Nancy Nash (born Maude Miller;[1] 1897–?) was an American actress. She appeared in films from the 1920s into the early 1940s. She had several leading roles including in Upstream and Rich But Honest. She was promoted as one of the "Youth in Fox Pictures" during her early career.[2]
Career
Born to a family of ranchers near Mercedes, Texas,[3] Nash was interested in recreating high fashion shown in films and often took notes on the outfits actresses wore in order to copy them. In 1926, on a visit to Hollywood, she decided to audition for an acting role in The City alongside 60 other applicants, and won the part.[4] This conflicted with her plans to attend the University of Texas the following week, and she had to convince her parents that pursuing a film career was more important.[5]
She was announced as an actress by Winfield Sheehan, vice president of Fox Film, in September 1926 before confirming her first role in The City in October of that year.[6] She next had the lead role with Earle Foxe in the 1927 comedy feature Upstream,[7] which was considered lost media until the discovery of a copy in the New Zealand Film Archive in 2009.[8]The Times said that Nash's and Raymond Hitchcock's work gave the film "pathos and humor, thrills and suspense and characterization that is poignantly human".[9]
Originally married to Los Angeles Examiner reporter Otto Winkler, they divorced in the early 1930s. Nash then married her second husband, attorney Jay Chotiner in 1933.[22] She was later married to film producer Ben Hershfield, a former husband of actress Rita La Roy.[23]