2:43 PM PST 2/16/2018 by
Lassie Lou Ahern
She played a boy in the 1927 epic 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' starred opposite Will Rogers and taught dance to Renee Zellweger.
Lassie Lou Ahern, the versatile child actress who appeared in the Our Gang comedy shorts and played a boy in the Universal Pictures silent epic Uncle Tom's Cabin, has died. She was 97.
Ahern, who was a protégé of the American icon Will Rogers and years later taught dance to the likes of Renee Zellweger, died Thursday in Prescott, Arizona, of complications related to the flu, film preservationist Jeffrey Crouse told The Hollywood Reporter.
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1927), a film adaptation of Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 novel, took almost two years to make on location alongside the Mississippi River and had an advertised budget of $2 million, a record at the time.
Ahern's father tried to pass her off as a boy so she could get the part of Little Harry Harris, a child of a slave, by putting her in a suit and having her use his name, Freddie. After Lassie Lou demonstrated that she could cry on cue, producer-director Harry A. Pollard asked her, "You're not a boy, are you?"
"I was scared to death because my father was sitting in the corner of the room," she once recalled. "I looked at my father and saw that he had a slight smile on his face, so I looked at Mr. Pollard and shook my head. 'No,' I said. … Suddenly he got up out of his chair and set me down. He then walked to the door, stuck his head out where there was still a long line of boys and said, 'Thank you all for coming, we have found our Little Harry.' "
The advent of sound derailed her movie career in the late 1920s, but she formed an act with her older sister Peggy - also an Our Gang actress - and The Ahern Sisters danced, tumbled and spun ropes in hotels and nightclubs throughout North America for about a decade.
After the sister act had run its course, Ahern returned to Hollywood and danced in the Donald O'Connor movies Mister Big (1943), Top Man (1943) and Patrick the Great (1945). She also can be spotted in George Cukor's Gaslight (1944).