From Wikipedia
Eva Moore (9 February 1868 â 27 April 1955) was an English
actress. Her career on stage and in film spanned six decades, and she was
active in the women's suffrage movement. In her 1923 book of reminiscences,
Exits and Entrances, she describes approximately ninety of her roles in plays,
but she continued to act on stage until 1945. She also acted in more than two
dozen films. Her daughter, Jill Esmond, was the first wife of Laurence Olivier.
From 1920 to 1946, Moore made over two dozen films,
beginning with The Law Divine (1920). Some of her best-received silent films
were Flames of Passion (1922), The Great Well (1924), Chu-Chin-Chow (1925) and
Motherland (1927). Her most popular 'talkies' included Almost a Divorce (1931),
The Old Dark House (1932), Leave It to Smith (1933), I Was a Spy (1933), Jew
Süss (1934), A Cup of Kindness (1934), Vintage Wine (1935), The Divorce of Lady
X (1938, which starred her son-in-law Laurence Olivier), and Of Human Bondage
(1946).