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IMDbPro

Helen Vinson(1907-1999)

  • Actress
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Spencer Tracy and Helen Vinson in The Power and the Glory (1933)
Trailer for this classic action adventure
Play trailer2:08
Torrid Zone (1940)
6 Videos
83 Photos
Texas-born Helen Vinson was born Helen Rulfs in Beaumont on September 17, 1907, the daughter of an oil company exec.. The family eventually settled in Houston, where her inflamed passion for acting was first ignited. While in her teens she married Harry N. Vickerman, a man fifteen years her senior who came from a well-to-do Philadelphia family. Although she was not accepted into the drama department of the University of Texas. She persevered by earning parts in local theater productions. She eventually made her Broadway debut in a walk-on role in a production entitled "Los Angeles" (1927). The stock market crash of 1929 ruined her husband's business and the stress and anguish precipitated divorce proceedings after only five years. Helen gained further notice on Broadway in "Berlin" starring Sydney Greenstreet and "The Fatal Alibi" (1932) with Charles Laughton. During this time she was also noticed by Warner Brothers talent scouts who ushered the svelte blonde straight to Hollywood.

A chic, elegant beauty with a tinge of a Southern drawl, she played both lead and support roles in pre-Code films. Making a strong impression trading insults as the aloof "other woman." Often unsympathetic, self-involved and frequently bitchy and backstabbing. She was not above using her feminine wiles to get her way. She played Kay Francis' epicurean friend in the mild comedy Jewel Robbery (1932), and stood between Loretta Young and David Manners happiness as his wealthy fiance in the soap-styled drama They Call It Sin (1932). In the classic Je suis un évadé (1932), she had a rather bland "nice girl" role as the stylish woman Paul Muni leaves Glenda Farrell for. Appearing opposite a number of diminutive male stars such as Muni, Edward G. Robinson, James Cagney and George Raft, whom she danced with in Club de Minuit (1933), the almost 5'7" actress was not too popular with the so-called vertically-challenged leading men at Warners and was quickly released from her contract.

Earlier (in 1931) she had earned major Broadway notice as the female lead in the fantasy "Death Takes a Holiday" playing a woman who literally faces Death (played by Philip Merivale). Both she and Merivale missed out on recreating their roles in the 1934 film version when the parts instead went to Fredric March and Evelyn Venable. More film work came Helen's way alongside some of Hollywood's most popular and virile leading men. She played Warner Baxter's castoff wife in Frank Capra's La course de Broadway Bill (1934) and Gary Cooper's problematic mate in Soir de noces (1935). She appeared with Charles Boyer in Private Worlds (1935); Humphrey Bogart in Two Against the World (1936); James Cagney in Torrid Zone (1940) and even lightened it up a little bit in the Bob Hope/Paulette Goddard comedy Rien que la vérité (1941). One of Helen's best known film roles, however, came with the plush drama L'autre (1939) starring Cary Grant and Carole Lombard. In this vintage soaper, Vinson plays a close confidante to the highly manipulative and rancorous Kay Francis, who is married to Grant, who has in turn fallen in love with good-hearted Lombard.

When Helen married the British Wimbledon tennis champion Fred Perry, in 1935. She moved to England for a time. While there she made the films Transatlantic (1935), King of the Damned (1935) and Love in Exile (1936), which resulted in little fanfare. They relocated to Los Angeles a couple years later so she could find more work. Perry also hoped he could parlay his sports fame into a movie career. Their highly publicized marriage was short-lived, however. Lasting only five years. After marrying her third husband, stockbroker Donald Hardenbrook, in 1945. Helen gave up her career completely according to the wishes of her husband. The couple remained together until his death in 1976. She had no children from her three marriages. After her retirement, she found varied interests including interior design. For the remainder of her life. She divided home life between Chapel Hill, North Carolina and Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. Helen passed away in Chapel Hill in 1999 of natural causes at the age of 92.
BornSeptember 17, 1907
DiedOctober 7, 1999(92)
BornSeptember 17, 1907
DiedOctober 7, 1999(92)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 1 win total

Photos83

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Known for

Je suis un évadé (1932)
Je suis un évadé
8.2
  • Helen
  • 1932
Mary Astor and William Powell in Meurtre au chenil (1933)
Meurtre au chenil
6.8
  • Doris Delafield
  • 1933
James Cagney, Pat O'Brien, and Ann Sheridan in Torrid Zone (1940)
Torrid Zone
6.7
  • Gloria Anderson
  • 1940
Cary Grant, Carole Lombard, and Kay Francis in L'autre (1939)
L'autre
7.0
  • Suzanne Duross
  • 1939

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Myrna Loy, William Powell, and Asta in L'introuvable rentre chez lui (1944)
    L'introuvable rentre chez lui
    7.3
    • Helena Draque
    • 1944
  • Ivan Lebedeff, Noel Neill, Robin Raymond, Lyle Talbot, and Helen Vinson in Are These Our Parents? (1944)
    Are These Our Parents?
    4.8
    • Myra Salisbury
    • 1944
  • 1 sheet, 27 x 41,
    La Femme et le Monstre
    5.7
    • Chloe Donovan
    • 1944
  • Ann Blyth, Joel Kupperman, Donald O'Connor, and Peggy Ryan in Les trois gloires (1944)
    Les trois gloires
    6.8
    • Glory Marlow Jr.
    • 1944
  • Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard in Rien que la vérité (1941)
    Rien que la vérité
    7.1
    • Linda Graham
    • 1941
  • Dennis O'Keefe in Bowery Boy (1940)
    Bowery Boy
    7.1
    • Peggy Winters
    • 1940
  • James Cagney, Pat O'Brien, and Ann Sheridan in Torrid Zone (1940)
    Torrid Zone
    6.7
    • Gloria Anderson
    • 1940
  • Harry Carey, Richard Carlson, Jean Parker, C. Aubrey Smith, Helen Vinson, and Charles Winninger in Beyond Tomorrow (1940)
    Beyond Tomorrow
    6.5
    • Arlene Terry
    • 1940
  • Robert Armstrong, Richard Cromwell, Marjorie Reynolds, and Helen Vinson in Enemy Agent (1940)
    Enemy Agent
    6.1
    • Irene Hunter
    • 1940
  • Alan Mowbray, Barbara Read, and Helen Vinson in Curtain Call (1940)
    Curtain Call
    5.9
    • Charlotte Morley
    • 1940
  • Patric Knowles, Alan Marshal, Barbara Read, and Helen Vinson in Married and in Love (1940)
    Married and in Love
    5.8
    • Doris Wilding
    • 1940
  • Cary Grant, Carole Lombard, and Kay Francis in L'autre (1939)
    L'autre
    7.0
    • Suzanne Duross
    • 1939
  • Robert Benchley, Robert Montgomery, and Rosalind Russell in La vie, l'art et l'amour (1937)
    La vie, l'art et l'amour
    5.9
    • Lily Chalmers
    • 1937
  • Joan Bennett and Warner Baxter in Vogues 38 (1937)
    Vogues 38
    5.9
    • Mary Curson
    • 1937
  • Annette Dionne, Cecile Dionne, Emilie Dionne, Marie Dionne, Yvonne Dionne, Jean Hersholt, Rochelle Hudson, Robert Kent, and The Dionne Quintuplets in Reunion (1936)
    Reunion
    5.1
    • Gloria Sheridan
    • 1936

Videos6

Official Trailer
Trailer 3:36
Official Trailer
Official Trailer
Trailer 2:20
Official Trailer
Official Trailer
Trailer 2:20
Official Trailer
Jewel Robbery
Trailer 1:44
Jewel Robbery
Lawyer Man
Trailer 2:33
Lawyer Man
Torrid Zone
Trailer 2:08
Torrid Zone
I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang
Trailer 2:33
I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang

Personal details

Edit
  • Height
    • 1.69 m
  • Born
    • September 17, 1907
    • Beaumont, Texas, USA
  • Died
    • October 7, 1999
    • Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA(natural causes)
  • Spouses
      Hardenbrook, Donald1946 - 1976 (his death)
  • Parents
      Edward A. Rulfs
  • Other works
    Performed on Broadway in the following productions:
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Article

Did you know

Edit
  • Quotes
    Hollywood seemed to be an absolute sea of short men. Robinson, Muni, James Cagney and George Raft all had to stand on boxes when they acted with me.

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