Helen Claire
Helen Claire was an actress on Broadway and in old-time radio.
Early years
Helen Claire was born in Union Springs, Alabama, to Col. and Mrs. Henry J. Rosenstihl. She grew up in Alabama and graduated cum laude from Randolph-Macon Woman's College, where she was a member of Phi Beta Kappa Society. She ventured to New York City and enrolled at Columbia University, from which she obtained a master's degree in psychology. Following graduation from Columbia, she attended Feagin School of Dramatic Art.Radio
Claire's roles in radio programs included those shown in the table below.Program | Character |
Backstage Wife | Virginia Lansing |
Bright Horizon | Edith Browning |
Death Valley Days | Jan Thackery |
Joyce Jordan, M.D. | Joyce Jordan |
The O'Neills | Sally Scott O'Neill |
Roses and Drums | Betty Graham |
Stella Dallas | Ada Dexter |
The Story of Bess Johnson | Mrs. Jordan |
Other programs in which Claire was a member of the cast included Young Widder Brown, Of Great Riches Stories of the Black Chamber, Aunt Jenny's Real Life Stories, Hilltop House, Stella Dallas, and Evelyn Winters.
Claire also had a recurring role on Dr. Christian, which annually broadcast several episodes from New York City rather than from its usual Hollywood site. During those times, Claire played nurse Judy Price, replacing Rosemary DeCamp, who portrayed Price in the broadcasts from Hollywood.
Claire also appeared on the radio version of Texaco Star Theatre and on "the Two Stars program over the WJZ network."
Stage
Although Claire had been advised seven years earlier "to abandon any idea she might have of becoming an actress" because of her southern accent, a 1938 newspaper article acclaimed Claire as "the first 'discovery' of the new Broadway season" for her work in Kiss the Boys Goodbye. Paul Ross wrote, "When the critical salvos had died down, it was found... that the unknown from Alabama had risen to stardom over night." In February 1939, another newspaper article reported: "Helen Claire, a few months ago a comparative unknown, is now the toast of Broadway. Hard-boiled New York has so fallen for this real life Cindy Lou that her mornings are filled with interviews, her afternoons with screen tests, guest appearances, dinner parties."Claire's Broadway debut came in 1932 in Girls in Uniform. She also appeared in Sunny River and Jezebel.
Film
Claire's voice was familiar to moviegoers who were attentive to Movietone News segments that preceded feature films in theaters. Twice a week she provided narration of fashion news segments for those newsreels.Television
Claire and others from the cast of The Parker Family radio program made an "experimental" broadcast of a TV version of the show on NBC May 9, 1941.In 1953, Claire, as narrator, received a certificate of merit related to the Sylvania Award "for outstanding individual variety performance on the Ford show" that was won by Mary Martin.