. . . . . . . . "1923-06-05"^^ . "Minerva Burgess"@en . . "Minnie Devereaux"@en . . . "1913"^^ . "Minnie Provost"@en . . . "Minnie Devereaux, conosciuta anche come Minnie Prevost o Minnie Ha Ha (Canadian, 1891 \u2013 Los Angeles, 5 giugno 1923), \u00E8 stata un'attrice statunitense del cinema muto. Di origine nativa, alcune fonti riportano che era di origine cheyenne, figlia di un capo. In un'intervista del 1917 si dichiarava che era nata da genitori cheyenne sfuggiti alle truppe di Custer durante la battaglia di Little Bighorn."@it . "Minnie Devereaux (1869\u20131923) was an American silent film actress. She was a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes in Oklahoma.More commonly known as \"Minnie Provost\" and occasionally \"Indian Minnie,\" or \"Minnie Ha-Ha,\" she held at least 14 roles, beginning in 1913 with Old Mammy\u2019s Secret Code and ending with the 1923 release of The Girl of the Golden West. A few sources say she was a Cheyenne and the daughter of a Chief Plenty Horses. However, her father is often confused with Plenty Horses who was Lakota and born the same year as Minnie. In a 1917 interview published in the Mack Sennett Weekly Provost states that she was born to Cheyenne parents who fled G. A. Custer's Army during the Battle of the Little Bighorn, an event that took place when she was eight years old."@en . . . "Motion Picture Magazine"@en . . "Devereaux and Mabel Normand on"@en . . "Actress"@en . . . . . . . "1923"^^ . . . . "Minnie Ha-ha"@en . . "Minerva Burgess"@en . . . "23113500"^^ . "Minnie Devereaux, conosciuta anche come Minnie Prevost o Minnie Ha Ha (Canadian, 1891 \u2013 Los Angeles, 5 giugno 1923), \u00E8 stata un'attrice statunitense del cinema muto. Di origine nativa, alcune fonti riportano che era di origine cheyenne, figlia di un capo. In un'intervista del 1917 si dichiarava che era nata da genitori cheyenne sfuggiti alle truppe di Custer durante la battaglia di Little Bighorn."@it . . . . . . . "Los Angeles, California"@en . "During the conversation, the name of Minnie, a fat, old Indian woman who has almost become a moving picture institution, was mentioned and he commented laughingly on her way of always saying and doing the unexpected."@en . . . "\"A Dryadic Dramatist\""@en . . "10520"^^ . "Minnie Devereaux"@en . . "Minnie Devereaux"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Minnie Devereaux"@it . . . . . . . "1869"^^ . . . "Indian Minnie"@en . "t"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "1923-06-05"^^ . . "Beth Trepel"@en . "Minnie Devereaux (1869\u20131923) was an American silent film actress. She was a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes in Oklahoma.More commonly known as \"Minnie Provost\" and occasionally \"Indian Minnie,\" or \"Minnie Ha-Ha,\" she held at least 14 roles, beginning in 1913 with Old Mammy\u2019s Secret Code and ending with the 1923 release of The Girl of the Golden West. A few sources say she was a Cheyenne and the daughter of a Chief Plenty Horses. However, her father is often confused with Plenty Horses who was Lakota and born the same year as Minnie. In a 1917 interview published in the Mack Sennett Weekly Provost states that she was born to Cheyenne parents who fled G. A. Custer's Army during the Battle of the Little Bighorn, an event that took place when she was eight years old."@en . "cover of Mack Sennett Weekly, 1917"@en . . . "Minnie Ha-ha"@en . . . "1121714066"^^ . "1913"^^ . . . . . . . "1923"^^ . . . . . "260"^^ . . . . . "Minnie Provost"@en . . . . . . . . . "Indian Minnie"@en . . . "Minnie Devereaux"@en . . . . . . . . . "c. 1869"@en . . . . .