Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Helen Twelvetrees (Revised August 25)

Born Helen Marie Jurgens in Brooklyn, New York on Christmas day 1908, her career was born after noted artist George Bradshaw Crandall painted a portrait of her which made the cover of the Saturday Evening Post.

She met her first husband, Clark Twelvetrees, while both were enrolled at the American Academy of Dramatic Art. They both worked on the New York stage but he couldn't get his acting career going and turned to alcohol. They divorced in 1931 and he died seven years later of acute alcoholism following a street brawl.

With her stage experience a big plus, Helen went to Hollywood with a number of other actors to replace the silent stars that could not or would not make the transition to talkies. Named a 1929 WAMPAS Baby Star she quickly signed a contract with Pathé/RKO. For most of her screen career she was cast a woman falling for and defending the wrong men. We recently watched her in Millie (1931) and she was quite good in her role spanning twenty years as innocent single, to happily married, to unhappily married, to happily single, to unhappily single, to a down and out woman on the edge. She left RKO when Selznick brought onboard the more versatile (and younger) Katharine Hepburn and spent the remainder of her screen career as a freelance actress. Helen made 33 films from 1929 to 1939 and then returned to summer stock. She never had a really happy off-screen life and her sudden death in 1958 was pronounced a suicide.

I own no postcard images of Helen, but I scanned these two photos from New Movie Magazine, Sept. 1931 and Hollywood magazine, Oct. 1931.



And this just in (August 25) - received a copy of
New Movie Magazine, April, 1930,
and lo and behold, another lovely picture of Helen.

Helen Twelvetrees - What do you think - Allure?

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Helen was my great grandmother, I've collected twelvetrees memoribilia for awhile now! interest? I'd be happy to share.

bootsthedog said...

James,
I am a handicapped artist that would love to draw your great-grandmother. I think that it's great that you are keeping her memory alive. Her eyes are so much an intrigue that I want to capture it somehow. I've seen her movies on TCM and always thought she was wonderful. I wouldn't be drawing any images except for my own gratification, to catch those eyes. I would be happy to share anything I would do, unless I botch it up which has happened a lot lately. She'd pull me out of it I'm sure! I appreciate you and your time. May God bless, Steve Pinkerton

Anonymous said...

I love those pictures of Helen.
I have a few movies of her. She
came out to Australia to film a
movie called "Thoroughbred" - my
mother and another schoolfriend
skipped school to see if they could
go down where the filming was and
to see if they could get a glimpse
of their idol. My mother always
tells the story of seeing Helen
sitting in a chair under a tree
looking very grand. They also
wanted to see if they could find
work as extras as well but that was
not to be.
Even though Helen looks lovely as
a brunette (or in "Millie" - a
redhead) I think she was born to
be a blonde. Being blonde gave her
a fairy like wistfulness.

Anonymous said...

I have a great aoutograph from your grandmother in my grandmothers 1933 scrapebook. Unfortunatly it is being auction off in late november at wwwrrauction.com It is with a scrapebook with 40 other original signatures from stars of that era.It will be on the computer in virtual pages as the auctiu\on is a month long. good luck!!!

Darrell said...

Aloha James, I'm a huge fan of your Great Grandmother. I have several of her movies and have downloaded many photos of her. Anything else you can share would be awesome.

Darrell in Honolulu

Anonymous said...

Helen was a very good friend of my mom and dad. Her husband, Conrad Payne, and my father were fellow officers in the Air Force. She painted a picture of my dad, visited my brother along with our family, at West Point, and gave me a doll with blonde hair which I still have. (Her name is Helen)