Helen Lindroth

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Helen Lindroth, born December 3, 1874, died October 5, 1956 in Boston, Massachusetts, was a Swedish-born American screen and stage actress.

She acted on stage in New York before entering motion pictures with the Kalem Company and Famous Players. Lindroth performed in the film adaptation of The Swan (1925) and and in The Song and Dance Man (1926), produced by George M. Cohan.

Lindroth has ninety-six screen credits beginning with a role in the Battle of Pottsburg Bridge in 1912. Other films she appeared in include A Battle of Wits (1912), The Menace of Fate (1914), The Black Crook (1916), Shadows of Suspicion (1919), The Way of a Maid (1921), Unguarded Women (1924), and The Song and Dance Man (1926).

Lindroth gave up acting around 1936 and became associated with the Christian Science Benevolent Association in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. She retired from this philanthropic work in 1953.

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[edit] References

  • "Motion Picture News", Frederick Maryland Post, 1914-01-13, pp. 12. 
  • "Helen Lindroth", New York Times, 1956-10-12, pp. 29.