Helen Hayes
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Helen Hayes | |
![]() Helen Hayes in Anastasia. |
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Birth name | Helen Hayes Brown |
Born | October 10, 1900 Washington, D.C. |
Died | March, 1993 Nyack, New York |
Academy Awards | |
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Best Actress 1932 The Sin of Madelon Claudet Best Supporting Actress 1970 Airport |
Helen Hayes (October 10, 1900 – March 17, 1993) was a two-time Academy Award-winning American actress whose successful and award-winning career spanned almost 70 years. She eventually garnered the nickname "First Lady of the American Theater", and was one of the twelve people who have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony Award.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
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Hayes was born Helen Hayes Brown in Washington, D.C. Her father, Francis Van Arnum Brown, worked at a number of jobs, including as a clerk at the Washington Patent Office[1] and as a salesman for a wholesale butcher.[2] Her mother, Catherine Estella Hayes, was an aspiring actress[3] who worked in touring companies.[2] Hayes' Irish Catholic maternal grandparents immigrated from Ireland during the Irish Potato Famine.[4] She began a stage career at an early age. By the age of ten, she had made a short film called Jean and the Calico Doll, but only moved to Hollywood when her husband, playwright Charles MacArthur, signed a Hollywood deal.
[edit] Career
Her sound film debut was The Sin of Madelon Claudet, for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress. She followed that with starring roles in Arrowsmith (with Myrna Loy), A Farewell to Arms (with actor Gary Cooper whom Hayes admitted to finding extremely attractive), The White Sister, What Every Woman Knows (a reprise from her Broadway hit), and Vanessa: Her Love Story. However, she never became a fan favorite and Hayes did not prefer the medium to the stage.
Hayes and MacArthur eventually returned to Broadway, and she starred for three years in Victoria Regina. In the 1950s, the Fulton Theatre was renamed for her. However, business interests in the 1980s wished to raze that theatre and four others to construct a large hotel that included the Marquis Theatre. To accomplish razing this theatre and three others, as well as the Astor Hotel, the business interests received Hayes consent to raze the theatre named for her, even though she had no ownership interest in the buildings. As a result in 1983, the Little Theater on West 45th Street was re-named The Helen Hayes Theatre in her honor; as was a theatre in Nyack, which has since been re-named the Riverspace-Arts Center.
In 1953, she was the first-ever recipient of the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre, repeating as the winner in 1969. She returned to Hollywood in the 1950s, and her film star began to rise. She starred in My Son John and Anastasia, and won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1970 for her role as an elderly stowaway in the disaster film Airport. She followed that up with several roles in Disney films such as Herbie Rides Again, One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing and Candleshoe. "Anastasia" was considered a comeback having not acted for several years due to her daughter, Mary's death and her husband's failing health.
The Helen Hayes Award for theater in the Washington D.C. area is named in her honor. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6220 Hollywood Blvd.
[edit] Personal life
Hayes was a Catholic[5] and a pro-business Republican, who attended the last Republican National Convention before her death, which was held in Colorado, but she was not as far-right as certain others (e.g. Adolphe Menjou, Ginger Rogers, John Wayne, etc) in the Hollywood community of that time.
Hayes wrote three memoirs: A Gift of Joy, On Reflection and My Life in Three Acts. Some of the themes in these books include her return to Roman Catholicism after having been denied communion from the Church for the length of her marriage to MacArthur, who was a Protestant and a divorcé, and the death of her only daughter, Mary, who was an aspiring actress, from polio. Hayes's son, James MacArthur, went on to a career in acting also, starring in Hawaii Five-O on television.
Hayes was hospitalized a number of time for her asthma condition, which was aggravated by stage dust. The asthma eventually forced her to retire from the theater. She spent most of her later years writing and raising money for organizations that fight asthma.
Hayes died on St. Patrick's Day, March 17, 1993 from congestive heart failure, aged 92, not long after the death of her friend Lillian Gish, with whom she had been friends for many decades. Gish made Hayes the beneficiary of her estate, but Hayes only survived her by a month. Hayes was interred in the Oak Hill Cemetery, Nyack, New York.
[edit] Quotes
- "The hardest years in life are those between ten and seventy." (at age 73)
[edit] Stage appearances
- Miss Hawke's May Ball (1905)
- A Midsummer Night's Dream (1905)
- Babe in the Woods (1908)
- Jack the Giant Killer (1909)
- A Royal Family (1909)
- Children's Dancing Kerrness (1909)
- The Prince Chap (1909)
- A Poor Relation (1909)
- Old Dutch (1909)
- The Summer Widowers (1910)
- The Barrier (1911)
- Little Lord Fauntleroy (1911)
- The Never Homes (1911)
- The Seven Sisters (1911)
- Mary Jane's Pa (1911)
- The June Bride (1912)
- The Girl with Green Eyes (1913)
- His House in Order (1913)
- A Royal Family (1913)
- The Prince Chap (1913)
- The Prince and the Pauper (1913)
- The Prodigal Husband (1914)
- The Dummy (1916)
- On Trial (1916)
- It Pays to Advertise (1917)
- Romance (1917)
- Just a Woman (1917)
- Mile-a-Minute Kendall (1917)
- Rich Man, Poor Man (1917)
- Alma, Where Do You Live? (1917)
- Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1917)
- Within the Law (1917)
- Pollyanna (1917)
- Penrod (1918)
- Dear Brutus (1918)
- On the Hiring Line (1919)
- Clarence (1919)
- The Golden Age (1919)
- Báb (1920)
- The Wren (1921)
- The Golden Days (1921)
- To the Ladies (1922)
- No Siree!: An Anonymous Entertaiment by the Vicious Circus of the Hotel Algonquin (1922)
- Lonely Lee (1923)
- We Moderns (1924)
- The Dragon (1924)
- She Stoops to Conquer (1924)
- Dancing Mothers (1924)
- Quarantine (1924)
- Caesar and Cleopatra (1925)
- The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1925)
- Young Blood (1925)
- What Every Woman Knows (1926)
- Coquette (1927)
- Coquette (1928) (London version)
- Mr. Gilhooley (1930)
- Petticoat Influence (1930)
- The Good Fairy (1931)
- Mary of Scotland (1933)
- Caesar and Cleopatra (1935)
- Victoria Regina (1935)
- Victoria Regina (1936) (revival)
- The Merchant of Venice (1938)
- What Every Woman Knows (1938)
- Victoria Regina (1938) (revival)
- Ladies and Gentleman (1939)
- Twelfth Night (1940)
- Candle in the Wind (1941)
- Harriet (1943)
- Alice-Sit-By-The-Fire (1946)
- Happy Birthday (1946)
- The Glass Menagerie (1948)
- Good Housekeeping (1949)
- The Wisteria Trees (1950)
- Mrs. McThing (1952)
- Gentleman, The Queens (1955)
- The Skin of Our Teeth (1955)
- Lovers, Villans and Fools (1956)
- The Glass Menagerie (1956)
- Time Remembered (1957)
- A Adventure (1958)
- Mid-Summer (1958)
- A Touch of the Poet (1958)
- The Cherry Orchard (1960)
- The Chalk Garden (1960)
- Shakespeare Revisited: A Program for Two Players (1962)
- Good Morning, Miss Dove (1964)
- The White House (1964)
- The Circle (1966)
- The School for Scandal (1966)
- Right You Are If You Think You Are (1966)
- We Comrades Three (1966)
- You Can't Take It With You (1966)
- The Show-Off (1967)
- The Show-Off (1968) (return engagement)
- The Front Page (1969)
- Harvey (1970)
- Long Day's Journey Into Night (1971)
[edit] Filmography
- The Weavers of Life (1917)
- Babs (1920)
- The Dancing Town (1928) (short subject)
- The Sin of Madelon Claudet (1931)
- Arrowsmith (1931)
- A Farewell to Arms (1932)
- The Son-Daughter (1932)
- The White Sister (1933)
- Another Language (1933)
- Night Flight (1933)
- Crime Without Passion (1934)
- What Every Woman Knows (1934)
- Vanessa: Her Love Story (1935)
- Hollywood Goes to Town (1938) (short subject)
- Stage Door Canteen (1943)
- My Son John (1952)
- Main Street to Broadway (1953)
- Anastasia (1956)
- Third Man on the Mountain (1959)
- The Challenge of Ideas (1961) (short subject) (narrator)
- Airport (1970)
- Herbie Rides Again (1974)
- One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (1975)
- Candleshoe (1977)
Preceded by Goldie Hawn for Cactus Flower |
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress 1970 for Airport |
Succeeded by Cloris Leachman for The Last Picture Show |
Preceded by Marie Dressler for Min and Bill |
Academy Award for Best Actress 1932 for The Sin of Madelon Claudet |
Succeeded by Katharine Hepburn for Morning Glory |
Preceded by Bob Hope 40th Academy Awards |
Oscars host 44th Academy Awards (with Sammy Davis, Jr., Alan King, and Jack Lemmon) |
Succeeded by Carol Burnett, Michael Caine, Charlton Heston, and Rock Hudson 45th Academy Awards |
[edit] Television Work
- The Cherry Orchard (1959)
- Arsenic and Old Lace (1969)
- The Front Page (1970) (narrator)
- Do Not Fold, Spindle, or Mutilate (1971)
- Harvey (1972)
- The Snoop Sisters (1973-1974)
- Black Day for Bluebeard (1974)
- Arthur Hailey's the Moneychangers (1976) (miniseries)
- Victory at Entebbe (1976)
- A Family Upside Down (1978)
- Murder is Easy (1982)
- A Caribbean Mystery (1983)
- Murder with Mirrors (1985)
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,848403-3,00.html
- ^ a b http://www.kennedy-center.org/calendar/index.cfm?fuseaction=showIndividual&entitY_id=3739&source_type=A
- ^ http://www.helenhayes.com/about/bio.htm
- ^ http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/read/IrelandGenWeb/2003-02/1044131835
- ^ http://www.adherents.com/people/ph/Helen_Hayes.html
[edit] External links
- Helen Hayes at the Internet Movie Database
- Helen Hayes at the Internet Broadway Database
- Official site
- Tribute site
- American Masters (PBS)
- The Helen Hayes Awards
- CBC Radio's "Nazi Eyes On Canada" starring Helen Hayes, 1942
- Helen Hayes' Gravesite
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Hayes, Helen |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Brown, Helen Hayes |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | actress |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 10, 1900 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Washington, D.C. |
DATE OF DEATH | March, 1993 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Nyack, New York |
Categories: 1900 births | 1993 deaths | American film actors | American stage actors | Best Actress Academy Award winners | Best Supporting Actress Academy Award winners | Deaths from cardiovascular disease | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Irish-American actors | People from Washington, D.C. | Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients | Roman Catholic entertainers | Tony Award winners | United States National Medal of Arts recipients | Vaudeville performers