Career Highlights: Wet Paint, Finger Prints, In Old Kentucky
First Major Screen Credit: Ranger of the Big Pines (1925)
Biography
The daughter of early movie matinee idol Maurice Costello and the younger sister of silent star Dolores Costello, Helene Costello made her first movie appearances as a child in her father's films. Helene's adult career followed many of the same paths previously trodden by her sister Dolores: modelling work in New York, dancing in George White's Scandals, and leading-lady assignments in several popular films of the 1920s. Helene co-starred in the first all-talking feature film, Lights of New York (1928); ironically, she proved to be an inadequate talkie actress, and her star quickly waned. For a brief period in the early 1930s, Helene was the wife of actor/director Lowell Sherman, and the sister-in-law of John Barrymore. Twenty-two years after appearing in her last film, Helene Costello died at age 53, suffering from the combined effects of pneumonia and tuberculosis. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
John W. Regan (1927-1929) Lowell Sherman (1930-1932)
Arturo de Barrio (1933-1939)
Lee Le blanc (1940-1946)
Helene Costello (June 21, 1906 - January 26, 1957) was am American motion picture actress, most notably of the silent film era.
Born in New York City, New York, USA she was the daughter of the prominent stage and pioneering film actor Maurice Costello and his actress wife Mae Costello (née Altschuk) and the younger sister of actress Dolores Costello. Helene first appeared onscreen (opposite her father) in the 1909 film adaptation of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables. She would continue acting in films throughout the 1910s as a child actor and reach her peak of public popularity in the 1920s, although never quite rivalling the success of her sister Dolores.
Although she had been appearing onscreen since her early childhood, in 1927 Helene Costello was selected as a WAMPAS Baby Star, a promotional campaign sponsored by the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers in the United States, which honored thirteen young women each year who they believed to be on the threshold of movie stardom.
Helene Costello's career declined with the advent of sound films and she began to appear less and less onscreen. She did manage to stay in the headlines briefly in the 1930s however, when she and her sister were sued by their famous actor father for financial support. Helene was married to actor and director Lowell Sherman from 1930 to 1932.
Helene Costello is the great-aunt of contemporary actress Drew Barrymore - her sister Dolores being Barrymore's paternal grandmother from her marriage to actor John Barrymore.