Lois Weber (born June 13, 1881, Allegheny [now in Pittsburgh], Pa., U.S.—died Nov. 13, 1939, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American actress, producer, and director who is best remembered for her crusading films of social concern in the early days of the motion picture industry.
Weber displayed musical ability at an early age. She had a brief tour as a concert pianist at age 16 and sang with the missionary Church Army before making her way to New York City. She toured for a time with the Zig Zag stage company and appeared in a road company of Why Girls Leave Home (1904). A few months later she married W. Phillips Smalley, with whom she played in stock and repertory companies for five years. In 1910 both actors went to seek careers in the nascent motion picture industry.
For a succession of small production companies—Gaumont, Reliance, Rex, and Bosworth—Weber and her husband turned out dozens of short and feature films. She wrote scenarios and subtitles, acted, directed, designed sets and costumes, edited, and even developed negatives. The couple also worked in an experimental form of sound films, with dialogue recorded on synchronized phonograph records. In 1915 they joined Universal Pictures, and in 1917 Weber established Lois Weber Productions, whose films were released through Universal. Except for a brief association with DeMille Pictures, she remained with Universal for the rest of her Hollywood career.
One of the most energetic, aesthetically ambitious, and technically well-grounded filmmakers in the industry, Weber wrote, produced, and directed such films as Hypocrites (1914), Scandal (1915), The People vs. John Doe (1916), The Man Who Dared God (1917), Forbidden (1920), What Do Men Want? (1921), and A Chapter in Her Life (1923).
Weber divorced in 1922 and did not work again until she remarried in 1926. Thereafter she directed The Marriage Clause (1926), Sensation Seekers (1927), The Angel of Broadway (1927), and Topsy and Eva (1927). Her next—and last—film was White Heat (1934).