Wendy Barrie - Actor Profile

Wendy Barrie

20Movies
7.4 Best Rating

Biography

Wendy Barrie was a British actress who worked in British and American films. Barrie was born in London to English parents. Her father, Francis Charles John Graigoe Jenkin KC (1883 – 1936), was an employee of Great Western (according to the 1901 census), who then joined the Royal Fusiliers in 1902. Her mother was Ellen McDonagh. Hollywood gave her a more exotic parentage with her father being a King's Counsel and her mother a Russian-Jewish actress who had performed in the world's first professional Yiddish-language theater troupe. She received her education at a convent school in England and a finishing school in Switzerland. In 1932, Barrie made her screen debut in the film Threads, which was based upon a play. She went on to make a number of motion pictures for London Films under the Korda brothers, Alexander and Zoltan, the best known of which is 1933's The Private Life of Henry VIII, in which she portrayed Jane Seymour. In 1934, she appeared in Freedom of the Seas and was contracted by Fox Film Corporation for a film directed by Scott Darling that was made in Britain. The following year, she moved to the United States and made her first Hollywood film for Fox opposite Spencer Tracy in the romantic comedy It's a Small World, followed by Under Your Spell with Lawrence Tibbett. Loaned to MGM, Barrie starred opposite James Stewart in the 1936 film Speed. In 1939 she starred with Richard Greene and Basil Rathbone in the 20th Century Fox version of The Hound of the Baskervilles, and with Lucille Ball in RKO's Five Came Back. During 1939 and the early 1940s, Barrie made several of The Saint and The Falcon mystery films with George Sanders. She made her final motion picture in 1954. With the dawn of television, in the late 1940s, Barrie turned to roles in that medium. In 1956, she had a disc jockey program, the Wendy Barrie Show, on WMGM in New York City. She also hosted a widely syndicated radio interview show into the mid-1960s. After appearances in more than 15 films in Britain and more than 30 in Hollywood, Barrie's contribution to the industry was recognized with a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1708 Vine Street, near the corner of Hollywood and Vine. Her star was dedicated February 8, 1960. Barrie became a naturalized American citizen in 1942. She was reportedly engaged to and had a daughter named Carolyn with the infamous gangster Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel, and at one time was married to textile manufacturer David L. Meyer. She died in Englewood, New Jersey, in 1978, aged 65, following a stroke that had left her debilitated for several years. She was buried in the Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.

Top Rated Movies

Complete Filmography & Verdicts

YearMovieCharacterRatingVerdict
1943 Forever and a Day Edith Trimble-Pomfret ★ 7.4 HIT
1939 The Hound of the Baskervilles Beryl Stapleton ★ 7.1 HIT
1954 It Should Happen to You Guest Panelist ★ 7.0 HIT
1937 Dead End Kay ★ 7.0 HIT
1936 Love on a Bet Paula Gilbert ★ 7.0 HIT
1936 Under Your Spell Cynthia Drexel ★ 7.0 HIT
1938 I Am the Law Frances 'Frankie' Ballou ★ 6.9 HIT
1935 A Feather in Her Hat Pauline Anders ★ 6.8 HIT
1942 A Date with the Falcon Helen Reed ★ 6.5 HIT
1933 The Private Life of Henry VIII Jane Seymour ★ 6.4 FLOP
1940 The Saint Takes Over Ruth Summers ★ 6.4 FLOP
1940 Cross-Country Romance Diane North ★ 6.4 FLOP
1941 The Gay Falcon Helen Reed ★ 6.3 FLOP
1939 Five Came Back Alice Melbourne ★ 6.2 FLOP
1939 The Witness Vanishes Joan Marplay ★ 6.2 FLOP
1936 Ticket to Paradise Jane Forbes ★ 6.0 FLOP
1938 Newsboys' Home Gwen Dutton ★ 6.0 FLOP
1936 Screen Snapshots (Series 16, No. 1) Self ★ 6.0 FLOP
1939 Day-time Wife Kitty Fraser ★ 5.9 FLOP
1941 The Saint In Palm Springs Elna Johnson ★ 5.8 FLOP