Discussions about Russian History > Russian Noble Families

A Romanov duchess in Hollywood?

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Parpar:
In 1924, New York artist Albert Victor Ballin (1861-1932) moved to Los Angeles. He had written several screenplays, none of which were produced. Undeterred, he hoped to find good work as an actor. About the only work he could find was as an extra, and he contributed several amusing reports to the Silent Worker, a popular Deaf-community newsletter/magazine published at New Jersey School for the Deaf, about his adventures. A witty, erudite, and outspoken writer, Ballin published a semi-autobiographical book, The Deaf-Mute Howls, in 1930; it was pretty much ignored, but has taken on the status of a classic. Gallaudet University issued a reprint in 1998. His writings provide an insightful glimpse of Hollywood just before and after it was indelibly changed by the "talkies."

In his account, "The Life of a Lousy Extra" in the June 1928 issue of the Silent Worker, he mentions meeting interesting folks from all walks of life. A quotation:

***
Among the extra I daily meet mot wonderful people from all stations and social ranks; authors, artists, ex-bankers who went afoul of luck. One I met is a true-to-goodness princess of the late Czar’s household. She disguised herself as a wretched peasant and escaped to America after her whole family was massacred. With calm philosophy she accepts the inevitable whirligig of the wheel of fortune; goes through her stunts as an extra calmly and waits patiently for the turn of the wheel.

***
Naturally, I was curious to know just who this princess might be . . . one of the Yussopovs? Or a genuine Romanov? I am familiar with the Anna Anderson story, but she never claimed to have found work as a Hollywood extra at an average of $5 a day . . . leastways, I don't think so!

Can any6one identify her for me?

Svetabel:
Of the late Tzar's household? So that could be not exactly a Romanov but ANY noble woman from any Noble family from Russia.
 

amelia:
Could it be Natalia Paley? Eva

Forum Admin:
I grew up in Los Angeles, among many people in the Motion Picture business.  Harold Lloyd and Mary Pickford, Chaplin and Groucho Marx will all alive.  I met Pickford and Groucho myself as a kid.  I have never ever heard mention of any Imperial Princess being an extra in the early days.  What I have learned, however, through our websites and this Forum, is that a great many Russian emigres became "self granted nobility in exile".  I strongly suspect one of the extras "said" she was a Princess, while it was mostly likely not the case in fact.

Parpar:
Thanks for your responses. Amelia, I checked the Wikipedia entry on Natalie Paley. The problem with that identification is that she started her U.S. film career around 1933, having left France. By that time, Albert Ballin was dead. When he wrote his accounts about being a "lousy extra," Princess Paley was still in France, romancing, modeling. designing.

Still . . . an interesting character, non? I agree that some Russian émigrés may have granted themselves nobility . . . that's certainly a possibility!

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