Helen Virginia Parrish[1] (March 12, 1923 – February 22, 1959) was an American stage and film actress.[2]
Career
Parrish was born in Columbus, Georgia.[1] She started in movies at the age of 4, getting her first part playing Babe Ruth's daughter in the silent film Babe Comes Home[3] in 1927. She was featured in the Our Gangcomedyshorts[4] and sometimes played the lead character as a child, co-starring with some of the great female stars of the day. In her teens she made herself known as a kid sister. During this time she also starred opposite Deanna Durbin in several of her films, playing a jealous, spiteful rival.
By her mid-twenties she had left motion pictures and turned to television, co-hosting Hour Glass,[5] the first U.S. network variety show in 1946-47. In an era when "... it was a social 'taboo' for a pregnant woman to display herself in public," Parrish was forced to leave Hour Glass as a result of her pregnancy.[6] In 1953, she was host of It's a Good Idea and This Is Your Music.[1]
One notable TV role was that of Geraldine Rutherford in the first season of the American television situation comedy Leave It to Beaver.[7]
Her last role on television was as women's editor of a morning program, Panorama Pacific, on the West Coast.[3]
Parrish appeared in TV commercials for a variety of products throughout the 1950s, earning more income from them than from roles in shows. In 1955, she said that making commercials "turned out to be the next best thing to owning an oil well."[1]
Family
Her brother, Robert Parrish,[8] was a minor child actor who earned respect as a film editor and director and her sister, Beverly Parrish, died suddenly at the age of 11 after filming only one movie.[9]
On July 11, 1942, Parrish married actor Charles G. Lang, Jr. in Hollywood.[10] They had a son and a daughter,[1] then divorced in 1954. On August 3, 1956, she married television producer John Guedel. She had a miscarriage in April 1958.[1]
Recognition
Parrish has a star at 6263 Hollywood Boulevard in the Motion Pictures section of the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It was dedicated on February 8, 1960.[11]
^Terrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010 (2nd ed.). Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 591. ISBN978-0-7864-6477-7.