• Today’s Topics:
  • THE STORE
  • Helen Twelvetrees Bio
    • Or Head to Amazon to buy my Helen Twelvetrees book
  • Head to WarrenWilliam.com
  • Cliff’s Fiction
  • Blog

Immortal Ephemera

Classic Movies & Movie Collectibles

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.

To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Privacy Policy
  • Reviews
    • Pre-Code
    • Horror
    • Gangsters
    • Warner Archive
  • Biographies
  • Card & Collectible Galleries
    • About Movie Collectibles
    • My eBay Store
    • My Books
    • Glossary
    • eBay Shopping Tips
  • Info / Misc
    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • My Bookshelf
    • Movie Books
    • WAMPAS
  • Social
    • Contact
    • YouTube
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
You are here: Home / News - Notes / “She Came from Montana” – Myrna Loy as Covered by Newspapers of the 1920s

“She Came from Montana” – Myrna Loy as Covered by Newspapers of the 1920s

August 1, 2012 By Cliff Aliperti 1 Comment

Helen Twelvetrees, Pefect Ingenue by Cliff Aliperti
Support the site? Skip buying me a coffee and grab yourself some movie cards & collectibles instead! Shop my eBay store here.


Today a look back at Myrna Loy before The Thin Man, before MGM, heck, even before her reputation for exotics in the first of the few old newspaper clippings to follow!

Myrna Loy 1930s Films Selectos Cuban Movie Magazine Premium Photo

“She Came from Montana”

From the Helena Daily Independent, January 31, 1926, page 7.

Myrna Loy 1920s 5x7 Fan PhotoLocal paper publishes article with photo about local girl made good after Myrna Loy is cast in Pretty Ladies (1925) for MGM. The text over the photo provides a chuckle all these years later as it sarcastically relays “Her right name is ‘Williams,’ but Loy sounds good in Follies.” Yeah, guys, maybe she’ll stick with it.

Loy, recently turned 20 by this time, “was first found a valuable asset to the moving picture world several years ago.” Erm, no.

The article largely centers on Loy’s background in Helena and does a good job of describing various family members. It gets Pretty Ladies all wrong though in describing Myrna as “one of Flo Ziegfeld’s latest acquisitions” and somehow making it sound like Myrna is not only featured in Pretty Ladies, but that Pretty Ladies is the latest live Follies production back in New York.

Pretty Ladies is a movie set in the world of the Follies and stars ZaSu Pitts and Tom Moore. Not Myrna Loy by any stretch.

Myrna Loy on cover of Picture Play, September 1931 issueOne 1925 newspaper review states that “The background is the ‘Follies.’ It is rather thinly disguised, for we recognize Eddie Cantor, Will Rogers and others; even the manager is made-up to resemble Mr. Ziegfeld.” Interesting in mentioning Cantor and Rogers as neither are credited on the film’s IMDb page.

What Pretty Ladies is important for is the film debut of Lucille LeSueur, who would soon become known as Joan Crawford, as well as Myrna Loy’s very early screen appearance. Also cast in the film is fellow future MGM high roller, Norma Shearer.

In her autobiography Being and Becoming, written with James Kotsilibas-Davis, Myrna remembers that she and Joan “were both chorus girls in this thing,” and that the film used “Joan and I, these two little extras, as part of a human chandelier. They had us hanging on to this thing with our toes out, all these girls going in different directions. It was a riot” (31).

“Pretty Legs Win Fame on Screen for Myrna Loy”

By Dan Thomas for Capital Times, May 6, 1928, page 38.

Thomas drools over the “shapely limbs” of others who’ve taken Myrna’s path to screen fame: Mae Murray, Gilda Gray, Dolores Costello, Billie Dove, Marion Davies, Joan Crawford, being among those mentioned.

Myrna Loy pictured on a 1926 promotional still photo

Thomas writes that “Make-believe village remembers vividly when the young actress was dancing in prologs in a Hollywood theater, just one of fifty or more girls. Yet, even in that forest of beautiful legs, Myrna’s were particularly noticeable.” Sure they were.

The “exotic Myrna” is quoted by Thomas as saying “I realize that it was my legs that gave me my start and I certainly am going to do everything possible to keep them pretty. Who knows, I may have to depend upon them to earn my living again some day.”

Don’t sell yourself short, Myrna.

Transition

Myrna Loy 1929 Movie Land Keeno Game Card“Myrna Loy is a silent artist with a very good microphone voice. Her work in The Black Watch and The Desert Song shows this.”

“Hollywood in Person” by Mollie Merrick.
Montana Standard, August 4, 1929, page 21.

Typecast

“Myrna Loy is one of the most interesting personalities in pictures. Great personal beauty, unique and seductive makeups, combined with amazing interpretative ability, have made the name of Myrna Loy synonymous with the mysterious and exotic parts Miss Loy is becoming more and more in demand for roles of this type.”

“Texas Mermaid” in promotion of Under a Texas Moon
The Helena Daily Independent, December 13, 1930, page 2.

Other Sources:

  • Loy, Myrna and James Kotsilibas-Davis. Myrna Loy: Being and Becoming. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1987.
  • “‘Pretty Ladies’–And Some of Them Clever, Too.” Hamilton Daily News. 19 Dec 1925: 8. Newspaper Archive. Web. 1 Aug 2012.

Check out the Summer Under the Stars blogathon by clicking on the Myrna Loy banner


[expand title=”If for any reason you are looking for TCM’s August 2, 2012 Myrna Loy schedule, just click this text and the section will be expanded to reveal it.”]
Thursday, August 2, 2012 – Myrna Loy – TCM Summer Under the Stars

  • 6:00 am – The Great Divide (1929) starring Ian Keith, Dorothy Mackaill, Myrna Loy
  • 7:15 am – The Naughty Flirt (1931) starring Alice White, Paul Page, Myrna Loy
  • 8:15 am – The Barbarian (1933) starring Ramon Novarro, Myrna Loy, Reginald Denny
  • 9:45 am – When Ladies Meet (1933) starring Ann Harding Robert Montgomery, Myrna Loy
  • 11:15 am – The Prizefighter and the Lady (1933) starring Myrna Loy, Max Baer, Walter Huston
  • 1:00 pm – Libeled Lady (1936) starring Jean Harlow, Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy
  • 2:45 pm – Wife Vs. Secretary (1936) starring Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow
  • 4:15 pm – The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947) starring Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, Shirley Temple
  • 6:00 pm – Mr. Blandings Builds His Dreamhouse (1948) starring Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, Melvyn Douglas
  • 8:00 pm – The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) starring Fredric March, Dana Andrews, Myrna Loy
  • 11:00 pm – The Thin Man (1934) starring William Powell, Myrna Loy, Maureen O’Sullivan
  • 12:45 am – Cheaper by the Dozen (1950) starring Clifton Webb, Jeanne Crain, Myrna Loy
  • 2:15 am – Penthouse (1933) starring Warner Baxter, Myrna Loy, Charles Butterworth
  • 4:00 am – Test Pilot (1938) starring Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy

[/expand]


Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Filed Under: News - Notes, Research Tagged With: Myrna Loy, pretty ladies, Summer Under the Stars, suts, suts 2012, TCM, Turner Classic Movies

← John Wayne on Football and Movies from a 1933 Newspaper Interview Johnny Weissmuller After the Olympics and Before Tarzan →

About Cliff

I write about old movies and movie stars from the 1920s to the 1950s. I also sell movie cards, still photos and other ephemera. Immortal Ephemera connects the stories with the collectibles. Read More…



Ways to Help Support the Site:

Every little bit helps pay the bills. My thanks in advance if you'd consider helping out through one of the following methods:
 

Preferred: Shop the Immortal Ephemera Store and get yourself some vintage movie items for your trouble!

Donate direct through my PayPal.me link.

Or begin your regularly scheduled Amazon shopping through my Amazon affiliate link.

Thanks again!
—Cliff Aliperti

Trackbacks

  1. Day 2: Myrna Loy | Sittin' on a Backyard Fence says:
    August 2, 2012 at 10:29 am

    […] Cliff at Immortal Ephemera on Penthouse (1933): https://immortalephemera.com/21297/penthouse-1933-warner-baxter-myrna-loy/ and a look at some Loy press clippings: https://immortalephemera.com/21246/august-2-myrna-loy-tcm-summer-under-the-stars/ […]

    Loading...
    Reply

Leave a Reply to Day 2: Myrna Loy | Sittin' on a Backyard FenceCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Copyright © 2002-2025 Immortal Ephemera - (privacy policy) - Article by Cliff Aliperti unless otherwise noted.

%d