- Born
- Died
- Birth nameAlma Genevieve Reubens
- Alma Rubens was born Alma Genevieve Reubens in San Francisco, California. She was interested in entertaining at an early age. Like most young girls, she enjoyed fantasy play acting and by the time she was 19 had become a full-fledged star. She didn't have to wait long like some of the starlets who haunted casting offices continually. Her break came in 1916 in the film Reggie Mixes In (1916). Six more films followed that year, and she won critical acclaim in The Half-Breed (1916). In 1917 she again starred in a box-office smash, The Firefly of Tough Luck (1917). She became a busy young actress with role after role and hit after hit. In 1924, as Mildred Gower, she performed magnificently in The Price She Paid (1924). After a busy 1925, Alma suddenly found it difficult to obtain work, but it was not because her star had suddenly dimmed--it was because of her addiction to heroin. The money she made dwindled away in search of the next high. She was in and out of mental asylums, but it didn't really help much because she was still dabbling in drugs. Weakened by her habit, she died in Los Angeles in 1931, of pneumonia. She was less than a month away from her 34th birthday. Her final two films were two years earlier, Show Boat (1929) and She Goes to War (1929).- IMDb Mini Biography By: Denny Jackson
- American actress of the silent period. Born in San Francisco, she studied and performed from her youth, and at the age of nineteen became a star. She appeared in a score of films within the next four years, then began to work on the theatrical stage as well, in musical comedy and drama. A beautiful and popular actress, she had a troubled life replete with failed marriages and addiction to alcohol and heroin. Her first marriage, to Franklyn Farnum, lasted less than a month. Her third and final husband was Ricardo Cortez. Rubens' health declined precipitously as a result of her heroin addiction, and she died of pneumonia in 1931.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Jim Beaver <jumblejim@prodigy.net>
- SpousesRicardo Cortez(January 30, 1926 - January 22, 1931) (her death)Daniel Carson Goodman(August 12, 1923 - January 28, 1925) (divorced)Franklyn Farnum(June 14, 1918 - November 14, 1918) (divorced)
- Following her untimely death, she was interred in a mausoleum at Mountain View Cemetery in Fresno, California.
- She was posthumously awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6409 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on February 8, 1960.
- [in her last interview in the Los Angeles Examiner] As long as my money held out I could get drugs. I was afraid to tell my mother, my best friends. My only desire was to get drugs and take them in secrecy. If only I could get on my knees before the police or before a judge and beg them to make stiffer laws so that men will refuse to take any dirty dollars from the murderers who sell this poison and who escape punishment when caught by buying their way out.
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