Sheila Terry | |
Birth Name: | Kathleen Eleanor Mulhern< |
Birth Date: | March 5, 1910 |
Death Date: | (date body found) |
Death Place: | New York City, NY, U.S. |
Resting Place: | Hart Island, New York, U.S. |
Occupation: | Actress |
Spouse: | Laurence Erastus Clark (m.1928 - div.1934) William Adam Magee Jr. (m.1936 - div.1937)[1] |
Yearsactive: | 1932 - 1938 |
Sheila Terry (born Kathleen Eleanor Mulhern; March 5, 1910[2] - January 1957) was an American film actress.
Although she wanted to be an actress, young "Kay" Mulhern studied to be a teacher in accordance with the desires of a rich uncle. After training as an educator from 1927 to 1929, she taught in a country school to meet the requirement for receiving her inheritance from that uncle. The inheritance was in stocks, however, and its value vanished in the 1929 crash of the stock market.
She first studied dramatics at Dickson-Kenwin academy, a Toronto school affiliated with London's Royal Academy.[3] For approximately seven months, she acted in stock theater in Toronto. Later she moved to New York,[2] where she continued her studies and appeared in a number of plays. A film scout saw her on Broadway in The Little Racketeer and offered her a test that resulted in a contract with Warner Bros.
She appeared in such films as You Said a Mouthful, Scarlet Dawn, and Madame Butterfly (all 1932). She appeared with John Wayne in the Western films as Haunted Gold (1932), 'Neath the Arizona Skies (1934), and The Lawless Frontier (1934). In 1933, she left Hollywood briefly for the New York stage.
She married Major Laurence Clark, a wealthy Toronto socialite, on August 16, 1928. They separated on August 15, 1930, and she divorced him on February 15, 1934.[4] In 1937, she married William Magee of San Francisco, and retired from show business. After his death, Terry wanted to return to show business, but couldn't find a job.
In January 1957, her body was discovered in her third floor apartment, which was both her home and office. A friend and neighbor, Jerry Keating, went to her apartment after he failed to reach her on the telephone. The door was locked, and Terry did not answer the bell. Keating called the police, who broke in and found Terry's body on the bedroom floor, her back leaning against the bed, with five empty capsules on the floor beside her. Friends told the police that she had returned from a trip to Mexico some time before her death and that she was ill when she came home. It was later discovered that she died broke, leaving only a scant wardrobe. She was 46 years old.[5] She was buried on Hart Island, New York.