
Helene Chadwick
Department: Acting
Biography
Helene Chadwick (November 25, 1897 – September 4, 1940) was an American actress in Silent and early sound films. Chadwick was born in the small town of Chadwicks, New York, which was named for her grandfather. Her mother was a singer who performed on the stage and her father was a businessman. She began making films for Pathe Pictures in Manhattan, New York. A director was impressed by Chadwick's talent as an equestrian, thus she began acting as a western star, but this did not continue with the exodus of film production from the east to the west coast. Signed by Samuel Goldwyn, Chadwick went to California in 1913 and entered silent movies in 1916. She was a star from 1920 through 1925. At the pinnacle of her acting career, she earned a salary estimated to have been $2,000 per week. From 1929 until 1935, she found success as a character actress when sound was being introduced to films. In the final five years of her life she was reduced to taking roles as an extra, playing "atmospheric parts". She was always optimistic that her fortunes would turn for the better. Helene made movies with Warner Brothers, Columbia Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Paramount Pictures, and other studios. Her most noteworthy performances came in The Long Arm of Mannister (1919), The Cup of Fury (1920), Heartsease (1919), The Sin Flood (1922), Dangerous Curve Ahead (1921), From The Ground Up (1921), The Glorious Fool (1922), Yellow Men and Gold (1922), Dust Flower (1922), Godless Men (1920), and Quicksands (1923). In January 1919, Chadwick became engaged to Lieutenant William A. Wellman, an American pilot with the Lafayette Flying Corps. He had just returned from France and was cited for bravery for his valour in World War I. The couple had met at a party at the house of a friend. Wellman was signed to play a prominent role in an upcoming movie with Douglas Fairbanks Sr. The couple wed in July 1921, but in the summer of 1923 Chadwick sued Wellman for divorce on grounds of desertion and non-support. At the time of their separation William was directing movies for Fox Film. Wellman directed Wings, the first film to win an Academy Award for Best Picture, as well as many other notable films. Helene Chadwick died at St. Vincent's Hospital, Los Angeles, California, aged 42, in 1940. Her death was indirectly the result of an accident she suffered in June 1939.
Known For

Father and Son
1929

Go-Get-Em Garringer
1919

The Naulahka
1918

The Last of the Carnabys
1917

The Border Legion
1924

Yellow Men and Gold
1922

The Sin Flood
1922

The Glorious Fool
1922

Quicksands
1923

Trouping with Ellen
1924

The Bachelor's Baby
1927

Night World
1932

The Mystery of the Double Cross
1917

The Honest Thief
1918

The Yellow Ticket
1918

Frisco Kid
1935

The Perfect Set-Up
1936

The Old Nest
1921

The Solitary Sin
1919

The Cup of Fury
1920

Cupid the Cowpuncher
1920

The Angel Factory
1917

Reno
1923

Gimme
1923

Wise Guys Prefer Brunettes
1926

The Long Arm of Mannister
1919

Employees' Entrance
1933

Hard Boiled
1926

The House of Hate
1918

Women Who Dare
1928

Mary Burns, Fugitive
1935

The Bad Sister
1931

The Dark Swan
1924

Managed Money
1934

Merrily Yours
1933

Say It with Sables
1928

Godless Men
1920

Why Men Leave Home
1924

A Wicked Woman
1934

Good Dame
1934

Men Are Like That
1930

Dancing Days
1926

The Woman Hater
1925

The Golden Cocoon
1925

So Big!
1932

School for Girls
1934

Made in Heaven
1921

Hell Bound
1931

Dangerous Curve Ahead
1921

The Challenge
1916

The Masked Dancer
1924

Her Own Free Will
1924

Mississippi
1935

Blind Man's Luck
1917

Vengeance Is Mine
1917

Love of Women
1924

Morning Glory
1933

The Still Alarm
1926

The Dust Flower
1922

An Adventure in Hearts
1919

Stolen Pleasures
1927

The Re-Creation of Brian Kent
1925

Modern Mothers
1928

Girls
1919

A Very Good Young Man
1919

Pleasures of the Rich
1926