Marten was born in Washington, DC, and
Photoplay claimed she was 19 in 1913, putting her approximate birth year as 1894, although movie magazines could be notoriously inaccurate on age. Her nickname was "The Gibson Girl," because she won first place over 4,000 contestants in the
New York World "Gibson Girl" beauty contest sponsored by a fabric company, Spring Maid, that was an occasional route to movie contracts. Some movie magazines claimed she had actually posed for artist
Charles Dana Gibson. Marten began acting at age six on the stage, playing the part of little Eva in one of the "
Uncle Tom" touring shows. She first appeared in films for the
Lubin Stock Company in 1912, then moving to the
Eclair Company. Among her films for Eclair in 1913 were The Spectre Bridegroom, The Trail of the Silver Fox, Right of Way, Rosary, For Better or Worse, Jacques the Wolf, Over the Cliffs, and Big-Hearted Jim. A
Gaumont-Mutual film, "An Idol of the Stage," opened at the beginning of 1916, and reviews were mixed, although critic
Wid Gunning praised her for her small part. "The Man from Nowhere" (Red Feather Photoplays) opened in the summer, and she seemed to have been moving from studio to studio. In October 1916 Photoplay magazine reported that she was no longer appearing in films. By 1917 she was making fewer films, including "Corruption," and
Motion Picture News announced that she was going on location to Miami, Florida for several weeks as the head of a group of actors working with under-sea diver
Tom Barry to make "underwater pictures for the Universal." In October The Answer Man, a column written pseudonymously by
Elizabeth M. Heinemann, and the most popular column in
Motion Picture Magazine, replied that she had moved to
Vitagraph studios; after 1917 she no longer appeared in the motion picture news, or at least not under that name. ==References==