Dorothy Montana Coburn (June 8, 1905 - May 15, 1978) was an American film actress who appeared in a number of early Laurel and Hardy silents. She was a niece of author Walt Coburn and granddaughter of Robert Coburn Sr., founder of the Circle C Ranch in Montana.
Coburn was born to cowboy-poet and Western film producer Wallace Coburn and Ann Reifenrath Coburn in Great Falls, Montana but raised in Prescott, Arizona.
Coburn played ingenue leads and comedic roles. Her documented film repertoire consisted of 16 silent short subjects for the Hal Roach studios, and she appeared in scores of films as horseback-stuntwoman opposite such stars as Gary Cooper and Joel McCrea,[citation needed] and as a stand-in for Ginger Rogers in several of her dancing films with Fred Astaire. Coburn retired from the movie business in the early 1930s. Coburn occasionally worked as a stunt performer in westerns.
After leaving the movie business in 1936, she found employment as a receptionist for an insurance company. She was married twice. Coburn died in 1978, aged 72, from emphysema. She is interred in Grand View Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
Her first husband, Joseph Maier, died in Santa Barbara on March 4, 1959. In 1973 she married Harry W. Heap in Santa Barbara, California. Before Coburn's death in 1978, the couple lived in Rancho Palos Verdes.
Filmography
The Battle of the Century (1927) Putting Pants on Philip (1927) Us (1927) Hats Off (1927) The Second Hundred Years (1927) Sailors, Beware! (1927) Sugar Daddies (1927) All for Geraldine (1928) The Cross Country Bunion Race (1928) Do Gentlemen Snore? (1928) Look Pleasant (1928) That Night (1928) Rubber Necks (1928) Should Married Men Go Home? (1928) Barnum & Ringling, Inc. (1928) From Soup to Nuts (1928) The Finishing Touch (1928) Flying Elephants (1928) Leave 'Em Laughing (1928) Playin' Hookey (1928) Sailor Suits (1929) Up and Down Stairs (1930) Hot - And How! (1930) Shivering Shakespeare (1930)