On January 7, 1913, the "Tacoma Times" published a story about the successful recovery of "pretty Reatha Watson," a 16-year-old former Tacoma convent school student who had disappeared from Los Angeles. The suspects in the kidnapping were two Seattle residents, Violet Ake and C. C. Boxley.
One year later, on Feburary 19, 1914, Reatha Watson was back in the news again - this time for being "too pretty" to live safely in the city of Los Angeles.
"Miss Watson complained that she was constantly being annoyed by 'mashers,' and it was when she haled one of the more persistent admirers into police court that the judge took official cognizance of her attractiveness."
Shortly after this incident, Reatha changed her name and transformed herself into the famous film star Barbara La Marr - "The Girl Who Was Too Beautiful." Born in Yakima in 1896, she is reported to have made her stage debut in Tacoma in a 1904 production of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." She ran away from home at the age of 14 to become a burlesque dancer in Los Angeles, and also worked as a screenwriter before embarking on her successful acting career. She died in 1926.

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