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Easter Walters

American actress From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Easter Walters
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Fern Easter Walters Kinch (March 25, 1894 – September 25, 1987) was an American actress and stuntwoman, with credits in at least five silent films.

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Early life

Walters was born in Chariton, Iowa, the daughter of A. C. Walters and Cora O. Boyd Walters. She moved to Los Angeles by 1910, with her widowed mother and older brother,[1] and was described as "a California girl" in publicity.[2]

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Easter Walters, from a 1919 publication

Career

Walters was known for her ability operate and do stunts on a motorcycle, a novelty for silent films. She also drove a motorcycle off-screen.[3] She made films for the Pathé company at Astra,[4] including two starring Ruth Roland: Hands Up (1918),[5][6] The Narrow Path (1918),[7][8] Common Clay (1919),[9] The Tiger's Trail (1919),[10] [11] and The Devil's Riddle (1920).[12]

In 1921, Walters was charged with disturbing the peace,[13] but found not guilty,[14][15] in connection with a larger series of scandals involving Count Armand D'Aleria, his mother, and his wife, Kate Nixon D'Aleria.[16][17] The count and Walters may have shared an affair,[18] or just a friendship;[19] his possible love letters to her were considered as evidence in his examination by a lunacy commission that year.[20]

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Personal life

Walters married railroad official Harry Galivan Churchill Kinch in 1911. Her husband died in 1978, and she died in 1987, at the age of 93, in San Diego, California.

References

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