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Helen Hayes

Personal Profile

Helen Hayes
  • Birth Name:
    Helen Hayes Brown
  • Nickname:
    First Lady of the American Theater
  • Date of Birth:
    October 10, 1900
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Libra
  • Place of Birth:
    Washington, D.C., United States
  • Place of Death:
    Nyack, New York, United States
  • Date of Death:
    March 17, 1993
  • Height:
    5'
  • Sex:
    Female
  • Nationality:
    American

Family

Helen Hayes
  • Spouse:
    Charles MacArthur (1928-1956)

Career

Helen Hayes

Awards

Helen Hayes

Oscar, Best Actress in a Supporting Role for: Airport (1970)

Oscar, Best Actress in a Leading Role for: The Sin of Madelon Claudet (1931)

Emmy, Best Actress

Golden Laurel, Best Supporting Performance, Female for: Airport (1970)

Trivia

Helen Hayes
  • In 1983, Hayes dedicated Riverside's The Shakespeare Center with New York theatre producer, Joseph Papp and in 1985 returned to the New York stage in a benefit for the company of A Christmas Carol with the late Raul Julia, Len Cariou, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Carole Shelley, Celeste Holm and Harold Scott, directed by W. Stuart McDowell.
  • Hayes was also a generous donor of time and money to a number of causes and organizations, including the Riverside Shakespeare Company of New York City, of which she became a founding member of the Board of Advisors in 1981.
  • 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.
  • In 1982, with friend Lady Bird Johnson, she founded the National Wildflower Research Center, now the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, Texas. The center protects and preserves North America's native plants and natural landscapes.
  • In 1955 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.
  • Her performance in Anastasia was considered a comeback she had suspended her career for several years due to the death of her daughter Mary, and her husband's failing health.
  • She followed that up with several roles in Disney films such as Herbie Rides Again, One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing and Candleshoe.
  • She starred in My Son John (1952) and Anastasia (1956), and won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as an elderly stowaway in the disaster film Airport (1970).
  • She returned to Hollywood in the 1950s, and her film star began to rise.
  • 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.

Quotes

Helen Hayes
  • “An actress's life is so transitory-suddenly you're a building.”
  • “I cry out for order and find it only in art.”
  • “It's a wonderful thing you are doing in Akron. Keeping this great theater alive for the performing arts and for your children.”
  • “Jackie Mason Freshly Squeezed.”
  • “Lasting accomplishment... Is still achieved through a long, slow climb and self discipline.”
  • “Everybody starts at the top, and then has the problem of staying there. Lasting accomplishment, however, is still achieved through a long, slow climb and self-discipline.”
  • “We relish news of our heroes, forgetting that we are extraordinary to somebody too.”
  • “The truth [is] that there is only one terminal dignity - love. And the story of a love is not important-what is important is that one is capable of love. It is perhaps the only glimpse we are permitted of eternity.”
  • “I'm leaving the screen because I don't think I am very good in the pictures and I have this beautiful dream that I'm elegant on the stage.”
  • “The hardest years in life are those between ten and seventy.”
View all Quotes: Helen Hayes

Biography

Helen Hayes
Last Updated: Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Helen Hayes (born Oct. 10, 1900, Washington, D.C., U.S.—died March 17, 1993, Nyack, New York) American actress who was widely considered to be the “First Lady of the American Theatre.”

At the behest of her mother, a touring stage performer, Hayes attended dancing class as a youngster, and, from 1905 to 1909, she performed with the Columbia Players. At age nine, she made her Broadway debut as Little Mimi in the Victor Herbert operetta Old Dutch, and in 1910 she was cast in the one-reel Vitagraph film Jean and the Calico Cat.

Specializing in standard ingenue roles during her teen years, she attained a degree of popularity in the touring company of Pollyanna (1917) and the New York productions of Penrod and Dear Brutus (both 1918).Cast as the heroine in the 1920 comedy Bab, she became the youngest actress to have her name in lights on Broadway an occasion that prompted an enterprising distributor to release the only silent film in which she had starred, The Weavers of Life, which had been sitting on the shelf for three years.

Uncomfortable with her sudden ascendancy, she refused to believe she had truly “arrived” until 1926, when she was cast as the multifaceted heroine of James Barrie's What Every Woman Knows. Two years later she married the journalist and playwright Charles MacArthur, a union that lasted until his death in 1956.In 1931 Hayes and MacArthur went to Hollywood, where she made her talking picture debut in The Sin of Madelon Claudet, for which she received an Academy Award. Although she made a number of later films, including the 1932 version of A Farewell to Arms, Hayes was unhappy in Hollywood and soon returned to Broadway.

In 1933 she scored her biggest stage success to date in Mary of Scotland, surpassing this triumph in 1935 with a tour-de-force performance in Victoria Regina, which ran for three years. Her many subsequent stage credits included Happy Birthday (1946), which earned her the first Tony Award for best actress.Except for occasional appearances in such films as My Son John (1952) and Anastasia (1956), Hayes remained essentially a stage performer until 1971, when her chronic asthmatic bronchitis triggered an allergic reaction to stage dust.

The previous year, she had won a second Academy Award for her portrayal of an elderly stowaway in the movie Airport (1970), which precipitated a succession of similarly eccentric movie roles. Active until the mid-1980s, she divided her time between film and television work, and in 1973 she costarred with Mildred Natwick in the weekly TV series The Snoop Sisters. She ended her acting career as Agatha Christie's elderly sleuth Miss Marple in three well-received television movies during the early 1980s.

Hayes published four autobiographies: A Gift of Joy (1965), On Reflection (1968), Twice Over Lightly (1972, with Anita Loos), and My Life in Three Acts (1991). Her daughter Mary MacArthur also pursued a stage career before her death from polio in 1949, and her son James MacArthur was a successful film and TV actor, known mostly for his role on the television series Hawaii Five-O. Showered with awards and citations for her acting and humanitarian activities, Hayes received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1986 and held the distinction of having two Broadway theatres named in her honour.

Filmography

Helen Hayes

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