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Broadway-bound
Helen's professional career began when Lew Fields, of the comedy
team Weber and Fields, saw her impersonation of the Gibson Girl
from Ziegfeld Follies. He told the theater
manager that if she would like a career when she was older, he wanted
to be the first in line. After a few years and some extra French
lessons (to reassure Essie that Helen would become a lady), mother
and daughter headed to Lew Fields' office in New York City. After
being shown a photograph of Helen in her Gibson Girl getup, Fields
remembered Helen and signed her to be in Old
Dutch at the age of eight. Helen became the favorite little
star of Broadway actors and producers like Fields, John Drew and
George Tyler, learning more from their example and advice than she
felt she ever would have in acting school.
The first play for which Helen received media attention was Pollyanna.
Though she was still playing a young girl while she was actually
17, Helen was the leading lady and got respect for her work. She
even made an audience of rough-and-tumble ranchers in Montana break
out in tears. This was the point at which she became an "adult"
actress. A year later, she brought Broadway audiences to their feet
in the fantasy play Dear Brutus. A review
in The New York Times called Helen's
performance "a wonderful blending of dream beauty and girlish actuality."
From that moment on, she would be referred to, at the very least,
as the "great Miss Hayes."
A budding romance
Until her mid-twenties, Helen's life was dictated by George Tyler,
who had become her producer.
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