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Helen Mack

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Full Name
  
Helen McDougall

Years active
  
1923–1971


Name
  
Helen Mack

Role
  
Actress

Helen Mack FileHelen Mack 1941jpg Wikimedia Commons

Born
  
November 13, 1913 (
1913-11-13
)

Occupation
  
actress, writer, director, producer

Died
  
August 13, 1986, Beverly Hills, California, United States

Spouse
  
Thomas McAvity (m. 1940–1974), Charles Irwin (m. 1935–1938)

Parents
  
William George McDougall, Regina Lenzer McDougall

Movies
  
Son of Kong, She, His Girl Friday, Kiss and Make‑Up, The Milky Way

Similar People
  
Ernest B Schoedsack, Irving Pichel, Harlan Thompson, Alan James, Leo McCarey

Movie legends helen mack


Helen Mack (November 13, 1913 – August 13, 1986) was an American actress. Mack started her career as a child actress in silent films, moving on to Broadway plays, and touring the vaudeville circuit. Her greater success as an actress was as a leading lady in the 1930s. Eventually Mack transitioned into performing on radio, and then into writing, directing, and producing some of the best known radio shows during the Golden Age of Radio. Later in life, Mack billed herself as a professional writer, writing for Broadway, stage, and television. Her career spanned the infancy of the motion picture industry, the beginnings of Broadway, the final days of Vaudeville, the transition to "talking pictures", the Golden Age of Radio, and the rise of television.

Contents

Helen Mack Helen Mack Web Site

Helen Mack - Wiki Videos


Youth and stage

Helen Mack helenmackusimagesHMackPublicityUnk1jpg

Helen Mack, born Helen McDougall, was the daughter of William George McDougall, a barber, and Regina (née Lenzer) McDougall, who had a repressed desire to become an actress. She obtained her education (1921–29) as a youth at the Professional Children's School of New York City. Vera Gordon was a friend who helped her along as a child actress. She appeared on Broadway, in vaudeville (1926–28) and in stock, as well as in silent films. Mack debuted on stage in The Idle Inn with Jacob Benami. She performed with Roland Young in The Idle Inn and toured America (1928–29) with William Hodge in Straight Through The Door.

Film actress

Helen Mack Helen MACK Biographie et filmographie

Her Fox Film screen test came in March 1931 and within three weeks she was on the studio lot. Mack began her film career, first billed as Helen Macks, in Success. The motion picture featured Brandon Tynan, Naomi Childers, and Mary Astor. In Zaza, Mack worked with Gloria Swanson. She also had a small role in D. W. Griffith's last film The Struggle (1931).

She made her debut as a leading lady opposite Victor McLaglen in While Paris Sleeps (1932) and was cast with John Boles in his initial Fox Film venture, Scotch Valley. Mack played in several westerns in the early 1930s. Among these are Fargo Express (1933) with Ken Maynard and The California Trail with Buck Jones.

Reviewer Norbert Lusk commented favorably regarding Mack's performance in the 1933 motion picture, Sweepings (1933). He said "she has a lively personality, appreciated all the more in a heavy, loomy picture, and she plays her shopgirl role with understanding and finesse." Prior to this film Mack's career had declined for three years. Three of her productions failed. One reason for this career downturn is that she was usually a character star. Her employers had used Mack as an ingenue. RKO Radio Pictures Inc. offered her a second chance as Mamie Donahue in Sweepings.

She may be best remembered for the 1933 movie sequel The Son of Kong, as Harold Lloyd's sister in The Milky Way (1936) and as the suicidal Molly Malloy in His Girl Friday (1940). She also played an important role as Tanya in Merian C. Cooper's production of H. Rider Haggard's She (1935) opposite Randolph Scott, Nigel Bruce, and Helen Gahagan (who did the title role as She, who must be obeyed). Other roles for Mack included the bank-robbing ingenue opposite Richard Cromwell and Lionel Atwill in 1937's The Wrong Road for RKO.

WAMPAS wrangle

Helen Mack Movie Legends Helen Mack YouTube

In 1931, thirteen members of the Fox Film Company publicity department resigned in protest after WAMPAS (Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers) did not include a Fox starlet on their annual list of baby stars. Linda Watkins missed by one vote and Mack was a bit farther down the list of those omitted. In response Fox named Mack, Watkins, and Conchita Montenegro as rival debutantes or budding stars. Fox proposed to name baby stars for each year after, by a vote of its executives.

Later career

Helen Mack Helen Mack 1913 1986 Find A Grave Memorial

In the 1940s and 1950s, Mack worked as a producer and director of radio programs including such series as Richard Diamond, Private Detective, The Saint and Meet Corliss Archer. As TV succeeded radio as the prevalent entertainment medium, she continued to write plays and TV episodes until her death.

Helen Mack Helen Mack Web Site

In 1949, she collaborated with Roger Price in writing the children's record Gossamer Wump, narrated by Frank Morgan and released by Capitol Records.

Private life

Mack married lawyer Charles Irwin in San Francisco, California, in February 1935 at age 21. Irwin was a bankruptcy trustee for Fox Film West Coast Theaters. By this time Mack was under contract to Paramount Pictures. They had a son in 1936 and divorced in 1938. In 1940 she married Thomas McAvity in Santa Barbara, California. McAvity later became Vice President in Charge of Television Network for NBC. They had one son. McAvity died in 1974.

In 1986, Mack died after a battle with cancer.

Filmography

Actress
1945
Divorce as
Martha Phillips
1945
Strange Holiday as
Miss Sims--Secretary
1944
And Now Tomorrow as
Angeletta Gallo
1941
Power Dive as
Betty Coles
1940
Girls of the Road as
Mickey
1940
His Girl Friday as
Mollie Malloy
1939
Calling All Marines as
Judy Fox
1939
Mickey the Kid as
Telephone Operator (uncredited)
1939
Mystery of the White Room as
Carole Dale
1938
Gambling Ship as
Mollie Riley
1938
Secrets of a Nurse as
Katherine MacDonald
1938
I Stand Accused as
Alison Cooper
1938
King of the Newsboys as
Mary Ellen Stephens
1937
The Wrong Road as
Ruth Holden
1937
Fit for a King as
Jane Hamilton / Princess Helen
1937
The Last Train from Madrid as
Lola
1937
You Can't Buy Luck as
Betty McKay
1937
I Promise to Pay as
Mary Lang
1937
A Doctor's Diary as
Nurse (uncredited)
1936
The Milky Way as
Mae Sullivan
1935
The Return of Peter Grimm as
Catherine
1935
She as
Tanya Dugmore
1935
Four Hours to Kill! as
Helen
1935
Captain Hurricane as
Susan 'Matey' Ann
1934
College Rhythm as
June Cort
1934
The Lemon Drop Kid as
Alice Deering
1934
You Belong to Me as
Florette Faxon
1934
Kiss and Make-Up as
Annie
1934
All of Me as
Eve Haron
1933
Son of Kong as
Hilda
1933
Fargo Express as
Helen Clark
1933
Christopher Bean as
Susan Haggett
1933
Blind Adventure as
Rose Thorne
1933
Melody Cruise as
Laurie Marlowe
1933
The California Trail as
Dolores Ramirez
1933
Sweepings as
Mamie Donahue
1932
While Paris Sleeps as
Manon Costaud
1932
The Silent Witness as
Sylvia Pierce
1931
The Struggle as
A Catty Girl
1924
Pied Piper Malone as
Child (as Helen Macks)
1924
Grit as
Gang Membert (uncredited)
1923
Under the Red Robe (uncredited)
1923
Zaza as
Lucille Dufresne (uncredited)
1923
Success as
Ruth (as Helen Macks)
Writer
1960
Mel-O-Toons (TV Series) (1 episode)
- Gosomer Wump (1960) - (uncredited)
Miscellaneous
1955
Homer Bell (TV Series) (story supervisor - 1 episode)
- Episode dated 1 March 1955 (1955) - (story supervisor)
Soundtrack
1935
The Return of Peter Grimm (performer: "In the Gloaming" (1877) - uncredited)
1934
You Belong to Me (performer: "Sweepin' The Clouds Away")
1933
Son of Kong (performer: "The Runaway Blues" - uncredited)
Archive Footage
2011
Lost Forever (Documentary short) as
Mollie Molloy (clip from His Girl Friday (1940)) (uncredited)

References

Helen Mack Wikipedia