Biography
A distant relative, her publicity insisted, of Francis Scott Key, dark-haired, exotic-looking Kathleen Key (née Lanahan) memorably played Tirzah to
Ramon Novarro's
Ben-Hur in the gigantic 1925 MGM production. Having made her screen debut in, of all places, Australia, Key was picked by writer/producer/director Ferdiand Pinney Earle to play opposite a very young Novarro in a reportedly dazzling and imaginative screen adaptation of The Rubaiat of Omar Khayyam, which sat on a shelf for four years before enjoying a brief release in 1925 due to Novarro's newfound celebrity. (Sadly, the potentially interesting film, re-titled
A Lover's Oath, apparently no longer exists.) Key was voted a 1923 Wampas Baby Star and went on to grace such popular films as the still extant
The Sea Hawk and
Revelation (both 1924), appearing as the Madonna in the latter.
Ben-Hur should have made her a major star, but a highly public battle with comedian
Buster Keaton -- he claimed she vandalized his dressing room after being refused a monetary loan -- virtually blacklisted her. Key played very minor roles in a couple of sound films, including a dance hall girl in
Mae West's
Klondike Annie (1936), but proved unable to pay a fine due to destitution when arrested for drunk driving in 1941. The former Wampas Baby spent her final years at the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, CA. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide