She came into the world as Virginia Cecelia Labuna on June 26, 1904, in Brooklyn, a place where noise never slept and ambition had to push through cement. Later, her name would appear in magazines and on marquees as “Virginia Brown Faire,” but that came later, after she slipped into a contest called Fame and Fortune—the kind of name that laughs in your face while stealing your lunch money. She entered under her stepfather’s last name, Brown, and she won. Not just a ribbon, not a handshake, but a one-way ride straight into Hollywood.
She was fifteen.
Too young to know better.
Just young enough to beat the odds.
Metro put her to work almost immediately, sliding her in front of cameras like she had been born under hot lights. She floated through Fox, drifted into Universal, learned quickly how to stand still while an entire room buzzed around her. Between 1920 and 1935, she stacked up seventy-five films, some silent, some talkies, most forgotten by everyone except the people who lived them.
Her first credit was a 1920 short with Hoot Gibson—Runnin’ Straight—and that title might’ve been an omen for how the studios wanted her: bright-eyed, straightforward, no trouble. Then came Monte Cristo (1922), where she played leading lady to John Gilbert, the kind of man who could smirk at you and ruin your whole day. In 1923 she became a WAMPAS Baby Star, which meant the industry picked her as one of the girls who might, just might, be “the next big thing.” For most of them, the honor aged like milk.
But Virginia had something that endured:
She was Tinker Bell.
In the 1924 Peter Pan, she glowed, flickered, flitted, casting a charm that survived long after the rest of her résumé faded to dust. Long before Disney claimed the character, there she was—tiny, electric, a spark caught on film.
And then the world changed.
Hollywood learned to talk.
The silence that made so many stars disappear swallowed whole careers in minutes.
But she wasn’t one of the victims. She survived the transition with Frank Capra’s The Donovan Affair (1929)—her voice clear enough, her presence steady enough. She didn’t shoot to new heights, though. Instead, she drifted sideways into B-westerns, riding alongside Hoot Gibson again, Buck Jones, John Wayne, Ken Maynard—all those men who wore their spurs like punctuation marks. The westerns paid the bills, kept her visible, gave her a place to stand while the town reinvented itself again and again.
Eventually Hollywood spat her out like a seed that wouldn’t grow. She left for Chicago in the late 1930s, worked in radio, industrial films—the kinds of gigs that don’t earn you headlines but let you breathe. Later, she drifted back west, not as a star but as a survivor.
Her personal life wasn’t shy about drama.
She married actor Jack Dougherty in 1927—separated within months, reconciled, split, reconciled, split again, the whole thing like a skipping record. The divorce finally went through in 1928.
In 1930 she married director Duke Worne, and fate cut that story short when he died in 1933.
By 1935 she’d married William Bayer, a furniture manufacturer—solid, ordinary, dependable—the kind of life raft a person grabs after too many years swimming through studio lies. She stayed with him until the end.
After decades of being a memory more than a name, Virginia Brown Faire died of cancer on June 30, 1980, in Laguna Beach. Seventy-six years old. Quiet exit. No headlines.
But look closely:
She was part of the golden avalanche, one of the silent girls who made up the architecture of early film—not the skyscrapers, maybe, but the bricks that held everything together. She never claimed to be a legend. She worked. She adapted. She took the world as it came.
And somewhere, preserved on old stock that smells like vinegar and dust, Tinker Bell still glows, forever young, forever magical, long after the actress who played her walked off the set and into the shadows.
