Enid Bennett (July 15, 1893 – May 14, 1969) was an Australian-born silent film actress who became a prominent leading lady in American cinema, particularly during the late 1910s and early 1920s. Combining a natural, understated acting style with striking classic beauty, she transitioned seamlessly from touring theater in Australia to the heights of early American cinema.
Bennett arrived in the United States in June 1915 alongside director Fred Niblo and his wife, Broadway star Josephine Cohan. After a successful stint on Broadway, she caught the eye of legendary pioneer producer Thomas H. Ince. Ince was looking for fresh talent for the Triangle Film Corporation and signed Bennett to a contract that would define the first major phase of her career. Between 1918 and 1921, Bennett was exceptionally prolific, starring in 23 films for Triangle. Unlike many silent stars of the era who played hyper-dramatic, distressed damsels, Bennett’s roles often showcased a practical, assertive, and modern sensibility.
Following Josephine Cohan’s tragic death in 1916, Bennett married Fred Niblo in 1918. Niblo directed many of her most popular Triangle releases, establishing a highly successful personal and professional partnership. Sadly, like much of silent film history, the majority of Bennett’s solo star vehicles from this era (such as Fuss and Feathers and Silk Hosiery) are currently considered lost. However, surviving prints like The Woman in the Suitcase (1920) reveal her sharp comedic timing and charisma.
As the early 1920s took shape, Bennett transitioned from headlining smaller domestic comedies and dramas to anchoring massive, high-budget Hollywood spectacles. Her career reached its historic zenith when she was cast as Maid Marian opposite Douglas Fairbanks in the monumental adventure epic Robin Hood. It was one of the most expensive and successful films of the silent era. Looking back on the role decades later, Bennett cheekily recalled to film historian Kevin Brownlow: “I had a wonderful time playing Maid Marian. Of course, the part was not too demanding, I just walked through it in a queenly manner. [Fairbanks] was wonderful, inspiring.”
Bennett followed her Robin Hood success with two more landmark roles in 1924: Lady Rosamund Godolphin in Frank Lloyd’s acclaimed adventure The Sea Hawk, and Marise La Noue in The Red Lily, starring opposite Ramon Novarro and directed by her husband, Fred Niblo.
By the mid-1920s, Bennett deliberately slowed her career to focus on family life, occasionally assisting Niblo behind the scenes (including serving as an uncredited assistant director during the chaotic production of 1925’s Ben-Hur). Though she made a brief, successful transition to early sound films in the 1930s, it is her brilliant run between 1917 and 1924 that marks her as a true pioneer of early Hollywood.



































