logo
 
Home News Holidays Wallpapers Celebrities Movies New Photos My Page
 Search Celebrity / Movie   
 
Helen Mack Index Helen Mack Filmography Helen Mack Photogallery Helen Mack Awards Helen Mack Links
  Helen Mack - Biography
Helen Mack
Change Image

Last Editor: sheeba_sweetfrnds
 Helen Mack Biography -
 
Name :Helen Mack
Profession : Actor
Biography

 Helen Mack Trivia -
N/A

 Helen Mack Detailed Biography -

Helen Mack (real name Helen McDougall) was the daughter of a barber (William McDougall) and a mother (Regina 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), in stock as well as 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.

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 made her debut as a leading lady opposite Victor McLaglen in While Paris Sleeps (1932). She performed in The Struggle (1931) under the direction of D.W. Griffith 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 unwisely used Mack as an ingenue (stock character). 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 did 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 less memorable, but still appealing, roles for Mack included the bank-robbing ingenue opposite Richard Cromwell and Lionel Atwill in 1937's The Wrong Road for RKO.

In 1931 thirteen members of the Fox Film Company publicity department resigned in protest of WAMPAS (Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers) failure to name 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 debutante or budding stars. Fox proposed to name baby stars for each year after, by a vote of its executives.

She married lawyer Charles Irwin in San Francisco, California, in February 1935. Mack was twenty-one. 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. In 1938 she divorced her husband.

In 1940 she married Thomas McAvity in Santa Barbara, California. Thomas would go on to become Vice President in Charge of Television Network for NBC. They had one son.

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

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

    Helen Mack Reviews
Total Reviews:0
Average Rating:
Write Reviews  
    Helen Mack Videos 

Allan Dwan - While P...

Son Of Kong - 1933 -...

Peritos Culturales :...

Son Of Kong Trailer...
All Videos  
    Top Celebs
  Megan Fox
  Paris Hilton
  Barack Obama
  Jennifer Lopez
  Jennifer Aniston
  Salma Hayek
  Brad Pitt
  Oprah Winfrey
  Robert Pattinson
  Heidi Klum
  Michelle Obama
  Britney Spears
  Kim Kardashian
  Angelina Jolie
  Tom Cruise
  Michael Jackson
  Susan Boyle
  Rihanna
More  
 


  Home | Ecards | Holidays | Movies | Celebrities | Celeb Links | Contact Us
Copyright © 2009 NetGlimse.com. Privacy PolicyAll Rights Reserved.