Helena Carter was an American film actress in the 1940s and 1950s who is best known for her work in the film Invaders from Mars as Dr. Patricia Blake. From 1947 to 1953 she would appear in 13 films, during which time she also worked as a model.
Carter was visiting friends at Universal Studios when spotted by producerLeonard Goldstein. Universal signed her to a seven-year contract in 1946. "I just happened to visit the studio at a good time, I guess", she later said. Her first film role was a small part in Time Out of Mind in 1947, which starred Ella Raines and Phyllis Calvert. According to Filmink "Carter has poise and beauty, but her inexperience is most evident in her speaking voice – she enunciates like someone who has been to finishing school. However, she already demonstrates what would be more notable attributes – her beauty, spark and intelligence, and her ability to focus her eyes on the person she was performing a scene with." Universal put Carter in Something in the Wind with Deanna Durbin. In April 1947 she was loaned out for Intrigue, her biggest part yet, billed third after George Raft and June Havoc. According to Filmink her performance in the latter "helped establish what would be her stock in trade character – a good girl sexually attracted to the bad boy hero; moral, but not a stick in the mud; intelligent and spirited." Back at Universal she was in River Lady vying with Yvonne de Carlo for Rod Cameron. That film was shot in July 1947. She did not work again until June 1948. In August 1949 Hedda Hopper reported that Carter became "a little difficult to handle after her first picture. She turned down a part in an Abbott and Costello film, and got the silent treatment from the studio for the year. She finally saw the light, started co operating." The film that brought her back was being cast as Douglas Fairbanks Jr's love interest in The Fighting O'Flynn, made for Fairbanks' company but released through Universal. Fairbanks took an option on her to for two more films. In 1948 she appeared on the cover of Life. In June 1948 she told an interviewer, "Cameras don't frighten me even if I have freckles. But I still talk too fast. Sound men tear their hair out when I speak my first words in a picture. They are polite but very firm as they say, between clenched teeth, 'Slow down, Miss Carter, slow down.'"
Conflict with Universal
Carter turned down the part of Richard Long's wife in Ma and Pa Kettle in October 1948; Meg Randall played the role. In November Hedda Hopper reported that Carter wanted out of her Universal contract six months ago, and would get it if she paid back all the salary she had received since September. Hopper reported that the studio got enough money out of her loan outs to Fairbanks and Raft to cover two years of her pay. Filmink suggested Carter knew how good she was and wanted better roles. But Universal executives weren't about to let any uppity ex model college grad tell them what to do and slapped her down." |author=However she stayed with Universal. In July 1949 Carter replaced Dolores Hart in East of Java which became South Sea Sinner. Carter and Shelley Winters reportedly feuded on set, although both denied it. She followed it with the female lead in Double Crossbones, a comedy with Donald O'Connor.
Final Films
In April 1950 James Cagney and his brother William borrowed her for Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye, made by William Cagney Productions for Warner Bros. The same month she was reportedly reading for the role of Roxanne in Cyrano de Bergerac. She supported Randolph Scott in the 1951 westernFort Worth. William Cagney used her again in Bugles in the Afternoon with Ray Milland. Sam Katzman used her in The Golden Hawk and The Pathfinder. Carter's final film role was in 1953 when she starred in William Cameron Menzies' sci-fi thriller Invaders from Mars. As pointed out by Filmink "For the first time in her entire career, Carter played something other than a love interest for the male lead." She retired on her second marriage.
Personal life
Carter married twice, the first ending in divorce. On December 31, 1953, she married Michael Meshekoff, with whom she would remain until his death in 1997.