Majel Coleman (February 22, 1903 – July 27, 1980) was an American silent-era film actress and model, originally from Mason, Ohio, whose screen career was closely tied to the beauty culture and studio machinery of the 1920s.
Early life
Coleman was born in Mason, Ohio, just north of Cincinnati, to Pierce (“Percy”) Coleman and Grace (née Slayback) Coleman. Her father was noted as a former Major League Baseball pitcher. The family later lived in Cincinnati, where she attended Hughes Center High School, graduating with the class of 1921.
In 1920, she won a Cincinnati Post beauty contest and was publicized as the “Most Beautiful Girl in Hamilton County.”
Modeling and “famous hands”
Before her acting work became her public identity, Coleman was marketed as a model—described in one period account as “a quiet red-haired girl”—and was promoted in 1920s press as one of the era’s standout beauties. By the mid-1920s, she was listed in publicity features alongside other well-known names in film and performance culture.
A distinctive part of her fame was unusual even for Hollywood: her hands. Studio screen tests and newspaper syndication pieces built a miniature legend around them—tapered fingers, careful nails, slender wrists—and she was frequently used as a hand double for close-ups. The press treated this as both a gimmick and a credential: the idea that her hands “broke into the movies” before her face did.
Another widely circulated story claimed that sculptors associated with the Cincinnati Art Institute used her hands as models for statues exhibited internationally, further feeding the mythos that her “perfection” had been validated by fine art as well as film.
Coleman also appeared in print advertising campaigns, including promotions for “Halo-Tress” cosmetics and wigs—exactly the kind of early beauty-industry endorsement that helped turn “screen presence” into a consumer identity.
Film career
Coleman went to Hollywood in 1921 after high school. Early newspaper coverage framed her as a beauty-contest discovery—part Cinderella narrative, part studio recruitment story—suggesting she was noticed through photographs and quickly absorbed into feature work.
She is associated in press accounts with early silent features and westerns, and she appeared in films during the 1920s that included Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife (1923) and several pictures connected to the silent-era production pipeline. Her credits also include Soft Shoes (1925) and West of Broadway (1926). In Corporal Kate (1926), she appeared in a cast that included Vera Reynolds and Julia Faye, in a World War I setting.
One of the more colorful—and very Hollywood—anecdotes in her biography involves Cecil B. DeMille. In the story, a stray dog and an accident in the street lead to DeMille noticing Coleman, after which he signed her to a contract in 1925 and began placing her in small parts. Whether embellished or not (as many studio-era “how I was discovered” tales were), it reflects the era’s obsession with chance encounters and destiny narratives.
In 1927, she played Procula, the wife of Pontius Pilate, in DeMille’s The King of Kings, a role often singled out as a notable credit in her filmography. Her later work included The Girl in the Glass Cage (1929) and Romance of the Rio Grande (1929), near the end of the silent-to-sound transition that abruptly reshaped many careers.
Personal life
Coleman married Victor Gangelin (1899–1967), an Academy Award–winning set decorator who worked across film and later television. They lived in Los Angeles, and she is sometimes identified by her married name, Majel Coleman Gangelin. Gangelin died in 1967.
Majel Coleman died in 1980 at age 77 in Paramount, California.

