Louise Brooks (born November 14, 1906, Cherryvale, Kansas, U.S.—died August 8, 1985, Rochester, New York) was an American motion-picture actress who was noted for her seemingly effortless incarnation of corrupt sensuality in silent-picture roles during the 1920s.
(Read Lillian Gish’s 1929 Britannica essay on silent film.)
Brooks was the daughter of a lawyer. She danced with the Denishawn company in 1922–24 and appeared in Florenz Ziegfeld’s Follies on Broadway in 1925. She made her film debut that same year, soon rising to leading roles in such Hollywood films as Howard Hawks’s A Girl in Every Port (1928) and William Wellman’s Beggars of Life (1928). Her performances attracted the attention of the German director G.W. Pabst, who cast her as the amoral self-destructive temptress Lulu in Die Büchse der Pandora (1929; Pandora’s Box). Brooks’s haunting performance in this film and as the 16-year-old girl who is seduced and prostituted in Pabst’s Das Tagebuch einer Verlorenen (1929; Diary of a Lost Girl) marked the summit of her career. Her innocent eroticism, along with her pale beautiful features and bobbed brunette hair, made her both a film icon and a symbol of the disdainful flapper of the 1920s.
Brooks returned to the United States in 1930, but her intellectual independence and outspokenness repeatedly brought her into conflict with studio executives there. After appearing in small roles in several Hollywood films during the 1930s, she permanently abandoned the cinema in 1938. Two years later Brooks opened a dance school in Wichita and wrote the booklet The Fundamentals of Good Ballroom Dancing. In 1943 she moved to New York City, where she held a series of jobs. In her later years she wrote articles for film journals, and her literate and intelligent collection of autobiographical essays, Lulu in Hollywood, was published in 1982.