Emmy Wehlen

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Emmy Wehlen
Photoplay magazine, April 1917
Photoplay magazine, 1917
Born
Emily Wehlen

1887 (1887)
Died1977 (1978) (aged 90)[citation needed]
OccupationActress
Years active1906—1920

Emily "Emmy" Wehlen (1887–1977) was a German-born Edwardian musical comedy and silent film actress who vanished from the public eye while in her early thirties.

Biography

Wehlen with C. Morton Horne in Marriage a la Carte, c. 1911

Wehlen was born in Mannheim, Germany, where, as a teenager, she received her musical training at the Mannheim Conservatory.[1] She began her career with the Thalia-Theater company performing in musical theatre productions in Stuttgart, Munich and Berlin. She was later brought to London as a possible successor to Lily Elsie.[2][3] In 1909 she played the lead role, Sonia, in The Merry Widow at Daly's Theatre.[4][5] and later that year, at the same venue, played Olga, in the hit musical, The Dollar Princess, which had a run of 428 performances.[1][3][6]

Soon she was in New York[7] playing Rosalie in the musical comedy Marriage a la Carte that opened January 2, 1911 at the Casino Theatre on Broadway (music by Ivan Caryll). In 1912 she played Mrs. Guyer in A Winsome Widow at the Loew's New York Theatre, then known as the Moulin Rouge. The next year she appeared at the Gaiety Theatre, London and then at the 44th Street Theatre in The Girl on the Film as Winifred.[8] The Playgoer and Society Illustrated wrote in May 1913, "Miss Emmy Wehlen used a distinctly pleasant voice to advantage".[9] Her last Broadway performance came in the 1914/15 season playing June in To-Night's the Night at the Shubert Theatre.[10]

Not long after To-Night's the Night ended its run, Wehlen abandoned the stage for film,[3] only to return briefly in late 1918 to perform with the traveling Little Theatre in New York to benefit the Stage Women's War Relief Organization.[11] Wehlen first played Ruth King in the 1915 film When a Woman Loves and would go on to perform leading roles in nearly twenty movies over the next five years. During this time she was often billed as Emily Wehlen.[12] Her last film was Lifting Shadows, released in 1920, in which she played the lead character, Vania.[13] Only three Wehlen films are known to have survived, and none of these have been re-released in any format to the public.

A 1911 article in Everybody’s Magazine commented that Wehlen was "very pretty, very graceful, and extraordinarily clever as an actress, and she has learned how to use a naturally fine voice. Moreover, she has the indescribable charm of personality, of making audiences like her and want to have her on the stage all the time."[14] Wehlen was described in a Hollywood directory as being five-foot three inches tall, with blonde hair and brown eyes.[15]

Filmography

The Pretenders (1916)
Cosmopolitan Magazine, August 1912

References

  1. ^ a b The Play Pictorial, Vol. 15, 1909
  2. ^ G.G. by George Grossmith, Jr. (1933), Hutchinson, p. 268
  3. ^ a b c Gänzl, Kurt. The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, 2001
  4. ^ Who's Who in the Theatre, Vol. 1914
  5. ^ "Emmy Wehlen at Berkely Theatre in Tables Turned", Berkeley Daily Gazette, 11 February 1916, p. 3
  6. ^ The Strand Magazine, Vol. 36, 1908, p. 328
  7. ^ Emmy Wehlen, The Washington Post, December 25, 1910, p. 16 (ancestry.com) "Is there any excuse for an exceptionally gifted and unusually pretty young woman, whose every wish that money can buy is hers, to be other than cheerful at this merry season? Perhaps not; but before making a positive assertion, allow a Post reporter to introduce you to Miss Emmy Wehlen, musical comedy celebrity, who arrived in Washington on Christmas eve, and who will spend one-half of today in a commodious suite at the Arlington and the other half at the Belasco Theater, rehearsing in "Marriage a la Carte.""(subscription required)
  8. ^ L. Carson (ed.) The Stage Year Book, 1914, London: Carson & Comerford, p. 178
  9. ^ The Playgoer and Society Illustrated, vol. VIII (New Series), no. 44, May 1913, p. 50b
  10. ^ Emmy Wehlen at the IBDB database
  11. ^ "The Littlest Theatre", The New York Times, 13 October 1918, p. xxii
  12. ^ The Charleroi Mail, 29 September 1916, p. 7
  13. ^ Emmy Wehlen at the IMDB database
  14. ^ Norris, Frank O. Henry Everybody’s Magazine, 1911, p. 561
  15. ^ Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual, 1921; p. 244.