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Myrna Loy

Myrna Loy (born Myrna Adele Williams; August 2, 1905 – December 14, 1993) was an American film, television and stage actress. Trained as a dancer, Loy devoted herself fully to an acting career following a few minor roles in silent films. She was originally typecast in exotic roles, often as a vamp or a woman of Asian descent, but her career prospects improved greatly following her portrayal of Nora Charles in The Thin Man (1934).[2]

Myrna Loy
Myrna Loy in 1941
Born
Myrna Adele Williams

(1905-08-02)August 2, 1905
DiedDecember 14, 1993(1993-12-14) (aged 88)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeForestvale Cemetery
Helena, Montana, U.S.
46°39′22″N 112°02′11″W / 46.6562°N 112.0365°W / 46.6562; -112.0365
Other namesThe Queen of Hollywood
OccupationActress
Years active1925–1982
Political partyDemocratic[1]
Spouse(s)
(m. 1936; div. 1942)

John Hertz, Jr.
(m. 1942; div. 1944)

(m. 1946; div. 1950)

(m. 1951; div. 1960)

Born in Helena, Montana, Loy was raised in rural Radersburg during her early childhood, before relocating to Los Angeles with her mother in her early adolescence. There, she began studying dance, and trained extensively throughout her high school education. She was discovered by production designer Natacha Rambova, who helped facilitate film auditions for her, and she began obtaining small roles in the late 1920s, mainly portraying vamps. Her role in The Thin Man helped elevate her reputation as a versatile actress, and she reprised the role of Nora Charles five more times.

Loy's performances peaked in the 1940s, with films like The Thin Man Goes Home, The Best Years of Our Lives, The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer, and Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House. She appeared in only a few films in the 1950s, including a lead role in the comedy Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), as well as supporting parts in The Ambassador's Daughter (1956) and the drama Lonelyhearts (1958). She appeared in only eight films between 1960 and 1981, after which she retired from acting.

Although Loy was never nominated for an Academy Award, in March 1991 she received an Honorary Academy Award in recognition of her life's work both onscreen and off, including serving as assistant to the director of military and naval welfare for the Red Cross during World War II, and a member-at-large of the U.S. Commission to UNESCO. In 2009, The Guardian named her one of the best actors never to have received an Academy Award nomination.[3] Loy died in December 1993 in New York City, aged 88.

Life and career

1905–1924: Early life

 
Loy (left) at age six, standing on her grandmother's porch in Helena, Montana, with her cousin Laura Belle Wilder (1911)

Loy was born Myrna Adele Williams on August 2, 1905, in Helena, Montana,[4][5] the daughter of Adelle Mae (née Johnson) and rancher David Franklin Williams.[6] Her parents had married in Helena in 1904, one year before Loy was born.[7] She had one younger brother, David Frederick Williams (d. 1982).[8] Loy's paternal grandfather, David Thomas Williams, was Welsh, and emigrated from Liverpool, England to the United States in 1856, arriving in Philadelphia.[9] Unable to read or write in English, he later settled in the Montana Territory where he began a career as a rancher.[10] Loy's maternal grandparents were Scottish and Swedish immigrants.[11][12] During her childhood, her father worked as a banker, real estate developer, and farmland appraiser in Helena, and was the youngest man ever elected to serve in the Montana state legislature.[13] Her mother had studied music at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago, and at one time considered a career as a concert performer, but instead devoted her time to raising Loy and her brother.[14] Loy's mother was a lifelong Democrat, while her father was a staunch Republican.[14] She was raised in the Methodist faith.[15]

 
Loy modeled for the central figure in Harry Fielding Winebrenner's Fountain of Education, a sculpture at Venice High School in Los Angeles (1922)

Loy spent her early life in Radersburg, Montana, a rural mining community approximately 50 miles (80 km)[16] southeast of Helena.[17][18] During the winter of 1912, Loy's mother nearly died from pneumonia, and her father sent his wife and daughter to La Jolla, California.[19] Loy's mother saw great potential in Southern California, and during one of her husband's visits, she encouraged him to purchase real estate there.[20] Among the properties he bought was land that he would later sell, at a considerable profit, to filmmaker Charlie Chaplin for his film studio there. Although her mother tried to persuade her husband to move to California permanently, he preferred ranch life and the three eventually returned to Montana. Soon afterward, Loy's mother needed a hysterectomy and insisted Los Angeles was a safer place to have it done, so she, Loy, and Loy's brother David moved to Ocean Park, where Loy began to take dancing lessons.[19] After the family returned to Montana, Loy continued her dancing lessons, and at the age of 12, Myrna Williams made her stage debut performing a dance she had choreographed based on "The Blue Bird" from the Rose Dream operetta[21] at Helena's Marlow Theater.[22]

When Loy was 13, her father died during the 1918 flu pandemic in November of that year.[23] Loy's mother permanently relocated the family to California, where they settled in Culver City, outside Los Angeles.[24] Loy attended the exclusive Westlake School for Girls while continuing to study dance in downtown Los Angeles.[25] When her teachers objected to her extracurricular participation in theatrical arts, her mother enrolled her in Venice High School, and at 15, she began appearing in local stage productions.[26]

In 1921, Loy posed for Venice High School sculpture teacher Harry Fielding Winebrenner as "Inspiration"; the full length figure was central in his allegorical sculpture group Fountain of Education.[27] Completed in 1922, the sculpture group was installed in front of the campus outdoor pool in May 1923 where it stood for decades.[28] Loy's slender figure with her uplifted face and one arm extending skyward presented a "vision of purity, grace, youthful vigor, and aspiration" that was singled out in a Los Angeles Times story that included a photo of the "Inspiration" figure along with the model's name—the first time her name appeared in a newspaper.[29][30] A few months later, Loy's "Inspiration" figure was temporarily removed from the sculpture group and transported aboard the battleship Nevada for a Memorial Day pageant in which "Miss Myrna Williams" participated.[29] Fountain of Education can be seen in the opening scenes of the 1978 film Grease. After decades of exposure to the elements and vandalism, the original concrete statue was removed from display in 2002, and replaced in 2010 by a bronze duplicate paid for through an alumni-led fundraising campaign.[31][29]

Loy left school at the age of 18 to begin to help with the family's finances. She obtained work at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, where she performed in what were called prologues, elaborate musical sequences that were related to and served as preliminary entertainment before the feature film. During this period, Loy saw Eleonora Duse in the play Thy Will Be Done, and the simple acting techniques she employed made such an impact on Loy that she tried to emulate them throughout her career.[32]

1925–1932: Career beginnings

 
In its September 1925 issue, Motion Picture magazine featured two Henry Waxman photographs of Loy, costumed by Adrian, as she appeared in What Price Beauty?

While Loy was dancing in prologues at the Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, portrait photographer Henry Waxman took several pictures of her that were noticed by Rudolph Valentino when the actor went to Waxman's studio for a sitting.[33] Valentino was looking for a leading lady for Cobra, the first independent project he and his wife Natacha Rambova were producing.[34] Loy tested for the role, which went to Gertrude Olmstead instead, but soon after that she was hired as an extra for Pretty Ladies (1925), in which she and fellow newcomer Joan Crawford were among a bevy of chorus girls dangling from an elaborate chandelier.[35]

Rambova hired Loy for a small but showy role opposite Nita Naldi in What Price Beauty?, a film she was producing. Shot in May 1925, the film remained unreleased for three years; but stills of Loy in her exotic makeup and costume appeared in Motion Picture magazine and led to a contract with Warner Bros. There, her surname was changed from Williams to Loy.[36]

Loy's silent film roles were mainly as a vamp or femme fatale, and she frequently portrayed characters of Asian or Eurasian background in films such as Across the Pacific (1926), A Girl in Every Port (1928), The Crimson City (1928), The Black Watch (1929), and The Desert Song (1929), which she later recalled "kind of solidified my exotic non-American image."[37] In 1930 she appeared in The Great Divide. It took years for her to overcome this typecasting, and as late as 1932, she was cast as a villainous Eurasian in Thirteen Women (1932). She also played, opposite Boris Karloff, the depraved sadistic daughter of the title character in The Mask of Fu Manchu (1932).

In 1932, Loy began dating producer Arthur Hornblow Jr., when he was still married to his wife, Juliette Crosby.[38] Prior to that, Loy appeared in small roles in The Jazz Singer and a number of early lavish Technicolor musicals, including The Show of Shows, The Bride of the Regiment, and Under a Texas Moon. As a result, she became associated with musical roles, and when they began to lose favor with the public, her career went into a slump. In 1934, Loy appeared in Manhattan Melodrama with Clark Gable and William Powell. When gangster John Dillinger was shot to death after leaving a screening of the film at the Biograph Theater in Chicago, the film received widespread publicity, with some newspapers reporting that Loy had been Dillinger's favorite actress.[39]

1933–1938: Rise to stardom

 
Loy, William Powell and Asta in The Thin Man (1934)

After appearing with Ramón Novarro in The Barbarian (1933), Loy was cast as Nora Charles in the 1934 film The Thin Man. Director W. S. Van Dyke chose Loy after he detected a wit and sense of humor that her previous films had not revealed. At a Hollywood party, he pushed her into a swimming pool to test her reaction, and felt that her aplomb in handling the situation was exactly what he envisioned for Nora.[40] Louis B. Mayer at first refused to allow Loy to play the part because he felt she was a dramatic actress, but Van Dyke insisted. Mayer finally relented on the condition that filming be completed within three weeks, as Loy was committed to start filming Stamboul Quest.[41] The Thin Man became one of the year's biggest hits, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Loy received excellent reviews and was acclaimed for her comedic skills. Her costar William Powell and she proved to be a popular screen couple and appeared in 14 films together, one of the most prolific pairings in Hollywood history. Loy later referred to The Thin Man as the film "that finally made me... after more than 80 films."[42]

 
Arthur Hornblow Jr. and Loy soon after their marriage in 1936

Her successes in Manhattan Melodrama and The Thin Man marked a turning point in her career, and she was cast in more important pictures. Such films as Wife vs. Secretary (1936) with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow, and Petticoat Fever (1936) with Robert Montgomery gave her opportunity to develop comedic skills. She made four films in close succession with William Powell: Libeled Lady (1936), which also starred Jean Harlow and Spencer Tracy; The Great Ziegfeld (1936), in which she played Billie Burke opposite Powell's Florenz Ziegfeld; the second Thin Man film, After the Thin Man (1936), with Powell and James Stewart; and the romantic comedy Double Wedding (1937). Loy married Arthur Hornblow in 1936, in between filming the successive productions.[43] She was later rumored to have had affairs with co-star Tracy between 1935 and 1936, while filming Whipsaw and Libeled Lady.[44][45] Later, Loy revealed to educator Alan Greenberg that she was in love with Spencer Tracy: "I loved him and I really did love him. I loved him. I mean I was in love with him and she [Katharine Hepburn] got in the way".[46]

 
Loy with Clark Gable on the set of Too Hot to Handle, 1938

She also made three more films with Gable at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM): Parnell (1937) was a historical drama and one of the most poorly received films of either Loy's or Gable's career, but their other pairings in Test Pilot and Too Hot to Handle (both 1938) were successes. While working for MGM, Loy was outspoken about the studio's casting hierarchy, especially based on race, and was quoted as saying: "Why does every black person in the movies have to play a servant? How about a black person walking up the steps of a court house carrying a briefcase?"[47]

During this period, Loy was one of Hollywood's busiest and highest-paid actresses, and in 1937 and 1938 she was listed in the annual "Quigley Poll of the Top Ten Money Making Stars", which was compiled from the votes of movie exhibitors throughout the United States for the stars who had generated the most revenue in their theaters over the previous year.[48]

1939–1949: Mainstream work and war activism

 
Loy and Tyrone Power in The Rains Came (1939)

By the late 1930s, Loy was highly regarded for her performances in romantic comedies, and she was anxious to demonstrate her dramatic ability. She was cast in the lead female role in The Rains Came (1939) opposite Tyrone Power. She filmed Third Finger, Left Hand (1940) with Melvyn Douglas and appeared in I Love You Again (1940), Love Crazy (1941), and Shadow of the Thin Man (1941), all with William Powell.

On June 1, 1942, Loy divorced husband Hornblow in Reno, citing "mental cruelty" as the impetus for separating.[49] Five days after the divorce, she married John D. Hertz, Jr. an advertising executive and founder of Hertz Rent A Car, at his sister's home in New York City.[49] They remained married for two years, eventually divorcing in Cuernavaca, Mexico, on August 21, 1944,[49] with Loy again citing mental cruelty.[50]

With the outbreak of World War II the same year, Loy all but abandoned her acting career to focus on the war effort and began devoting her time working with the Red Cross.[51] She was so fiercely outspoken against Adolf Hitler that her name appeared on his blacklist, resulting in her films being banned in Germany.[52] She also helped run a Naval Auxiliary canteen and toured frequently to raise funds for the war efforts. Around 1945, Loy began dating producer and screenwriter Gene Markey, who had previously been married to actresses Joan Bennett and Hedy Lamarr.[49] The two were married in a private ceremony on January 3, 1946, at the chapel on Terminal Island, while Markey was serving in the military.[49]

She returned to films with The Thin Man Goes Home (1945). In 1946, she played the wife of returning serviceman Fredric March in The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). Loy was paired with Cary Grant in David O. Selznick's The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947). The film co-starred a teenaged Shirley Temple. Following its success, she appeared again with Grant in Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948).

1950–1982: Later career and political activities

 
Loy and husband number four Howland H. Sargeant returning from a UNESCO conference soon after their marriage in 1951

In 1950, Loy co-starred with Clifton Webb in Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), which was a box-office hit, grossing $4.4 million in the United States.[53] The same year, she divorced Markey.[49] Her fourth and final husband was Howland H. Sargeant, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and president of Radio Liberty,[49] whom she married on June 2, 1951, in Fort Myer, Virginia.[49] Sargeant, a Presbyterian, wanted the marriage officiated in the church, but they were unable to do so due to Loy's recent divorce.[54]

Throughout the 1950s, Loy assumed an influential role as co-chairman of the Advisory Council of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing. In 1948, she had become a member of the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, the first Hollywood celebrity to do so. In 1952, she starred in the Cheaper by the Dozen sequel, Belles on Their Toes. In 1956, she appeared in The Ambassador's Daughter along with John Forsythe and Olivia de Havilland. She played opposite Montgomery Clift and Robert Ryan in Lonelyhearts (1958), Dore Schary's adaptation of Nathanael West's classic 1933 novel Miss Lonelyhearts. In 1960, she appeared in Midnight Lace and From the Terrace, but was not in another film until 1969 in The April Fools. In 1965, Loy won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre. Loy, a lifelong Democrat, publicly supported the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960, finding Richard Nixon to be an unscrupulous man.[1] Loy also dedicated herself to fighting for African-American civil rights, serving as co-chair of the Advisory Council of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing. She would endorse Eugene McCarthy, and later Hubert Humphrey in 1968 and George McGovern in 1972.[55][56][57]

After divorcing her fourth husband Sargeant in 1960, Loy relocated to 23 East 74th Street in Manhattan's Upper East Side. She later lived at 425 East 63rd Street.[58] In 1967, she was cast in the television series The Virginian, appearing in an episode titled "Lady of the House." Also in 1967, she appeared on "Family Affair" in the episode "A Helping Hand" as a woman out of work and taking on hired-help and cook work, comically aided by Mr. French, though, the job did not work out, and she takes the failure out on John Williams, who was temporarily substituting for Sebastian Cabot in the role of Mr. French. In 1972, she appeared as the suspect's mother-in-law in an episode of the television series Columbo titled "Étude in Black". In 1974, she had a supporting part in Airport 1975 playing Mrs. Devaney, a heavy-drinking woman imbibing Jim Beam and Olympia Beer mixed together; a foil to the character played by Sid Caesar. In 1975, Loy was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent two mastectomies to treat the disease.[59] She kept her cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatment from the public until the publication of her autobiography in 1987.[59]

In 1978, she appeared in the film The End as the mother of the main character played by Burt Reynolds. Her last motion picture performance was in 1980 in Sidney Lumet's Just Tell Me What You Want. She also returned to the stage, making her Broadway debut in a short-lived 1973 revival of Clare Boothe Luce's The Women. She toured in a 1978 production of Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking, directed by David Clayton.

In 1981, she appeared in the television drama Summer Solstice,[60] which was Henry Fonda's last performance. Her last acting role was a guest spot on the sitcom Love, Sidney, in 1982.

1983–1993: Final years

In January 1985 Loy was honoured by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences with a special salute held at Carnegie Hall in New York City, which she attended along with 2,800 guests.[61][62] Her autobiography, Myrna Loy: Being and Becoming, was published in 1987. The following year she received a Kennedy Center Honor.[63] Although Loy was never nominated for an Academy Award for any single performance, after an extensive letter-writing campaign and years of lobbying by screenwriter and then-Writers Guild of America, West board member Michael Russnow, who enlisted the support of Loy's former screen colleagues and friends such as Roddy McDowall, Sidney Sheldon, Harold Russell, and many others, she received a 1991 Academy Honorary Award "for her career achievement". She accepted via camera [64] from her New York City home, simply stating, "You've made me very happy. Thank you very much." It was her last public appearance in any medium.

Death

 
Grave, Helena, Montana

Loy died at age 88 on December 14, 1993, at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan during surgery following a long, unspecified illness.[65] She had been frail and in failing health, which had resulted in her being unable to attend the 1991 Academy Awards ceremony, where she was to receive a lifetime achievement Oscar.[66] She was cremated in New York and her ashes interred at Forestvale Cemetery in her native Helena, Montana.[67][68]

Legacy

For her contribution to the film industry, Loy has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6685 Hollywood Boulevard.[69]

A building at Sony Pictures Studios, formerly MGM Studios, in Culver City is named in her honor.[70] A cast of her handprint and her signature are in the sidewalk in front of Theater 80, on St. Mark's Place in New York City.[71]

Steel Pole Bathtub has a song on their 1991 album Tulip that is both named after Loy and samples dialogue from one of her films ("Stinky Davis" story, excerpted from The Thin Man Goes Home, 1945).

In 1991, the Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts opened in downtown Helena, not far from Loy's childhood home. Located in the historic Lewis and Clark Country Jail, it sponsors live performances and alternative films for underserved audiences.[72]

The songwriter Josh Ritter included a song about Loy on his 2017 album Gathering.

Filmography

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode Ref.
1936 Lux Radio Theatre "The Thin Man"
1937 Maxwell House Good News of 1938 "Herself" [73]
1940 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater "Single Crossing"
1940 Lux Radio Theatre "After the Thin Man"
1940 Lux Radio Theatre "Manhattan Melodrama" [74]
1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater "Magnificent Obsession"
1941 Lux Radio Theatre "I Love You Again"
1941 Lux Radio Theatre "Hired Wife"
1942 Lux Radio Theatre "Appointment for Love"
1945 Suspense "Library Book" [74]: 33 

References

  1. ^ a b Leider 2011, p. 293.
  2. ^ Curtis 2011, p. 333.
  3. ^ Singer, Leigh (February 19, 2009). "Oscars: the best actors never to have been nominated". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
  4. ^ Leider 2011, p. 1.
  5. ^ Parish & Bowers 1974, p. 443.
  6. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 1–4.
  7. ^ Leider 2011, p. 13.
  8. ^ Leider 2011, p. 385.
  9. ^ Leider 2011, p. 9.
  10. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 9–10.
  11. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 10–12.
  12. ^ Reed, Rex (April 13, 1969). "Myrna's Back – And Boyer's Got Her". The New York Times. Retrieved August 31, 2018.  
  13. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 11–12.
  14. ^ a b Leider 2011, p. 12.
  15. ^ Leider 2011, p. 14.
  16. ^ Swartout 2015, p. 34.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on July 5, 2008. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  18. ^ . Great Falls Tribune. Great Falls, Montana. August 23, 2011. Archived from the original on November 2, 2011. Retrieved August 30, 2018.
  19. ^ a b Leider 2011, p. 22.
  20. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 22–23.
  21. ^ Willis, Gertruce Knox and Mrs. R.R. Forman. W. A Rose Dream: A Fairy Operetta for Young People in Two Scenes.[permanent dead link] Philadelphia: Theodore Press Co., 1915.
  22. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 17–18.
  23. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 27–30.
  24. ^ Leider 2011, p. 32.
  25. ^ Leider 2011, p. 34.
  26. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 25–29.
  27. ^ Leider 2011, p. 41.
  28. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 41–42.
  29. ^ a b c Leider 2011, p. 42.
  30. ^ Perhaps ironically, in 1947 Loy co-starred in The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer as the older sister of Shirley Temple, who hopes to have her portrait made by Cary Grant, posing as "Young America".
  31. ^ "The Myrna Loy Statue Project".
  32. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 33–34.
  33. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 34–38.
  34. ^ Leider 2011, pp. 47–48.
  35. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 37–41.
  36. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 42–43.
  37. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, p. 66.
  38. ^ Leider 2011, p. 92.
  39. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, p. 97.
  40. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, p. 88.
  41. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 88–89.
  42. ^ Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 88–91.
  43. ^ Leider 2011, p. 149.
  44. ^ Wayne 2005, pp. 209–210.
  45. ^ Andersen 1997, p. 86.
  46. ^ Myrna Loy: loving Spencer Tracy & hating Katherine Hepburn - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axD5mkA2aMM
  47. ^ Maier 2011, p. 17.
  48. ^ "The 2007 Motion Picture Almanac, Top Ten Money Making Stars" December 21, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, quigleypublishing.com. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h Houseman 1991, p. 190.
  50. ^ Leider 2011, p. 276.
  51. ^ Leider 2011, p. 239.
  52. ^ Leider 2011, p. 202.
  53. ^ Leider 2011, p. 274.
  54. ^ Leider 2011, p. 279.
  55. ^ "Anti-Bias Unit Gets Officers", The New York Times, May 14, 1961
  56. ^ Bob Thomas, “Politics Still Beckons to Myrna Loy,” The Washington Post, September 21, 1968
  57. ^ “Myrna Loy’s Star Still Burns Bright”; Rob Edelman, The New York Times, February 3, 1980
  58. ^ Leider 2011, p. 288.
  59. ^ a b Kotsilibas-Davis & Loy 1987, pp. 345–346.
  60. ^ Erickson, Hal. , nytimes.com. Retrieved December 20, 2011.
  61. ^ Harvey, Stephen (January 13, 1985). "FOR MYRNA LOY, A LATE BUT LOVING TRIBUTE". The New York Times. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  62. ^ Maslin, Janet (January 16, 1985). "TRIBUTE TO MYRNA LOY". The New York Times. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  63. ^ Hall, Carla; Swisher, Kara (December 5, 1988). "ARTISTRY, HONOR AND A STARRY, STARRY NIGHT". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  64. ^ "The presenting of an Honorary Oscar® to Myrna Loy at the 63rd Annual Academy Awards®, March 25, 1991, youtube.com. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  65. ^ Flint, Peter B. (December 15, 1993). "Myrna Loy, Model of Urbanity in 'Thin Man' Roles, Dies at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved August 30, 2018.  
  66. ^ Folkart, Burt A. (December 15, 1993). "From the Archives: Myrna Loy, Star of 'Thin Man' Films, Dies at 88". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  67. ^ . Myrna Loy Center. Archived from the original on October 16, 2009. Retrieved August 30, 2018.
  68. ^ Wilson, Scott (August 17, 2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed. McFarland. p. 478. ISBN 9780786479924.
  69. ^ "Myrna Loy". Hollywood Walk of Fame. October 25, 2019.
  70. ^ "Sony Pictures Studios: Studio Lot Map" September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, sonypicturesstudios.com. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  71. ^ "Village Sidewalk", forgotten-ny.com. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  72. ^ Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts website; Helenair.com. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  73. ^ Maxwell Good House News. Maxwell House Good News of 1938. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. December 30, 1937.
  74. ^ a b "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 37, no. 1. Winter 2011. p. 32.

Footnote 55. Being and Becoming is a memoir. The man cited wrote the preface. To verify, see the book.

Works cited

External links

myrna, confused, with, mina, born, myrna, adele, williams, august, 1905, december, 1993, american, film, television, stage, actress, trained, dancer, devoted, herself, fully, acting, career, following, minor, roles, silent, films, originally, typecast, exotic,. Not to be confused with Mina Loy Myrna Loy born Myrna Adele Williams August 2 1905 December 14 1993 was an American film television and stage actress Trained as a dancer Loy devoted herself fully to an acting career following a few minor roles in silent films She was originally typecast in exotic roles often as a vamp or a woman of Asian descent but her career prospects improved greatly following her portrayal of Nora Charles in The Thin Man 1934 2 Myrna LoyMyrna Loy in 1941BornMyrna Adele Williams 1905 08 02 August 2 1905Helena Montana U S DiedDecember 14 1993 1993 12 14 aged 88 New York City U S Resting placeForestvale CemeteryHelena Montana U S 46 39 22 N 112 02 11 W 46 6562 N 112 0365 W 46 6562 112 0365Other namesThe Queen of HollywoodOccupationActressYears active1925 1982Political partyDemocratic 1 Spouse s Arthur Hornblow Jr m 1936 div 1942 wbr John Hertz Jr m 1942 div 1944 wbr Gene Markey m 1946 div 1950 wbr Howland H Sargeant m 1951 div 1960 wbr Born in Helena Montana Loy was raised in rural Radersburg during her early childhood before relocating to Los Angeles with her mother in her early adolescence There she began studying dance and trained extensively throughout her high school education She was discovered by production designer Natacha Rambova who helped facilitate film auditions for her and she began obtaining small roles in the late 1920s mainly portraying vamps Her role in The Thin Man helped elevate her reputation as a versatile actress and she reprised the role of Nora Charles five more times Loy s performances peaked in the 1940s with films like The Thin Man Goes Home The Best Years of Our Lives The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer and Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House She appeared in only a few films in the 1950s including a lead role in the comedy Cheaper by the Dozen 1950 as well as supporting parts in The Ambassador s Daughter 1956 and the drama Lonelyhearts 1958 She appeared in only eight films between 1960 and 1981 after which she retired from acting Although Loy was never nominated for an Academy Award in March 1991 she received an Honorary Academy Award in recognition of her life s work both onscreen and off including serving as assistant to the director of military and naval welfare for the Red Cross during World War II and a member at large of the U S Commission to UNESCO In 2009 The Guardian named her one of the best actors never to have received an Academy Award nomination 3 Loy died in December 1993 in New York City aged 88 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 1905 1924 Early life 1 2 1925 1932 Career beginnings 1 3 1933 1938 Rise to stardom 1 4 1939 1949 Mainstream work and war activism 1 5 1950 1982 Later career and political activities 1 6 1983 1993 Final years 1 7 Death 2 Legacy 3 Filmography 4 Radio appearances 5 References 6 Works cited 7 External linksLife and career Edit1905 1924 Early life Edit Loy left at age six standing on her grandmother s porch in Helena Montana with her cousin Laura Belle Wilder 1911 Loy was born Myrna Adele Williams on August 2 1905 in Helena Montana 4 5 the daughter of Adelle Mae nee Johnson and rancher David Franklin Williams 6 Her parents had married in Helena in 1904 one year before Loy was born 7 She had one younger brother David Frederick Williams d 1982 8 Loy s paternal grandfather David Thomas Williams was Welsh and emigrated from Liverpool England to the United States in 1856 arriving in Philadelphia 9 Unable to read or write in English he later settled in the Montana Territory where he began a career as a rancher 10 Loy s maternal grandparents were Scottish and Swedish immigrants 11 12 During her childhood her father worked as a banker real estate developer and farmland appraiser in Helena and was the youngest man ever elected to serve in the Montana state legislature 13 Her mother had studied music at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago and at one time considered a career as a concert performer but instead devoted her time to raising Loy and her brother 14 Loy s mother was a lifelong Democrat while her father was a staunch Republican 14 She was raised in the Methodist faith 15 Loy modeled for the central figure in Harry Fielding Winebrenner s Fountain of Education a sculpture at Venice High School in Los Angeles 1922 Loy spent her early life in Radersburg Montana a rural mining community approximately 50 miles 80 km 16 southeast of Helena 17 18 During the winter of 1912 Loy s mother nearly died from pneumonia and her father sent his wife and daughter to La Jolla California 19 Loy s mother saw great potential in Southern California and during one of her husband s visits she encouraged him to purchase real estate there 20 Among the properties he bought was land that he would later sell at a considerable profit to filmmaker Charlie Chaplin for his film studio there Although her mother tried to persuade her husband to move to California permanently he preferred ranch life and the three eventually returned to Montana Soon afterward Loy s mother needed a hysterectomy and insisted Los Angeles was a safer place to have it done so she Loy and Loy s brother David moved to Ocean Park where Loy began to take dancing lessons 19 After the family returned to Montana Loy continued her dancing lessons and at the age of 12 Myrna Williams made her stage debut performing a dance she had choreographed based on The Blue Bird from the Rose Dream operetta 21 at Helena s Marlow Theater 22 When Loy was 13 her father died during the 1918 flu pandemic in November of that year 23 Loy s mother permanently relocated the family to California where they settled in Culver City outside Los Angeles 24 Loy attended the exclusive Westlake School for Girls while continuing to study dance in downtown Los Angeles 25 When her teachers objected to her extracurricular participation in theatrical arts her mother enrolled her in Venice High School and at 15 she began appearing in local stage productions 26 In 1921 Loy posed for Venice High School sculpture teacher Harry Fielding Winebrenner as Inspiration the full length figure was central in his allegorical sculpture group Fountain of Education 27 Completed in 1922 the sculpture group was installed in front of the campus outdoor pool in May 1923 where it stood for decades 28 Loy s slender figure with her uplifted face and one arm extending skyward presented a vision of purity grace youthful vigor and aspiration that was singled out in a Los Angeles Times story that included a photo of the Inspiration figure along with the model s name the first time her name appeared in a newspaper 29 30 A few months later Loy s Inspiration figure was temporarily removed from the sculpture group and transported aboard the battleship Nevada for a Memorial Day pageant in which Miss Myrna Williams participated 29 Fountain of Education can be seen in the opening scenes of the 1978 film Grease After decades of exposure to the elements and vandalism the original concrete statue was removed from display in 2002 and replaced in 2010 by a bronze duplicate paid for through an alumni led fundraising campaign 31 29 Loy left school at the age of 18 to begin to help with the family s finances She obtained work at Grauman s Egyptian Theatre where she performed in what were called prologues elaborate musical sequences that were related to and served as preliminary entertainment before the feature film During this period Loy saw Eleonora Duse in the play Thy Will Be Done and the simple acting techniques she employed made such an impact on Loy that she tried to emulate them throughout her career 32 1925 1932 Career beginnings Edit In its September 1925 issue Motion Picture magazine featured two Henry Waxman photographs of Loy costumed by Adrian as she appeared in What Price Beauty While Loy was dancing in prologues at the Grauman s Egyptian Theatre portrait photographer Henry Waxman took several pictures of her that were noticed by Rudolph Valentino when the actor went to Waxman s studio for a sitting 33 Valentino was looking for a leading lady for Cobra the first independent project he and his wife Natacha Rambova were producing 34 Loy tested for the role which went to Gertrude Olmstead instead but soon after that she was hired as an extra for Pretty Ladies 1925 in which she and fellow newcomer Joan Crawford were among a bevy of chorus girls dangling from an elaborate chandelier 35 Rambova hired Loy for a small but showy role opposite Nita Naldi in What Price Beauty a film she was producing Shot in May 1925 the film remained unreleased for three years but stills of Loy in her exotic makeup and costume appeared in Motion Picture magazine and led to a contract with Warner Bros There her surname was changed from Williams to Loy 36 Loy s silent film roles were mainly as a vamp or femme fatale and she frequently portrayed characters of Asian or Eurasian background in films such as Across the Pacific 1926 A Girl in Every Port 1928 The Crimson City 1928 The Black Watch 1929 and The Desert Song 1929 which she later recalled kind of solidified my exotic non American image 37 In 1930 she appeared in The Great Divide It took years for her to overcome this typecasting and as late as 1932 she was cast as a villainous Eurasian in Thirteen Women 1932 She also played opposite Boris Karloff the depraved sadistic daughter of the title character in The Mask of Fu Manchu 1932 In 1932 Loy began dating producer Arthur Hornblow Jr when he was still married to his wife Juliette Crosby 38 Prior to that Loy appeared in small roles in The Jazz Singer and a number of early lavish Technicolor musicals including The Show of Shows The Bride of the Regiment and Under a Texas Moon As a result she became associated with musical roles and when they began to lose favor with the public her career went into a slump In 1934 Loy appeared in Manhattan Melodrama with Clark Gable and William Powell When gangster John Dillinger was shot to death after leaving a screening of the film at the Biograph Theater in Chicago the film received widespread publicity with some newspapers reporting that Loy had been Dillinger s favorite actress 39 1933 1938 Rise to stardom Edit Loy William Powell and Asta in The Thin Man 1934 After appearing with Ramon Novarro in The Barbarian 1933 Loy was cast as Nora Charles in the 1934 film The Thin Man Director W S Van Dyke chose Loy after he detected a wit and sense of humor that her previous films had not revealed At a Hollywood party he pushed her into a swimming pool to test her reaction and felt that her aplomb in handling the situation was exactly what he envisioned for Nora 40 Louis B Mayer at first refused to allow Loy to play the part because he felt she was a dramatic actress but Van Dyke insisted Mayer finally relented on the condition that filming be completed within three weeks as Loy was committed to start filming Stamboul Quest 41 The Thin Man became one of the year s biggest hits and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture Loy received excellent reviews and was acclaimed for her comedic skills Her costar William Powell and she proved to be a popular screen couple and appeared in 14 films together one of the most prolific pairings in Hollywood history Loy later referred to The Thin Man as the film that finally made me after more than 80 films 42 Arthur Hornblow Jr and Loy soon after their marriage in 1936 Her successes in Manhattan Melodrama and The Thin Man marked a turning point in her career and she was cast in more important pictures Such films as Wife vs Secretary 1936 with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow and Petticoat Fever 1936 with Robert Montgomery gave her opportunity to develop comedic skills She made four films in close succession with William Powell Libeled Lady 1936 which also starred Jean Harlow and Spencer Tracy The Great Ziegfeld 1936 in which she played Billie Burke opposite Powell s Florenz Ziegfeld the second Thin Man film After the Thin Man 1936 with Powell and James Stewart and the romantic comedy Double Wedding 1937 Loy married Arthur Hornblow in 1936 in between filming the successive productions 43 She was later rumored to have had affairs with co star Tracy between 1935 and 1936 while filming Whipsaw and Libeled Lady 44 45 Later Loy revealed to educator Alan Greenberg that she was in love with Spencer Tracy I loved him and I really did love him I loved him I mean I was in love with him and she Katharine Hepburn got in the way 46 Loy with Clark Gable on the set of Too Hot to Handle 1938 She also made three more films with Gable at Metro Goldwyn Mayer MGM Parnell 1937 was a historical drama and one of the most poorly received films of either Loy s or Gable s career but their other pairings in Test Pilot and Too Hot to Handle both 1938 were successes While working for MGM Loy was outspoken about the studio s casting hierarchy especially based on race and was quoted as saying Why does every black person in the movies have to play a servant How about a black person walking up the steps of a court house carrying a briefcase 47 During this period Loy was one of Hollywood s busiest and highest paid actresses and in 1937 and 1938 she was listed in the annual Quigley Poll of the Top Ten Money Making Stars which was compiled from the votes of movie exhibitors throughout the United States for the stars who had generated the most revenue in their theaters over the previous year 48 1939 1949 Mainstream work and war activism Edit Loy and Tyrone Power in The Rains Came 1939 Hoagy Carmichael Fredric March Loy Dana Andrews and Theresa Wright in The Best Years of Our Lives 1946 By the late 1930s Loy was highly regarded for her performances in romantic comedies and she was anxious to demonstrate her dramatic ability She was cast in the lead female role in The Rains Came 1939 opposite Tyrone Power She filmed Third Finger Left Hand 1940 with Melvyn Douglas and appeared in I Love You Again 1940 Love Crazy 1941 and Shadow of the Thin Man 1941 all with William Powell On June 1 1942 Loy divorced husband Hornblow in Reno citing mental cruelty as the impetus for separating 49 Five days after the divorce she married John D Hertz Jr an advertising executive and founder of Hertz Rent A Car at his sister s home in New York City 49 They remained married for two years eventually divorcing in Cuernavaca Mexico on August 21 1944 49 with Loy again citing mental cruelty 50 With the outbreak of World War II the same year Loy all but abandoned her acting career to focus on the war effort and began devoting her time working with the Red Cross 51 She was so fiercely outspoken against Adolf Hitler that her name appeared on his blacklist resulting in her films being banned in Germany 52 She also helped run a Naval Auxiliary canteen and toured frequently to raise funds for the war efforts Around 1945 Loy began dating producer and screenwriter Gene Markey who had previously been married to actresses Joan Bennett and Hedy Lamarr 49 The two were married in a private ceremony on January 3 1946 at the chapel on Terminal Island while Markey was serving in the military 49 She returned to films with The Thin Man Goes Home 1945 In 1946 she played the wife of returning serviceman Fredric March in The Best Years of Our Lives 1946 Loy was paired with Cary Grant in David O Selznick s The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer 1947 The film co starred a teenaged Shirley Temple Following its success she appeared again with Grant in Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House 1948 1950 1982 Later career and political activities Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Loy and husband number four Howland H Sargeant returning from a UNESCO conference soon after their marriage in 1951 In 1950 Loy co starred with Clifton Webb in Cheaper by the Dozen 1950 which was a box office hit grossing 4 4 million in the United States 53 The same year she divorced Markey 49 Her fourth and final husband was Howland H Sargeant U S Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and president of Radio Liberty 49 whom she married on June 2 1951 in Fort Myer Virginia 49 Sargeant a Presbyterian wanted the marriage officiated in the church but they were unable to do so due to Loy s recent divorce 54 Throughout the 1950s Loy assumed an influential role as co chairman of the Advisory Council of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing In 1948 she had become a member of the U S National Commission for UNESCO the first Hollywood celebrity to do so In 1952 she starred in the Cheaper by the Dozen sequel Belles on Their Toes In 1956 she appeared in The Ambassador s Daughter along with John Forsythe and Olivia de Havilland She played opposite Montgomery Clift and Robert Ryan in Lonelyhearts 1958 Dore Schary s adaptation of Nathanael West s classic 1933 novel Miss Lonelyhearts In 1960 she appeared in Midnight Lace and From the Terrace but was not in another film until 1969 in The April Fools In 1965 Loy won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre Loy a lifelong Democrat publicly supported the election of John F Kennedy in 1960 finding Richard Nixon to be an unscrupulous man 1 Loy also dedicated herself to fighting for African American civil rights serving as co chair of the Advisory Council of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing She would endorse Eugene McCarthy and later Hubert Humphrey in 1968 and George McGovern in 1972 55 56 57 After divorcing her fourth husband Sargeant in 1960 Loy relocated to 23 East 74th Street in Manhattan s Upper East Side She later lived at 425 East 63rd Street 58 In 1967 she was cast in the television series The Virginian appearing in an episode titled Lady of the House Also in 1967 she appeared on Family Affair in the episode A Helping Hand as a woman out of work and taking on hired help and cook work comically aided by Mr French though the job did not work out and she takes the failure out on John Williams who was temporarily substituting for Sebastian Cabot in the role of Mr French In 1972 she appeared as the suspect s mother in law in an episode of the television series Columbo titled Etude in Black In 1974 she had a supporting part in Airport 1975 playing Mrs Devaney a heavy drinking woman imbibing Jim Beam and Olympia Beer mixed together a foil to the character played by Sid Caesar In 1975 Loy was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent two mastectomies to treat the disease 59 She kept her cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatment from the public until the publication of her autobiography in 1987 59 In 1978 she appeared in the film The End as the mother of the main character played by Burt Reynolds Her last motion picture performance was in 1980 in Sidney Lumet s Just Tell Me What You Want She also returned to the stage making her Broadway debut in a short lived 1973 revival of Clare Boothe Luce s The Women She toured in a 1978 production of Alan Ayckbourn s Relatively Speaking directed by David Clayton In 1981 she appeared in the television drama Summer Solstice 60 which was Henry Fonda s last performance Her last acting role was a guest spot on the sitcom Love Sidney in 1982 1983 1993 Final years Edit In January 1985 Loy was honoured by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences with a special salute held at Carnegie Hall in New York City which she attended along with 2 800 guests 61 62 Her autobiography Myrna Loy Being and Becoming was published in 1987 The following year she received a Kennedy Center Honor 63 Although Loy was never nominated for an Academy Award for any single performance after an extensive letter writing campaign and years of lobbying by screenwriter and then Writers Guild of America West board member Michael Russnow who enlisted the support of Loy s former screen colleagues and friends such as Roddy McDowall Sidney Sheldon Harold Russell and many others she received a 1991 Academy Honorary Award for her career achievement She accepted via camera 64 from her New York City home simply stating You ve made me very happy Thank you very much It was her last public appearance in any medium Death Edit Grave Helena Montana Loy died at age 88 on December 14 1993 at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan during surgery following a long unspecified illness 65 She had been frail and in failing health which had resulted in her being unable to attend the 1991 Academy Awards ceremony where she was to receive a lifetime achievement Oscar 66 She was cremated in New York and her ashes interred at Forestvale Cemetery in her native Helena Montana 67 68 Legacy Edit With Clark Gable in Test Pilot For her contribution to the film industry Loy has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6685 Hollywood Boulevard 69 A building at Sony Pictures Studios formerly MGM Studios in Culver City is named in her honor 70 A cast of her handprint and her signature are in the sidewalk in front of Theater 80 on St Mark s Place in New York City 71 Steel Pole Bathtub has a song on their 1991 album Tulip that is both named after Loy and samples dialogue from one of her films Stinky Davis story excerpted from The Thin Man Goes Home 1945 In 1991 the Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts opened in downtown Helena not far from Loy s childhood home Located in the historic Lewis and Clark Country Jail it sponsors live performances and alternative films for underserved audiences 72 The songwriter Josh Ritter included a song about Loy on his 2017 album Gathering Filmography EditMain article Myrna Loy filmographyRadio appearances EditYear Program Episode Ref 1936 Lux Radio Theatre The Thin Man 1937 Maxwell House Good News of 1938 Herself 73 1940 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater Single Crossing 1940 Lux Radio Theatre After the Thin Man 1940 Lux Radio Theatre Manhattan Melodrama 74 1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater Magnificent Obsession 1941 Lux Radio Theatre I Love You Again 1941 Lux Radio Theatre Hired Wife 1942 Lux Radio Theatre Appointment for Love 1945 Suspense Library Book 74 33 References Edit a b Leider 2011 p 293 Curtis 2011 p 333 Singer Leigh February 19 2009 Oscars the best actors never to have been nominated The Guardian UK Retrieved September 17 2022 Leider 2011 p 1 Parish amp Bowers 1974 p 443 Leider 2011 pp 1 4 Leider 2011 p 13 Leider 2011 p 385 Leider 2011 p 9 Leider 2011 pp 9 10 Leider 2011 pp 10 12 Reed Rex April 13 1969 Myrna s Back And Boyer s Got Her The New York Times Retrieved August 31 2018 Leider 2011 pp 11 12 a b Leider 2011 p 12 Leider 2011 p 14 Swartout 2015 p 34 About Myrna Loy Archived from the original on July 5 2008 Retrieved July 20 2018 125 Montana Newsmakers Myrna Loy Reynolds Great Falls Tribune Great Falls Montana August 23 2011 Archived from the original on November 2 2011 Retrieved August 30 2018 a b Leider 2011 p 22 Leider 2011 pp 22 23 Willis Gertruce Knox and Mrs R R Forman W A Rose Dream A Fairy Operetta for Young People in Two Scenes permanent dead link Philadelphia Theodore Press Co 1915 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 17 18 Leider 2011 pp 27 30 Leider 2011 p 32 Leider 2011 p 34 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 25 29 Leider 2011 p 41 Leider 2011 pp 41 42 a b c Leider 2011 p 42 Perhaps ironically in 1947 Loy co starred in The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer as the older sister of Shirley Temple who hopes to have her portrait made by Cary Grant posing as Young America The Myrna Loy Statue Project Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 33 34 Leider 2011 pp 34 38 Leider 2011 pp 47 48 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 37 41 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 42 43 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 p 66 Leider 2011 p 92 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 p 97 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 p 88 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 88 89 Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 88 91 Leider 2011 p 149 Wayne 2005 pp 209 210 Andersen 1997 p 86 Myrna Loy loving Spencer Tracy amp hating Katherine Hepburn https www youtube com watch v axD5mkA2aMM Maier 2011 p 17 The 2007 Motion Picture Almanac Top Ten Money Making Stars Archived December 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine quigleypublishing com Retrieved July 11 2007 a b c d e f g h Houseman 1991 p 190 Leider 2011 p 276 Leider 2011 p 239 Leider 2011 p 202 Leider 2011 p 274 Leider 2011 p 279 Anti Bias Unit Gets Officers The New York Times May 14 1961 Bob Thomas Politics Still Beckons to Myrna Loy The Washington Post September 21 1968 Myrna Loy s Star Still Burns Bright Rob Edelman The New York Times February 3 1980 Leider 2011 p 288 a b Kotsilibas Davis amp Loy 1987 pp 345 346 Erickson Hal Summer Solstice 1981 nytimes com Retrieved December 20 2011 Harvey Stephen January 13 1985 FOR MYRNA LOY A LATE BUT LOVING TRIBUTE The New York Times Retrieved July 27 2021 Maslin Janet January 16 1985 TRIBUTE TO MYRNA LOY The New York Times Retrieved July 27 2021 Hall Carla Swisher Kara December 5 1988 ARTISTRY HONOR AND A STARRY STARRY NIGHT The Washington Post Retrieved July 27 2021 The presenting of an Honorary Oscar to Myrna Loy at the 63rd Annual Academy Awards March 25 1991 youtube com Retrieved August 14 2014 Flint Peter B December 15 1993 Myrna Loy Model of Urbanity in Thin Man Roles Dies at 88 The New York Times Retrieved August 30 2018 Folkart Burt A December 15 1993 From the Archives Myrna Loy Star of Thin Man Films Dies at 88 Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 31 2018 About Myrna Loy Myrna Loy Center Archived from the original on October 16 2009 Retrieved August 30 2018 Wilson Scott August 17 2016 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed McFarland p 478 ISBN 9780786479924 Myrna Loy Hollywood Walk of Fame October 25 2019 Sony Pictures Studios Studio Lot Map Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine sonypicturesstudios com Retrieved December 24 2010 Village Sidewalk forgotten ny com Retrieved December 24 2010 Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts website Helenair com Retrieved August 14 2015 Maxwell Good House News Maxwell House Good News of 1938 Metro Goldwyn Mayer December 30 1937 a b Those Were the Days Nostalgia Digest Vol 37 no 1 Winter 2011 p 32 Footnote 55 Being and Becoming is a memoir The man cited wrote the preface To verify see the book Works cited EditAndersen Christopher 1997 An Affair to Remember A Remarkable Love Story of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy New York William Morrow and Company Inc ISBN 0 688 15311 9 keep under wraps Brands H W 2008 Traitor to his Class The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 38551 958 8 Carr Larry More Fabulous Faces The Evolution and Metamorphosis of Bette Davis Katharine Hepburn Dolores del Rio Carole Lombard and Myrna Loy New York Doubleday and Company 1979 ISBN 0 385 12819 3 Houseman Victoria 1991 Made in Heaven The Marriages and Children of Hollywood Stars Los Angeles Bonus Books ISBN 978 0 929 38724 6 Curtis James 2011 Spencer Tracy A Biography London Hutchinson ISBN 978 0 30726 289 9 Kotsilibas Davis James Loy Myrna 1987 Myrna Loy Being and Becoming New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 55593 5 Leider Emily W 2011 Myrna Loy The Only Good Girl in Hollywood Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25320 9 Maier Simon 2011 Inspire Singapore Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 9 814 35176 8 Parish James Robert Bowers Ronald L 1974 The MGM Stock Company The Golden Era London Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 0501 3 Swartout Robert R Jr ed 2015 Montana A Cultural Medley Helena Montana Farcountry Press ISBN 978 1 560 37644 6 Wayne Jane Ellen 2005 The Leading Men of MGM New York Carrol and Graf ISBN 978 0 7867 1768 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Myrna Loy category Official website Myrna Loy at IMDb Myrna Loy at the Internet Broadway Database Myrna Loy at the TCM Movie Database Myrna Loy at AllMovie Obituary nytimes com Profile virtual history com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myrna Loy amp oldid 1131001229, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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