Natalie Kingston was born in Sonoma County, California and raised in San Francisco, California. Her father was Adolph Ringstrom. She was descended from Spanish and Hungarian ancestors. She was a great-
She began law school but dropped out to take a course in dancing. As a child she learned to dance the Jota (music) and other traditional Spanish dances. Two seasons later Kingston performed as a danseuse with the New York City Winter Garden show. Later she joined a Fanchon and Marco troupe in California after they discovered her dancing in a San Francisco cabaret.
Starting her career as an actress on Broadway, she moved into films in the early 1920s. Her first movie appearance was in The Daredevil (1923). She joined the Mack Sennett studios in 1924, and co-
She signed with Paramount Pictures and made three motion pictures in quick succession. All three are comedies. The first was Miss Brewster's Millions (1926), the second The Cat's Pajamas (1926), and the third was Wet Paint (1926).
Kingston's first dramatic role was in Street Angel (1928). She played the part of Lisetta. The same year she made Painted Post with Tom Mix. In this film she portrays a magazine illustrator who is seeking western types. She gets caught up in an exciting feud in her search for them. As Dona Beatriz Kingston was given a great opportunity in The Night of Love (1927). The movie featured Ronald Colman and Vilma Banky.
She appeared in two of the popular Tarzan films: as Mary Trevor in Tarzan the Mighty (1928) and was the fifth actress to play Jane in Tarzan the Tiger (1929). The Tarzan serial, which co-