Winnie Baldwin (April 7, 1894 – October 7, 1969) was an American vaudevillian, film actress, and playwright.
[1] In 1913, Baldwin was described as having "a sort of Howard Chandler Christy girl plus vaudeville sprightliness, the delightful American type we all fall for every time.
Don Carle Gillette wrote that Baldwin "helps the comedy along and puts over a couple of song numbers well.
A review in The Billboard stated, "Her easy, winning manner suggests that Miss Baldwin with a newly written act would go over big.
A review read, "Despite its faults, the play has some dramatic force, and with the lustful emotions of its chief character, may have a chance, providing it gets by New York's equivalent to 'the watch and ward' society.