Born in
Shreveport, Louisiana, Later that year she appeared as Alice Palmer in
Theodore Kremer's
The Slaves of the Orient at the
Star Theatre. She did not return to Broadway again until 1910 when she starred as Mrs. Comstock in
Maurice Campbell's ''Where There's a Will'' with the American Play Company at Weber's Music Hall. That same year she toured nationally as Mrs. Wright in
Rida Johnson Young's
The Lottery Man. In 1911 Moore was engaged at the
Theatre Royal, Nottingham where she starred opposite the British actress Winifred Delevanti in Arthur S. Gill's
The Kiss of Isis. In 1913 she starred in
George Scarborough's Broadway play
The Lure, and reprised her role in the
1914 silent film of the same name. In 1914 she returned to Broadway in another play penned by Scarborough,
What is love?, in the role of Mrs. Samuel Hoyt. In 1919 Moore created the role of Mrs. Smith in the original Broadway production of
Rachel Crothers's
39 East; a role she also performed in the
1920 silent film. She created roles in several more plays written by women on Broadway, including Mrs. Wolfe in Laura Hinkley and Mabel Ferris's ''Another Man's Shoes'' (1918), The Governor's Wife in Cora Dick Gantt's
The Tavern (1920), Mary Vaughan in
Clare Kummer's
The Mountain Men (1921), and Mrs. Simmons in
Anita Loos and
John Emerson's ''The Whole Town's Talking'' (1923). She also portrayed Miss Pritchard in the 1918 Broadway revival of
Jean Webster's
Daddy-Long-Legs. Moore's other film credits include
Caprice of the Mountains (1916), Nancy Allen in
Little Miss Happiness (1916), Lady Clifford in
Her Double Life (1916), and the Mother in
The Small Town Girl (1917). Her other roles in original plays on Broadway included Mrs. Springer in
Edgar Selwyn's
Anything Might Happen (1923), Mrs. Harrington in
Barry Conners's
The Patsy (1925), Mrs. Halevy in
Maxwell Anderson's ''
Saturday's Children'' (1927), Mrs. Weaver in
J. C. and
Elliott Nugent's
Take My Advice (1927), Mrs. James Russell Lockhart Sr. in Barry Conners's
Girl Trouble (1928), and Mrs. Farquhar in Don Mullally and H. A. Archibald's
Coastwise (1931). Moore died in New York City on April 1, 1932. ==References==