Helen Gardner (actress)


Helen Louise Gardner was an American stage and film actress, screenwriter, producer, editor and costume designer.

Career

Gardner was born in Binghamton, New York. An alumna of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, Gardner began her acting career as a stage actress. She became a Vitagraph Studios player in 1910 and earned critical acclaim for portraying Becky Sharp in the film version of the novel Vanity Fair. In 1912, she became the first film actor, male or female, to form her own production company,
The Helen Gardner Picture Players. The company was established in Tappan, New York with capital provided by Gardener’s mother. Gardner hired her lover Charles L. Gaskill as a director and scenarist. Known for her portrayal of strong female characters, Gardner’s first production was Cleopatra, one of the first American full-length films. The film was re-edited and re-released after Fox released the 1917 adaptation starring Theda Bara. Gardner is considered the screen's first vamp, predating Theda Bara, Valeska Suratt and Louise Glaum. Gardner produced eleven feature films before closing her studio in 1914.
In 1915, she returned to Vitagraph briefly before signing with Universal. By this time, her popularity began to wane and she retired from acting in 1924.

Personal life

Before Gardner embarked on an acting career, she married socially prominent businessman Duncan Clarkson Pell, Sr., on October 16, 1902, in West Haven, Connecticut. The marriage took place shortly after Gardner's 18th birthday and one week after Pell's divorce from his first wife, Anna. Duncan and Anna Pell's divorce was covered in the gossip columns of The New York Times. The couple had one child in 1904. Gardner left Pell in 1906 to continue her acting career but they never divorced. They remained married until Pell's death in 1964.
Some sources state that Gardner married for a second time to Charles Gaskill, the director of many of her films. Gardner's granddaughter and biographer, Dorin Gardner Schumacher, states that this is incorrect and that Gardner never divorced Duncan C. Pell, Sr.

Later years and death

In the 1950s, Gardner returned to Orlando, Florida where she had previously lived with her estranged husband. Gardner died in Orlando on November 20, 1968, at the age of 84.

Selected filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1912CleopatraCleopatra - Queen of EgyptProducer, costume designer, editor
Credited as Miss Gardner
1913A Sister to CarmenMargoProducer
1913A Princess of BagdadPrincess OjiraProducer
1914Pieces of Silver: A Story of Hearts and SoulsSister BereniceProducer
1914The Strange Story of Sylvia GraySylvia Gray/Silvery
1914The Moonshine Maid and the ManNancy - the Moonshine Maid
1920The Sleep of Cyma RogetCyma Roget
1924SandraLa Flamme's wife