic copy, but can't figure out how to post it to this site.
Was happy to find this, as Dorothy Seastrom is one of my favorites! I'm a published paper doll artist, and am drawing Dorothy this weekend, (as well as the 13 other mannequins from the 1925 "The Dressmaker from Paris")
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