
Linda Arvidson (born Linda Arvidson Johnson, July 12, 1884 – July 26, 1949; sometimes credited as Linda Griffith) was an American stage and film actress and philanthropist through the Linda A. Griffith Fund. She became one of America's early motion picture stars while working at Biograph Studios in New York, where none of the company's actors, until 1913, were credited on screen. Along with Florence Lawrence, Marion Leonard, and other female performers there, she was often referred to by theatergoers and in trade publications as simply one of the "Biograph girls". Arvidson began working in the new, rapidly expanding film industry after meeting her future husband D. W. Griffith, who impressed her as an innovative screen director. Their marriage was kept secret for reasons of professional discretion.
[biography (excerpted) from Wikipedia]

The Wife
1914 · as Helen Truman

The Medicine Bottle
1909 · as Telephone Operator / At Party

The Eavesdropper
1909 · as Mercedes' Friend

Charity
1916 · as Mary Fleming

Leather Stocking
1909 · as One of the Colonel's Nieces

Pranks
1909

The Two Paths
1911

A Fool's Revenge
1909 · as At Court

The Golden Louis
1909 · as Reveller

The Children's Friend
1909

For a Wife's Honor
1908 · as The Maid

King of the Cannibal Islands
1908 · as Extra in chase

The Redman and the Child
1908

The Mills of the Gods
1909 · as Hulda - the Maid

I Did It
1909 · as A Visitor

The Red Girl
1908 · as Woman in Second Bar

The Man and the Woman
1908 · as Gladys

The Joneses Have Amateur Theatricals
1909 · as The Maid