Helen Ford![]() Helen Ford (born Helen Isabel Barnett;[1] June 6, 1894, Troy, New York–January 19, 1982, Glendale, California) was an American actress. BiographyFord's father was a manufacturer in Troy, and she was considered a musical prodigy as a child. She studied voice and piano at a conservatory of music in Troy.[2] Ford appeared in a production of The Heart of Annie Wood in New York in 1918 and in Sometime shortly thereafter.[2] In 1920, she had the role of Toinette in Always You, Oscar Hammerstein's first musical.[3] She was a stage actress in musicals in the 1920s. A "Rodgers, Hart, and Fields' favorite",[4] she starred in three of their Broadway productions: Dearest Enemy (1925), Peggy-Ann (1926) and Chee-Chee (1928).[5][6] She also starred in the touring production of Dearest Enemy.[7] She went on to appear in films and television programs, including The Raid. In 1926, Ford was involved in a court case in District Court in New York City. The trial related to her appearance at the Knickerbocker Theater "clad only in a barrel".[8] The trial focused on whether her husband, George Ford, had committed perjury when he told a grand jury that the barrel did not contain champagne.[8] On August 9, 1918, she married George Ford, who produced touring Shakespearean festivals.[2] She died of a stroke on January 19, 1982. She was cremated and her ashes interred in the crypt below the chapel at Grand View Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.[9] Filmography
References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Helen Ford.
Information related to Helen Ford |