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Helen Vinson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helen Vinson (September 17, 1907 – October 7, 1999) was an American film actress, who appeared in 40 films between 1932 and 1945.
Vinson's screen career often featured her in roles in which she played the part of the other woman or (pre-Code) loose women with active romantic lives. Her first film role was Jewel Robbery (1932), which starred William Powell and Kay Francis. She appeared as Doris Delafield in The Kennel Murder Case, which starred Powell as Philo Vance. One of her memorable roles was in The Wedding Night (1935), when she played the wife of Gary Cooper's character and the rival of Anna Sten's, in a story about the Connecticut tobacco fields. Another performance was in the RKO film In Name Only (1939), in which she was cast as the treacherous friend of Carole Lombard, Kay Francis and Cary Grant's characters. Another standout role for Vinson was as an undercover federal agent posing as a femme fatale opposite Richard Cromwell in Universal Pictures's anti-Nazi action drama entitled, Enemy Agent (1940). She followed that role with that of Helen Draque in The Thin Man Goes Home. Vinson's film career ended in 1945.
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Vinson has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1560 Vine Street. Description above from the Wikipedia article Helen Vinson, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
As actor
The Thin Man Goes Home
The Lady and the Monster
Chip Off the Old Block
Are These Our Parents?
Nothing but the Truth
Beyond Tomorrow
Torrid Zone
Curtain Call
Married and in Love
Bowery Boy
Enemy Agent
In Name Only
Vogues of 1938
Live, Love and Learn
Reunion
Love in Exile
The Wedding Night
The Tunnel
Private Worlds
Age of Indiscretion
A Notorious Gentleman
King of the Damned
As Husbands Go
Broadway Bill
The Captain Hates the Sea
The Life of Vergie Winters
Let's Try Again
Gift of Gab
The Little Giant
The Kennel Murder Case