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  1. www.imdb.com › name › nm0847911Helen Talbot - IMDb

    Helen Talbot. Actress: Federal Operator 99. Born Helen Darling, she was adopted by the Smith family in 1937 and lived with them until 1941, when she left to live with her brother, Dan Darling's family, a milkman in West Los Angeles, and the Smiths moved to Rochester, New York.

    • January 1, 1
    • Concordia, Kansas, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • La Jolla, California, USA
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Helen_TalbotHelen Talbot - Wikipedia

    Helen Talbot (April 7, 1924 – January 29, 2010) was a motion picture actress and pin-up girl in the United States. She was born Helen Darling in Concordia, Kansas and lived there until 1941 when she moved to live with her brother in West Los Angeles, California.

  3. Helen Talbot. Actress: Federal Operator 99. Born Helen Darling, she was adopted by the Smith family in 1937 and lived with them until 1941, when she left to live with her brother, Dan Darling's family, a milkman in West Los Angeles, and the Smiths moved to Rochester, New York.

    • April 7, 1924
    • January 29, 2010
  4. actress. 85 years biography, photo, best movies and TV shows, news, birthday and age, Date of Death. «Affairs of Geraldine» (1946), «The Last Crooked Mile» (1946), «King of the Forest Rangers» (1946), «Gay Blades» (1946), «Song of Mexico» (1945)...

  5. Jan 29, 2010 · Helen Talbot (April 7, 1924–January 29, 2010) was a motion picture actress and pin-up girl in the United States. She was born Helen Darling in Concordia, Kansas and lived there until 1941 when she moved to live with her brother in West Los Angeles, California.

  6. The blonde, energetic, and altogether adorable Helen Talbot, a frequent leading lady in Republic Pictures’ 1940s B-westerns, could easily have become that studio’s successor to its serial queens Kay Aldridge and Linda Stirling.

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  8. HELEN TALBOT. Although redheaded beauty Helen Talbot only co-starred in six B-westerns and two serials, and had minor supporting roles in four Roy Rogers/Dale Evans titles, it seems like far more because of the lasting impression she left on Saturday matinee moviegoers from 1943-1946.