Minta Dufree (Araminta Estelle Dufree)
Minta Dufree met Roscoe Arbuckle when he was attempting to get started in theater, and the two married in August 1908. Durfee entered show business in local companies as a chorus girl at the age of seventeen. She was the first leading lady of Charlie Chaplin. Durfee and Arbuckle separated in 1921, just prior to a scandal involving the death of starlet Virginia Rappe. There were three trials and finally Arbuckle was acquitted. His career was destroyed and he received few job offers. Durfee and Arbuckle were divorced in 1925. Durfee was quoted in her later years as saying Arbuckle was “the most generous human being I’ve ever met”, and “if I had to do it all over again, I’d still marry the same man.” Minta Durfee was an avid defender of her close friend Mabel Normand throughout Normand’s many public scandals, and she spoke fondly of her until her own death. A regular performer on television, Durfee appeared on such shows as Noah’s Ark (1956). She had minor roles in motion pictures like How Green Was My Valley (1941), Naughty Marietta (1935), Rose-Marie (1936), The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964), and It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963). In later life, Durfee gave lectures on silent film and held retrospectives on her and her husband’s pictures. She was surprised and excited by the renewed interest in silent film and did her best to help. Minta Durfee died in Woodland Hills, California at the Motion Picture Country Home in 1975. She suffered from a heart ailment.
Born
- October, 01, 1889
- USA
- Los Angeles, California
Died
- September, 09, 1975
- USA
- Woodland Hills, California
Cause of Death
- heart ailment
Cemetery
- Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)
- Glendale, California
- USA