Career
Teare acted in Mack Sennett comedies during World War I. Her first film appearances came in 1914. She performed in The Widow"s Might, Fatty and the Shyster Lawyer, Tough Luck Smith, The Devil and Mistress Walker, In Dutch, Through The Keyhole, and Love, Oil and Grease.
In Desperate Bud, the Plumber, a Kalem Company comedy, Teare was supported by Charles Dudley in the title role.
Some Romance, also produced by Kalem, featured Teare and her mastiff. Kalem was a forerunner of Universal Pictures in Hollywood.
These Ham and Bud comedies were directed by Sennett. Teare continued in motion pictures until the mid-1920s.
One of her final roles was in Antony and Cleopatra (1924), a comedy short directed by Bryan Foy.
Other roles of note include Hold Maine Tight (1920), Skirts (1921), Please Be Careful (1922), Columbus and Isabella (1924), and A Woman Who Sinned (1924). Teare married an assistant to the president of Bank of America. She was also known as Mistress
Ethel O. Risso.
Ethel Teare died in San Mateo, California in 1959, following a long illness. She was 65. She had resided in San Mateo since 1925. She was entombed in Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, California.