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Mabel Normand (November 10, 1892– February 23, 1930) was an American silent film comedienne and actress, a popular star of Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios and noted as one of the film industry's first female screenwriters, producers and directors. Onscreen she appeared in a dozen commercially successful films with Charles Chaplin and seventeen with Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle, occasionally writing and directing movies featuring Chaplin as her leading man as well as sometimes co-writing and co-directing with Chaplin in films in which they played the lead roles. At the height of her career in the late 1910s and early 1920s, Normand had her own movie studio and production company. Throughout the 1920s her name was linked with widely publicized scandals including the 1922 murder of William Desmond Taylor and the 1924 shooting of Courtland S. Dines, who was shot by Normand's chauffeur with her pistol. She was not a suspect in either crime. Her film career declined, possibly due to both scandals and a recurrence of tuberculosis in 1923, which led to a decline in her health, retirement from films and her death in 1930 at age 37.
4.3Help! Help!
1912
9.0Pinto
1920
5.8Suzanna
1923
5.7The Masquerader
1914

The Alarm
1914
5.3Getting Acquainted
1914
6.8Anything Once!
1927

Bright Lights
1916
10.0Upstairs
1919
5.8Mabel's Married Life
1914
6.2The Extra Girl
1923
6.5Hide and Seek
1913

Riley and Schultze
1912
4.3Why Be Good?: Sexuality & Censorship in Early Cinema
2007
9.0The Pest
1919
6.2Tillie's Punctured Romance
1914
8.0Charlie Chaplin, The Genius of Liberty
2020
5.0Bangville Police
1913
3.7The Brave Hunter
1912
5.4Wished on Mabel
1915