Film à voir !


Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 27 films

Né(e) le 11 août 1891

Lieu de naissance
Philadelphia, PA

Mort le 25 septembre 1959 (à 68 ans)

Helen Broderick

Acteur dans

1946

  • Because of Him

1945

  • Love, Honor and Goodbye

1944

  • 3 Is a Family
  • Her Primitive Man
  • Chip Off the Old Block

1943

  • Stage Door Canteen

1941

  • Father Takes a Wife
  • Nice Girl?
  • Virginia

1939

  • Honeymoon in Bali
  • Naughty But Nice
  • Stand Up and Fight

1938

  • Service de Luxe
  • The Rage of Paris
  • Radio City Revels

1937

  • She's Got Everything
  • The Life of the Party
  • Meet the Missus
  • We're on the Jury

1936

  • Smartest Girl in Town
  • Sur les ailes de la danse
  • The Bride Walks Out
  • Murder on a Bridle Path
  • Love on a Bet

1935

  • To Beat the Band
  • Le Danseur du dessus

1931

  • 50 Million Frenchmen
Helen Broderick was a wonderfully funny character comedienne with vaudeville and stage experience, a close friend of Jeanne Eagels. The story goes, that at the age of 14 she ran away from home, because her mother, who appeared in operatic comedy, was totally obsessed by the theatre. Paradoxically, all the people she met turned out to be performers, and Helen (who needed to make a living, after all) ended up where she hadn't wanted to end up - on the stage. She started out as a chorus girl in the first Ziegfeld Follies in 1907. Her talent for comedy was discovered quite by accident. In 1911, she was understudy to the actress Ina Claire in the Broadway play 'Jumping Jupiter'. One night, Claire was unable to perform and Helen Broderick stood in as the romantic lead. She soon had the audience in stitches, trampling about the stage like an elephant, rolling her big saucer eyes and attempting to croon 'Cuddle Near Me All Day Long' in her rather unique voice. The romance was no more and instead turned into a popular farce with Helen now permanently installed in the lead role. For a while, Helen partnered her husband, Lester Crawford, in vaudeville. In the 1920's, she enjoyed success on Broadway, most notably in 'Fifty Million Frenchmen' ( a role she took to Hollywood in 1931). Her best parts in the movies were as the perennial friend or chaperone of the heroine (an earlier Eve Arden), delivering acidic wisecracks in her inimitable dead-pan manner. She was particularly amusing in Top Hat (1935) and Swing Time (1936) with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers; and in The Rage of Paris (1938) with Danielle Darrieux.





0.808 sec