Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Helen Twelvetrees

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Cause of death
  
Sedative overdose

Name
  
Helen Twelvetrees

Role
  
Movie actress


Nationality
  
American

Parents
  
Williams Jurgens

Occupation
  
Actress

Children
  
Frank Woody Jr.

Helen Twelvetrees Helen Twelvetrees Autographed Russell Ball Photo Actress

Full Name
  
Helen Marie Jurgens

Born
  
December 25, 1908 (
1908-12-25
)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

Education
  
Public School #119Brooklyn Heights Seminary

Died
  
February 13, 1958, Middletown, Pennsylvania, United States

Spouse
  
Conrad Payne (m. 1947–1958), Jack Woody (m. 1931–1936), Clark Twelvetrees (m. 1927–1931)

Movies
  
Millie, The Painted Desert, Her Man, Young Bride, Panama Flo

Similar People
  
Lilyan Tashman, Lupe Velez, William Boyd, John Francis Dillon, William A Seiter

Resting place
  
Middletown Cemetery

Joan Blondell & Lilyan Tashman Are Pre-Code Lesbians


Helen Marie Twelvetrees (December 25, 1908 – February 13, 1958) was an American film and theatre actress, who became a top female star through a series of "women's pictures" in the early 1930s.

Contents

Helen Twelvetrees Helen TwelvetreesAnnex

Lisa kron is looking for helen twelvetrees teaser trailer interview


Early life

Helen Twelvetrees 98739491jpgv8CD2C65218596B0

She was born Helen Marie Jurgens in Brooklyn, where she attended Public School 119. Her family moved to Flatbush, where her younger brother was born. One night during the winter of 1919, the four-bedroom apartment in which the family resided caught fire.Twelvetrees's brother perished in the burning structure, but the rest of the family was rescued. Later she attended Brooklyn Heights Seminary. After graduation, she enrolled in the Art Students League of New York, where she studied for a year before enrolling at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. While attending AADA, she met actor Clark Twelvetrees, whom she married in 1927. She adopted her husband's surname which she used as her professional name.

Career

Helen Twelvetrees Helen Twelvetrees Silent Screen Actress Pinterest Posts

With some stage experience, Twelvetrees went to Hollywood with a number of other actors to replace the silent stars who could not or would not make the transition to talkies. Her first job was with Fox Film Corporation, and she appeared in The Ghost Talks (1929). After three films with Fox, she was released from her contract. However, she was signed by Pathé shortly thereafter, and along with Constance Bennett and Ann Harding, Twelvetrees starred in several lachrymose dramas, not all of which were critically acclaimed. When Pathé was absorbed by RKO Radio Pictures, she found herself at various times miscast in mediocre films. With the arrival of Katharine Hepburn at RKO, Twelvetrees left the studio to freelance (Harding and Bennett would also subsequently depart).

Helen Twelvetrees Helen Twelvetrees The Time Bullet

The 1930 film Her Man set the course of her screen career, and she was subsequently cast in a series of roles portraying suffering women fighting for the wrong men. Later she played opposite Spencer Tracy in 1934's Now I'll Tell (also known as When New York Sleeps) from a novel by Mrs. Arnold Robinson; opposite Donald Cook in The Spanish Cape Mystery; and costarred in Paramount's A Bedtime Story with Maurice Chevalier. She also starred in two Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films, which prompted author John Douglas Eames to note that she "had a gift for projecting emotional force with minimal visible effort."

Helen Twelvetrees waytofamouscomimageshelentwelvetrees01jpg

In 1936, she traveled to Australia to star in the Cinesound Studios production Thoroughbred, about the rise of a Melbourne Cup winning racehorse. The filming was done at Cinesound Studios sound stages in Bondi Junction, Sydney. After filming completed, Twelvetrees returned home to Brooklyn, where she fell ill. After a slow recovery, she returned to acting in the USO production of The Man Who Came to Dinner. She made her final two films, Persons in Hiding and Unmarried, in 1939.

Twelvetrees left films in favor of summer stock and made her Broadway debut in Jacques Deval's Boudoir in 1941. The play folded after only 11 performances, and she largely retired after marrying for a third time. She continued to act occasionally and successfully essayed the role of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire in summer stock in Sea Cliff, New York, in August 1951. Fellow cast member Naomi Caryl (who played Eunice Hubbell) recalled that Twelvetrees had "the saddest eyes I'd ever seen" and "it was also obvious that she had an extremely fragile psyche."

Personal life

Helen Twelvetrees was married three times. She married her first husband, actor Clark Twelvetrees, in February 1927. During the marriage Clark Twelvetrees attempted suicide by jumping out a window. He was hospitalized for several months afterwards. In March 1930, she filed for divorce, citing mental cruelty. During the divorce trial, Twelvetrees claimed that Clark was an alcoholic who was drunk when they married and beat her on four occasions. Their divorce became final in March 1931. Clark Twelvetrees died in August 1938 of a skull fracture after striking his head on a curb when a man who witnessed him hitting a woman with whom he was arguing attempted to intervene.

Twelvetrees married real estate broker Frank Woody in April 1931. They had a son, Jack Bryan Woody, born in October 1932, who became a wildlife biologist. She filed for divorce in March 1936, and it was finalized the following month.

She married for a third and final time to farmer and Air Force captain Conrad Payne (13 November 1916 – 2 March 1970) in 1947. After their marriage, Twelvetrees occasionally acted in stage productions but essentially had left acting. She spent her remaining years traveling around the world with her husband, who was stationed in the United States and Europe.

Death

On February 13, 1958, Twelvetrees was found unconscious on the floor of her living room at her home in Middletown, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Harrisburg. She was taken to Olmstead Air Force Base Hospital in Middletown where she died. According to the county coroner, Twelvetrees had been suffering from a kidney ailment for some time and took an overdose of sedatives. Her death was ruled a suicide. Twelvetrees's remains were later cremated. Her funeral service was attended by only her widower and a close friend. Her ashes were interred in a grave in Middletown Cemetery. The gravesite was left unmarked until January 2013, at which point her surviving family placed a headstone.

For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Helen Twelvetrees has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6263 Hollywood Boulevard.

The play I'm Looking For Helen Twelvetrees explores her life through the eyes of an actor who went to see her perform in Long Island, New York. Parallels between Twelvetrees and the character she played, Blanche, are explored.

Filmography

Actress
1939
Unmarried as
Pat Rogers
1939
Persons in Hiding as
Helen Griswold
1937
Hollywood Round-Up as
Carol Stephens
1936
Thoroughbred as
Joan
1935
Frisco Waterfront as
Alice
1935
The Spanish Cape Mystery as
Stella Godfrey
1935
She Gets Her Man as
Francine
1935
Times Square Lady as
Margo Heath
1934
One Hour Late as
Betty Dunn
1934
She Was a Lady as
Sheila Vane
1934
Now I'll Tell as
Virginia Golden
1934
All Men Are Enemies as
Katha
1933
King for a Night as
Lillian Williams
1933
My Woman as
Connie Riley Rollins
1933
Disgraced as
Gay Holloway
1933
A Bedtime Story as
Sally
1932
Unashamed as
Joan Ogden
1932
Is My Face Red? as
Peggy Bannon
1932
State's Attorney as
June Perry
1932
Young Bride as
Allie
1932
Panama Flo as
Flo
1931
Bad Company as
Helen King Carlyle
1931
A Woman of Experience as
Elsa Elsbergen
1931
Millie as
Millie Blake Maitland
1931
The Painted Desert as
Mary Ellen Cameron
1930
The Cat Creeps as
Annabelle West
1930
Her Man as
Frankie Keefe
1930
Swing High as
Maryan Garner
1930
The Grand Parade as
Molly
1929
Words and Music as
Dorothy Blake
1929
Blue Skies as
Dorothy May (episode 2)
1929
The Ghost Talks as
Miriam Holt
Soundtrack
1932
Panama Flo (performer: "Some of These Days" (1910), "The Darktown Strutters' Ball" (1917) - uncredited)
Self
1934
Screen Snapshots, Series 14, No. 1 (Documentary short) as
Self
Archive Footage
2003
Complicated Women (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1997
Century of Cinema (TV Series documentary) as
Joan
- 40,000 years of dreaming (1997) - Joan
1995
The Celluloid Heroes (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
1991
The Republic Pictures Story (TV Movie documentary) as
Stella Godfrey (clip from The Spanish Cape Mystery (1935)) (uncredited)
1985
Don't Call Me Girlie (Documentary) as
Self
1963
Hollywood Without Make-Up (Documentary) as
Self
1932
Boo! (Short) as
Annabelle West (edited from "The Cat Creeps") (uncredited)

References

Helen Twelvetrees Wikipedia