Tien Hogue | |
---|---|
Born | Anne Christina Hogue 29 June 1892 |
Died | 1 November 1964 Tasmania | (aged 72)
Occupation(s) | Film and stage actress |
Tien Hogue was the stage name of Anne Christina Hogue (29 June 1892 – November 1964), an Australian actress of stage and screen in the silent era.
She was a popular personality, who, though marriage, became Lady Wyatt.[1]
The fourth daughter, and youngest child of James Alexander Hogue (1846–1920),[2][3] and Jessie Hogue (1853–1932), née Robards,[4][5][6] Anne Christina Hogue was born at Glebe Point, Sydney, New South Wales on 29 June 1892.[7][8]
She was the sister of Major Oliver Hogue (1880–1919), who wrote under the name of Trooper Blue Gum,[9][10] and of John Roland Hogue (1882–1958), the talented professional singer (baritone), Broadway, film, and U.S.television actor, and playwright.[11]
She married Guy Wyatt (1893–1981) of the British Navy, later Vice-Admiral Sir Arthur Guy Norris Wyatt, K.B., C.B. on 19 January 1922,[12] and moved to England.[13] The couple later settled in Tasmania.[14]
She died in Tasmania in November 1964.
Tien Hogue was the subject of an Archibald Prize finaliat painting by Joseph Wolinski (1872–1955) in 1926.[18]
She was a witness in the Dicker case where the Tasmanian Labor MP David Edward Dicker (1882–1967) was charged with "disloyal utterances",[19] in his making of statements likely to prejudice recruiting.[20][21]