Career
She made fifty-one films in a career which extended from 1910 until 1932. Born in Anchorage, Kentucky, Pearson worked for a brief time as an assistant in the public library in Louisville, Kentucky after completing school. Pearson trained in the tradition of the stars of the American stage, and played in stock productions in Washington, District of Columbia and New York City.
In New York she played the heroine in Hypocrisy, a story which laid bare "the shame of society." She was promoted by William Fox of Fox Film Corporation for the same kind of strong vamp parts as those played by Theda Bara.
Among her movies is Blazing Love (1916), Wildness of Youth (1922), The Vital Question (1916), Sister Against Sister (1917), The Red Kimona (1925), Wizard of Oz (1925), and The Phantom of the Opera (1925). The couple affiliated themselves with the Independent Productions Company, capitalized at $1,000,000.
In 1924 the couple were forced to declare bankruptcy. In 1928, Pearson was legally divorced from Lewis.
At the time, it was considered bad box office for screen actresses to be married.
Later they lived at the Motion Picture Country Home. Virginia Pearson died of uremic poisoning in Hollywood on June 6, 1958 nearly a month to the day after Sheldon Lewis. She was 72. Funeral services were held at the Pierce Brothers Hollywood Chapel.
She was buried in an unmarked grave in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.