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Anita Loos

 

(born April 26, 1893?, Sissons, Calif., U.S. — died Aug. 18, 1981, New York, N.Y.) U.S. novelist and screenwriter. She was a child actress; at an early age she also began contributing sketches and articles to various periodicals. By age 20 she was a professional screenwriter for silent films. Her first novel, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1925), brought fame to Loos and her central character, the naive gold digger Lorelei Lee; a musical version (1949) starred Carol Channing (b. 1921), and a film (1953) starred Marilyn Monroe. Loos's later film scripts included Blossoms in the Dust (1941) and I Married an Angel (1942). She also wrote two memoirs, A Girl Like I (1966) and Kiss Hollywood Good-Bye (1974).

For more information on Anita Loos, visit Britannica.com.

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American Theater Guide: Anita Loos
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Loos, Anita (1893–1981), playwright. Born in Sisson, California, she was an actress before turning to writing and then became famous with her comic novel Gentlemen Prefer Bondes. Although Loos spent much of her career in Hollywood, she was represented on Broadway with a handful of plays, most notably The Whole Town's Talking (1932), Happy Birthday (1946), and her dramatization of Colette's novel Gigi (1951). She contributed to both the play version and the musical version of her Gentlemen Prefer Blondes in 1926 and 1949. Autobiography: A Girl Like I, 1966.

Biography: Anita Loos
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Anita Loos (1893-1981) is most famous for her satirical short story collection "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes: The Illuminating Diary of a Professional Lady", which became a film phenomenon starring Marilyn Monroe. She was an amazingly prolific writer who turned out more than 150 works including film scripts, short stories, novels, plays, and autobiographical books. "She had the wit of Dorothy Parker, the resourcefulness of Robinson Crusoe, and the endurance of the Sphinx," raved Diane MacIntyre in "The Silents Majority".

Anita Loos was born April 26, 1893 (some say 1888), in Sisson, California, the daughter of Richard Beers Loos, a theater producer, and Minnie Ellen (Smith), a graduate of Mills Seminary for Young Ladies of Quality. As a young child, Loos appeared in her father's productions along with her sister Gladys, who died in childhood. Loos later noted in her autobiographical work Cast of Thousands that "child actresses at the turn of the century were just as larcenous as they are today." Her brother, Clifford, became a doctor who helped create Blue Cross.

Although Loos rejected a career as an actress, having performed in plays as well as silent movies, show business drew her in. While appearing in a San Diego play, viewing a short movie inspired Loos to give film writing a whirl. In 1913 she dashed a scenario off to the address she found on a film can, signing her letter "A. Loos" to seem older and male, and several weeks later received an acceptance letter from Thomas Dougherty of the American Biograph Company. Along with the acceptance for The New York Hat came the promise of $25 payment. The subsequent film was directed by film pioneer D. W. Griffith and starred Mary Pickford and Lionel Barrymore.

From 1912 to 1916, Loos cranked out more than 100 more film scenarios, mainly for the Biograph Studio, beginning at $25 each. "By 1916, Loos's price had gone up to $500 a picture," reported Marsha McCreadie in The Women Who Write the Movies: from Frances Marion to Nora Ephron. "In that year, she was given her first movie credit for Macbeth, by William Shakespeare and Anita Loos. In typically cheeky fashion, she is reported to have said 'If I had asked, [they] would have given me top billing.' "

Already popular as the author of light comedy and romantic melodramas, Loos, McCreadie wrote, began to build a reputation as a satirist, penning "wisecracking titles" to accompany Douglas Fairbanks' silent films. It was during this time that she met John Emerson, an actor and playwright 20 years her senior who was then working as a director.

Married

In 1919, Loos married Emerson at Joe Schenck's estate in Great Neck, Long Island. "All the movie bigshots in the New York area were present," Loos wrote in Cast of Thousands. "I had set my sights on a man of brains, to whom I could look up," she lamented. "But what a terrible let down it would be to find out that I was smarter than he was."

Loos found her marriage disappointing from the start. "Instead of living happily ever after," she wrote, "John and I set about wrecking each other's lives. Our marriage was both tragic and comic, together with a thousand combinations of the two." The couple collaborated on a number of film projects and two books, Breaking Into the Movies, published in 1919, and How to Write Photoplays, 1921. Later Loos would claim that Emerson took all of the money and most of the credit for projects, even though his contribution usually consisted of observing from bed as Loos worked.

Despite Loos' unhappiness and Emerson's alleged philandering, the couple remained married until Emerson's death March 8, 1956. "Sometimes I get enquiries (sic) concerning my marriage to a man who treated me with complete lack of consideration, tried to take credit for my work and appropriated all my earnings," Loos wrote in Cast of Thousands. "The main reason is that my husband liberated me; granted me full freedom to choose my own companions."

Early in their marriage, the couple grew rich from the booming stock market. Together they traveled to Europe to pursue their dreams of "happily ever after." However, as the marriage soured, so did the U.S. economy. Loos and Emerson went broke in the 1929 stock market crash, and Emerson "was more than grateful to send me back to the easy money of Hollywood, where the golden era of movies was in full swing," Loos wrote. "Although the United States was in the depths of a depression, folks were scrimping on the bare necessities of life in a search for diversion."

Back to Hollywood

Irving Thalberg of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer lured Loos back to Hollywood by asking her to craft a script based on a popular novel, Red Headed Woman. Loos jumped at the chance, especially since she would earn $3,500 a week. When she arrived in Hollywood, she learned that several other writers had made failed attempts at writing the script, including her friend F. Scott Fitzgerald. Loos wound up having the magic touch. Her script became a hit film that launched the career of Jean Harlow.

Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Loos enjoyed a productive and profitable relationship with MGM, for whom she wrote scripts for films including Susan and God, which starred Joan Crawford, The Girl from Missouri, San Francisco,and The Women, based on the play by Clare Booth Luce. In Cast of Thousands, she fondly recalled lunches at a café near the studio, where she would spend hours with other MGM writers, plus actors including Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, and Jean Harlow. "We called our hangout the 'Trap' and took the same delight in going there that kids do in playing hooky," she wrote.

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

Loos' own career caught fire with the publication of her book of short stories Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, which chronicles the story of Lorelei Lee, a gold-digging blonde traveling through Europe. The inspiration came from a fellow train passenger when Loos traveled from New York to Hollywood with a group of film directors and writers. "Accompanying us on that jaunt was a Broadway cutie who was being imported to Hollywood for a screen test," Loos noted in Cast of Thousands. Over the course of the train trip, Loos grew more and more irritated by the behavior of the men, who jumped at the woman's every move. Comparing herself favorably to the actress, Loos could only conclude that the men were enchanted by her "quite unnatural" haircolor. "Why did she so far outdistance me in feminine allure?" Loos lamented. "Could her power, like that of Samson, have something to do with her hair?"

The notes Loos scribbled during that trip later evolved into a biting satire starring a magnetic flapper. The piece was published in serial form in Harper's Bazaar, sparking a huge leap in sales, and in 1925 as a book, garnering Loos fan letters from fellow authors William Faulkner, Aldous Huxley, and Edith Wharton, among others.

The blazing success of Loos' book had one unusual side-effect. While Gentlemen Prefer Blondes earned Loos widespread acclaim, Loos' husband, John Emerson, began to suffer from a mysterious throat ailment. Loos suspected cancer. However, as she wrote in Kiss Hollywood Goodbye, she soon learned otherwise. "Dr. Jelliffe went on to inform me the specific reason for [Emerson's] loss of voice," she wrote. "The poor man, suffering agonies over the success of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, had invented a disease as a means of attracting attention. Dr. Jelliffe proceeded to quote from H.L. Mencken that a husband may survive the fact of a wife having more money than he, but if she earns more, it can destroy his very essence."

The book, which was eventually translated into 14 languages, enjoyed a long life in many forms. The first stage version, produced in 1926, ran on Broadway for 201 performances, and a 1949 musical, which ran for 740 performances, made a sensation out of actress Carol Channing. The film also introduced the popular song "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend." Loos also wrote a 1974 version of the stage show, entitled Lorelei.

The first film version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was released in 1928, starring Ruth Taylor as Lorelei Lee. The film was silent except for one sequence. "Little Ruth," Loos wrote in Kiss Hollywood Goodbye, took her role so seriously that as soon as the film was finished she married a millionaire named Mr. Zukor and never worked again." A talking version of the film, released in 1953, starred Marilyn Monroe. Loos followed Gentlemen Prefer Blondes with But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes, which follows the tumultuous love life of Lorelei's best friend, Dorothy.

Colette and Other Associations

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Loos began an association with French writer Colette that would result in two successful plays and launch the career of yet another actress. Loos was hired to adapt Colette's book Gigi for the Broadway stage, another job that had been unsuccessfully attempted by other writers before Loos came along. The two writers got along famously, and Colette herself chose the actress she wanted to play Gigi when she spotted a striking woman among the extras of a movie being filmed in Monte Carlo. Audrey Hepburn premiered Gigi at New York City's Fulton Theater in 1951. Loos later penned a script based on Colette's Cheri.

In the 1940s, Loos was asked by her friend, actress Helen Hayes, to write a script that would help her break out of a string of overly serious roles. In response, Loos penned the play Happy Birthday, starring a librarian whose entire life is blown open after a few drinks at the local bar. The play premiered on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theater on Halloween 1946 and ran for 564 performances. Later Loos collaborated with Hayes on a book about New York City. Twice Over Lightly: New York Then and Now was published in 1972.

In her final books, Loos revisited her years in Hollywood with several autobiographical works. A Girl Like I, was published by Viking in 1966; Kiss Hollywood Goodbye, in 1974, also from Viking; and Cast of Thousands, was published by Grosset and Dunlap in 1977. Cast of Thousands is a coffee-table-sized book filled with photographs from Loos' personal life and Hollywood career, accompanied by a steam-of-consciousness narrative and sharp-tongued dishing about her many noteworthy friendships with giants of the century including Aldous and Maria Huxley, Charlie Chaplin, H.G. Wells, Bertrand Russell, and H. L. Mencken. While Loos delights in name-dropping, she is less willing to discuss her own personal life, devoting scant attention to her relationships with adopted daughter "Miss Moore," her long-time housekeeper Gladys, and bandleader Peter Duchin, whom she cared for after his mother died in childbirth. Loos died of a heart attack August 18, 1981, in New York City.

Books

Contemporary Authors, Gale, 1999.

Loos, Anita, Cast of Thousands, Grosset and Dunlap, 1977.

Loos, Anita, Kiss Hollywood Goodbye, Viking, 1974.

McCreadie, Marsha, The Women Who Write the Movies: from Frances Marion to Nora Ephron, Birch Lane Press, 1994.

Periodicals

People Weekly, December 12, 1988, p. 54.

Online

Britannica Online: Women In American Historyhttp://women.eb.com, (December 10, 2000.)

The Silents Majorityhttp://www.mdle.com/ClassicFilms, (December 10, 2000.)

Works: Works by Anita Loos
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(1893-1981)

1925Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Subtitled "The Illuminating Diary of a Professional Lady," Loos's bestseller tells the story of a naive young flapper, Lorelei Lee, who uses her charms to coax gifts from her admirers. It is said that Loos, a brunette, was inspired by observing fellow train passengers fawning over a blonde Broadway actress heading to Hollywood for a screen test. The book would be followed by a sequel, But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1928), and the author's adaptations of the story as a play, musical, and film. Loos, a Californian, was a Hollywood screenwriter at the age of fifteen.
1926Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Gold-digger Lorelei Lee from Little Rock makes her stage debut in the author's adaptation (with her husband) of her popular 1925 novel. Loos would also adapt her play as a musical in 1949.
1946Happy Birthday. Set in a New Jersey cocktail lounge, this successful comedy provides a star turn for Helen Hayes as a timid Newark librarian who loosens up.

Quotes By: Anita Loos
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Quotes:

"Fate keeps on happening."

"The people I'm furious with are the Women's Liberationists. They keep getting up on soapboxes and proclaiming women are brighter than men. That's true, but it should be kept quiet or it ruins the whole racket."

"If we have to tell Hollywood good-by, it may be with one of those tender, old-fashioned, seven-second kisses exchanged between two people of the opposite sex, with all their clothes on."

"There is a serious defect in the thinking of someone who wants -- more than anything else -- to become rich. As long as they don't have the money, it'll seem like a worthwhile goal. Once they do, they'll understand how important other things are -- and have always been."

"I really think that American gentlemen are the best after all, because kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond and a sapphire bracelet lasts forever."

"A girl with brains ought to do something with them besides think."

See more famous quotes by Anita Loos

Writer: Anita Loos
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  • Born: Apr 26, 1893 in Sissons (now Mount Shasta), California
  • Died: Aug 18, 1981 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: teens-'40s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Romance
  • Career Highlights: Gigi, The Women, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912)

Biography

American writer Anita Loos' father was a California newspaper publisher who, after enduring a spell of unemployment, became a theatre manager. Anita's first taste of show business was as a child actress (playing Little Lord Fauntleroy) in her father's playhouse. She continued acting into her teens, then turned to writing, churning out hundreds of 3-page plot synopses and at least one vaudeville sketch. She made her first movie sale at the Lubin Company in 1912; the first Anita Loos script to be produced, however, was Biograph's The New York Hat (1912), directed by D. W. Griffith. Because she looked about fifteen, and because for many years she misrepresented her date of birth, a myth grew up around Anita, alleging that she was writing Griffith scripts from the age of 12; vestiges of the Anita Loos legend were utilized for Peter Bogdanovich's 1975 film Nickelodeon, in which Tatum O'Neal played a pre-teen silent movie scriptwriter. Anita remained with Griffith until 1916, when she wrote some of the subtitles for his epic Intolerance; then she moved to the Douglas Fairbanks unit at Triangle, where she and her future husband John Emerson collaborated on several witty Fairbanks scenarios. By 1925, Anita felt written out and planned to retire, but a chance meeting with "dumb like a fox" blonde actress Mae Clarke prompted Anita to write her best-remembered novel Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. The book served as inspiration for a 1928 silent picture starring Ruth Taylor (the mother of Buck Henry), a 1949 Broadway musical starring Carol Channing, and a 1952 filmization of that musical starring Marilyn Monroe. Never a brilliant story constructionist, Anita was at her best contributing comic dialogue, which kept her busy at MGM throughout the '30s. In 1946 she returned to the theatre, this time as a playwright. Her most successful theatrical projects were the English translations of the Collette plays Gigi (1950) and Cheri (1957) (Anita had spoken fluent French since childhood). Anita Loos devoted her final years to writing several volumes of hilarious but highly unreliable memoirs; her last published work was a biography, The Talmadge Girls. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Anita Loos
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Anita Loos

Anita Loos (c 1930s)
Born Corinne Anita Loos
April 26, 1888(1888-04-26)
Sisson, California, USA.
Died August 18, 1981 (aged 93)
New York City, New York
Occupation Actress, Novelist, Screenwriter, Producer
Spouse(s) John Emerson (1919–1956) (his death)
Frank Pallma, Jr. (1915–1919) (divorced)

Anita Loos (April 26, 1888 – August 18, 1981) was an American screenwriter, playwright and author. On pronouncing her name, "The family has always used the correct French pronunciation which is lohse. However, I myself pronounce my name as if it were spelled luce, since most people pronounce it that way and it was too much trouble to correct them."[1]

Following her early appearances on the stage, Loos drew on her life experiences for subject matter to fulfill her ambition to write screenplays and scripts. After a short-lived marriage and fueled by her initial writing success, she joined the Hollywood film community as a writer.[2] In her first position with a major film company she was partnered with John Emerson, they later married, but the marriage to the philandering hypochondriac Emerson deteriorated while Loos did most of the work. When the team was offered a contract to write pictures for MGM she took the job to write alone.[3] Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, a comic novel, appeared in 1925.

Over the next few years the now happy and successful Loos worked alone, socialized, and saw whomever she wanted while giving the impression that she and Emerson were still a "team"; but following treatment at a sanatorium for Emerson's mental health, the couple lived apart until his death in 1956. Loos continued to write for MGM (after a brief spell with United Artists), and then as a free agent; writing or adapting plays, screenplays and novels.[3]

During her later years Loos was a constant contributor to magazines, and wrote a number of memoirs. She continued to attend shows, balls and other social events, and remained a virtual institution on the New York scene until her death at the age of 93.[4]

Contents

Biography

Early Life

Born Corinne Anita Loos in Sisson, California (today Mount Shasta), where her father, R. Beers Loos, had opened a tabloid newspaper for which her mother, Minerva "Minnie" Smith did most of the work of a newspaper publisher.[5] Loos had two siblings: Gladys, and Clifford (Harry Clifford), the latter being the eldest who would be a physician and co-founder of Ross-Loos Medical Group. The family moved to San Francisco in 1892, where Beers Loos bought still another newspaper, The Dramatic Event, a veiled version of a Police Gazette, with money Minerva borrowed from her father.[5]

While living in San Francisco, , Loos followed her dissolute alcoholic father as they explored San Francisco's underbelly;[5] together they would sit on the pier, fishing and making friends with the natives, feeding into her lifelong fascination with lowlifes and loose women.[3] In 1897, at their father's urging, she and her sister performed in the San Francisco stock company production of Quo Vadis.[5] Gladys died while their father was on one of his drinking and philandering "fishing trips". Anita continued appearing on stage, sometimes being the family's sole breadwinner. Eventually Beers Loos' spendthrift ways caught up with them, and in 1903, Beers Loos took an offer to manage a theater company in San Diego.[5] There, Anita performed simultaneously in her father's stock company, and under another name with the more legitimate stock company in town. It was around this time that she started shaving years off her true age.

Loos had known she wanted to be a writer since she was six,[5] and she also wanted to free herself of the shackles of stock performance. After graduating from high school, Loos devised a method of cobbling together published reports of Manhattan social life, mailing them to a friend in New York who would submit them under their own name for publication in San Diego. Her father had turned out some one-act plays for the stock company, and encouraged Anita to work in the field herself. She wrote The Ink Well, a successful piece for which she would receive periodic royalties.[5]

In 1911, the theater was running one-reel films after each night's performances; Anita would take a perfunctory bow and run to the back of the theater to watch them.[3] She sent her first attempt at a one-reel screenplay, The New York Hat, to the Biograph Company, for which she received $25.[4] The New York Hat, starring Mary Pickford and Lionel Barrymore and directed by D. W. Griffith, was her third screenplay and the first to be produced. Loos dredged real life and real situations for her scenarios, she dished up her father's cronies, her brothers friends, the rich vacationers from the San Diego resorts, eventually every experience became grist for her script mill.[5] By 1912, Loos had sold scripts to both the Biograph and Lubin Companies. Between 1912 and 1915 she turned out 105 scripts, only four of which went unproduced,[2] and she would write 200 scenarios before she ever saw the inside of a studio.[6]

Hollywood

Her mother had objected to Loos' working in Hollywood. In 1915, trying to escape her influence, Loos married her first husband Frank Pallma, Jr., the son of the band conductor.[7] But Frank proved to be penniless and dull – after six months, Anita sent him out for hair pins – while he was gone she packed her bags and went home to her mother.[3] After that Minnie rethought her position on a Hollywood career. Afterwards, accompanied by her mother, Anita joined the film colony in Hollywood where Griffith put Loos on the payroll for Triangle Film Corporation at $75 a week with a bonus for every produced script, perhaps making her the first "staff writer". Many of the scripts she turned out for Griffith went unproduced, some he considered unfilmable because the "laughs were all in the lines, there was no way to get them onto the screen", but he encouraged her to continue, because he liked reading them for amusement.[2] Her first screen credit was for an adaptation of Macbeth in which her billing came right after Shakespeare's.[3] When Griffith asked her to write the subtitling for his epic Intolerance (1916), she traveled to New York City for the first time to attend its premiere. Instead of returning to Hollywood, Loos spent the fall of 1916 in New York and met with Frank Crowninshield of The New Yorker. They had an instant rapport and Loos would remain a New Yorker contributor for several decades.[2]

Loos returned to California just as Griffith who wanted to make longer films, was leaving Triangle, and she joined director and future husband John Emerson for a string of successful Douglas Fairbanks films. Loos and company realized that Douglas Fairbanks' acrobatics were an extension of his effervescent personality and parlayed his natural athletic ability into swashbuckling adventure roles. His Picture in the Papers (1916) was noted for its wry style of discursive and witty subtitles: "My most popular subtitle introduced the name of a new character. The name was something like this: 'Count Xxerkzsxxv.' Then there was a note, 'To those of you who read titles aloud, you can't pronounce the Count's name. You can only think it.' "[6] The five films Loos' wrote for Fairbanks made him a star.[2] When Fairbanks was offered a sweetheart deal with Famous Players-Lasky, he took the team of Emerson-Loos with him at the high income of $500 a week. During this time Loos, Fairbanks and Emerson collaborated well together and Loos was getting as much publicity as either Lillian Gish or Pickford.[3] Photoplay magazine labeled her "The Soubrette of Satire."[2] In 1918, Famous Players-Lasky offered the couple a four-picture deal in New York for more money than they had been making with the Fairbanks unit.

Anita Loos and John Emerson by Edward Steichen for Vanity Fair, July 1928

New York

Loos, Emerson and fellow writer Frances Marion, migrated to New York as a group, Loos and Emerson sharing a leased mansion in Great Neck, Long Island.[8] Loos desperately wanted Marion as chaperone, as she found herself attracted to Emerson. He would readily admit that he "had never been, nor could be, faithful to any one female." Loos, convinced herself that he would see that she was different than all his other girls, and that behind the outwardly dull exterior was a great mind. She would be wrong on both counts. She would later write: "I had set my sights on a man of brains, to whom I could look up", she lamented, "but what a terrible let down it would be to find out that I was smarter than he was."[9]

The pictures for Famous Players-Lasky were not as successful as their previous films, partly because they starred Broadway headliners not adept at screen acting. In addition to their film "collaborations" the couple wrote two books: Breaking Into the Movies, published in 1919 followed by How to Write Photoplays in 1921. Though the scripts carried both names, they were mostly products of Loos alone. Later Loos would claim that Emerson took all of the money and most of the credit for projects, even though his contribution usually consisted of observing from bed as Loos worked.[10] Much to the chagrin of her friends, her adoration of Emerson had manifested as subservience. When their contract was not renewed he blamed her scripts though he had claimed credit for them. When William Randolph Hearst offered Loos a contract to write a picture for his mistress Marion Davies,[8] Loos included Emerson in the deal, though his presence was unnecessary. Hearst liked the picture and Getting Mary Married (1919) was one of the few Marion Davies pictures that didn't lose money.[3]

Loos and Emerson turned down another picture with Davies, preferring to write for their old friend Constance Talmadge, whose husband Joseph Schenck was an independent producer. Both A Temperamental Wife (1919) and A Virtuous Vamp (1919) were great hits for Talmadge. The Schenck studios filmed in a New York warehouse and Loos and Emerson occupied suites at the Algonquin. Individually Anita liked many members of the Algonquin Round Table, but as a group she found them overwhelming. In the spring of 1919, the couple joined the Talmadges and the Schencks at the Ambassador Hotel on Park Avenue, with Constance, filling the void left by the loss of her sister many years before. When Anita and Constance weren't working, they went shopping.[citation needed] The Talmadge-Schencks convinced Anita to summer with them in Paris without Emerson. Much of this adventure would end up as fodder for Loos's book Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.

When they returned they produced five more films in sixteen months. Emerson still received his full salary though reputedly made few appearances on set and the script credit continued to name both of them. Emerson's assistant, who had taken up the workload on set, objected to the lack of credit and unfair reimbursement and was subsequently replaced. The new assistant director had eyes for Loos, who had filed for divorce from her estranged first husband. Emerson proposed marriage. They were married at the Schenck estate on June 15, 1919. Loos was among the first to join Ruth Hale's Lucy Stone League, an organization that fought for women to preserve their maiden names after marriage. Hale, wife of playwright Heywood Broun had struggled to get a U.S. passport issued in her birth name.

The couple moved into a modest Murray Hill apartment, and cut back to two films a year in order to travel. They spent the summer in Paris. Leaving Loos and her new assistant John Ashmore Creeland, to visit many of the Paris-based writers Loos had met in America, as well as Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, and Elizabeth Marbury and Elsie De Wolfe. Loos was soon spending time with Elsa Maxwell and Dorothy Gordon "Dickie" Fellows.

After one more film for Constance, The Perfect Woman (1920), Emerson refused another contract with Schenck, who had become disenchanted with the film industry. After working with Actors Equity during their 1919 strike, he decided that the Loos-Emerson team should make the move to the theater;[3] Loos took a subordinate position. Their first play, The Whole Town's Talking, which opened at the Bijou Theatre on August 29, 1923, received good reviews and was a moderate box-office success. Soon afterwards the couple moved to a small house in Gramercy Park.

Emerson had convinced a devastated Loos that he needed to take a break from his marriage once a week. It was on these days he would date younger women, while Loos consoled herself by entertaining her friends: the Talmadge sisters, Mama Peg Talmadge, Marion Davies, Marilyn Miller, Adele Astaire and an assortment of chorus girls kept by prominent men.[3] These "Tuesday Widows" soireés would influence her later writings, and it was with the "Tuesday Widows" that she visited one of her favorite hangouts, Harlem, where she developed a deep and life-long appreciation for African-American culture.[3] "Sometimes I get enquiries (sic) concerning my marriage to a man who treated me with complete lack of consideration, tried to take credit for my work and appropriated all my earnings", Loos wrote in Cast of Thousands, "The main reason is that my husband liberated me; granted me full freedom to choose my own companions."[9]

Loos had become a devoted admirer of H. L. Mencken and when he was in New York, she would take a break from her "Tuesday Widows", and join his circle which included Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson, Sinclair Lewis, Joseph Hergesheimer, essayist Ernest Boyd, and theater critic George Jean Nathan. Loos adored Mencken with what may have been love, and preferred this group over the Round Table. She gradually realized Emerson paled in comparison to someone like Mencken, and disappointingly, high-IQ gentlemen didn't fall for women with brains, but those with more "downstairs".[citation needed] In 1925, on the train to Hollywood for another Talmadge picture, Loos began to write a sketch of Mencken and his vacant lady friends that would later become Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,first edition paperback cover. Sleaze-style artwork gives a completely different impression of the book.

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes began as a series of short sketches published in Harper's Bazaar. Known as the "Lorelei" stories, they were satires on the state of sexual relations that only vaguely alluded to sexual intimacy; the magazine's circulation quadrupled overnight.[11] The heroine of the stories, Lorelei Lee, was a bold, ambitious flapper, who was much more concerned with collecting expensive baubles from her conquests than any marriage licenses, in addition to being a shrewd woman of loose morals and high self-esteem. She was a practical young woman who had internalized the materialism of the United States in the 1920s and therefore equated culture with cold cash and tangible assets.[7]

The success of the short stories had the public clamoring for them in book form. Pushed on by Mencken, she signed with Boni & Liveright. Modestly published in November 1925, the first printing sold out overnight. The initial reviews were rather bland and unimpressive, but through word of mouth it became the surprise best-seller of 1925. Loos garnered fan letters from fellow authors William Faulkner, Aldous Huxley, and Edith Wharton, among others.[10] "Blondes" would see three more printings sell through by years end, and twenty in its first decade. The little book would see 85 editions in the years to come and eventually be translated into 14 languages including Chinese.[4]

When asked who the models for her characters, Loos would almost always say they were composites of various people, but when pressed, admitted that toothless flirt Sir Francis Beekman was modeled after writer Joseph Hergesheimer and producer Jesse L. Lasky. Dorothy Shaw modeled after herself and Constance Talmadge, and Lorelei herself most closely resembled acquisitive Ziegfeld showgirl, Lillian Lorraine, who was always looking for new places to display the diamonds bestowed by her suitors.

Emerson, perhaps foreseeing the success of Blondes as a threat to his control over Loos, first attempted to suppress its publication, and then merely settled on a personal dedication. Loos continued to be overworked throughout 1926, sometimes working many projects at once. In the spring of 1926 she completed the stage adaptation, which opened a few weeks later in Chicago, and ran for 201 performances on Broadway. Emerson by this time had developed a serious case of hypochondria, using imaginary laryngitis attacks to garner attention away from her work,[2] he was in the words of his wife, "a man who enjoyed ill health."[7] It was the opinion of New York's leading psychiatrist, Alfred Jelliffe, that she was to blame and that in order for Emerson to "get better" she would have to give up her career.[10] She resolved to retire after her next book, But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes, a sequel to Blondes she had promised Harper's Bazaar.

On the further advice of the psychiatrist, the couple had planned another European vacation. At the last minute Emerson feigned being unwell and insisted Loos continue alone. Arriving in London, she was promptly taken under the wing of socialite Sybil Colefax, whose drawing room had become a salon, filled with "the bright young things" of the day such as John Gielgud, Harold Nicolson, Noël Coward and notables such as Arnold Bennett, Max Beerbohm and Bernard Shaw. Photos of Loos on the social scene in London appeared in the New York papers, and Emerson's subsequent whisper-throated "death bed" phone calls managed to inflict guilt on Loos for her absence overseas. Emerson finally joined Loos in London, and to keep his spirits up she took him to the theatre every night. It worked: at times he forgot to continue his act and spoke in normal tones. The couple continued on to Paris, where Loos renewed all friendships and made new ones; Emerson's recovery was remarkable. In September, their vacation was cut short; Loos was needed back in New York to do revisions on Blondes for its Broadway debut. Despite this, Blondes closed in April 1927.

Leisure time

When But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes was published in 1927, Emerson proposed another European vacation, and went ahead of Loos to visit medical specialists. A seriously ill but still devoted Loos followed him, always being left one hotel behind. When Loos came down with a sinus attack in Vienna, she and the ear, nose and throat specialist who was treating her came up with a method of "fixing" Emerson's hypochondria.[3] The doctor arranged a bit of psychosurgery for him and presented him with the "polyps" that had been supposedly removed from his vocal chords. This placebo treatment did the trick and when they returned a cured Emerson took great pleasure in showing off his little sloshy trophy. Not wanting to undo all her efforts, Loos retired to a life of leisure.

The first film version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, now lost, was released in 1928, starring Ruth Taylor (as Lorelei Lee), who took her role so seriously that as soon as the film was finished she married a millionaire named Mr. Zukor and never worked again.[12] Between 1927 and 1929, the couple traveled extensively, which was hard on Loos' health. All their winters were spent in Palm Beach, where Emerson would indulge in social climbing. There Loos met Wilson Mizner, a witty and charming real estate speculator and in some quarters – confidence man.[4] Though they saw each other every day, the relationship, what there was of one, didn't last beyond Florida. Loos, starved of intellectual male companionship, was rumored to have stopped just short of having a full blown affair. Emerson also suffered a return of his imaginary throat ailment, though he recovered quickly after his second round of Viennese 'pretend surgery'.

Emerson also threatened to have another relapse after they Christmased in Hollywood, in 1929. The Emersons had traveled to Hollywood with Loos' new friend photographer Cecil Beaton. Wilson Mizner had also relocated to Hollywood as a screenwriter. Since Emerson had his own entertainment, Loos was often in the company of Beaton or Mizner. When they returned to New York in the spring of 1930, Emerson expressed his unhappiness at her inattention, and the guilt-ridden Loos would spend much more time alone.[3] Emerson had also unwisely invested "their" money which was lost in the stock market crash, and suggested she return to work.[7] Loos was not unhappy with this, and within a few months had produced a stage adaptation of But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes and a comedy Cherries are Ripe.

With their income reduced, the couple moved to a residential hotel and did much less traveling in 1931. Not long after, Loos came upon a love letter from one of Emerson's conquests. Apparently Emerson had been describing their marriage as "unfulfilled". Devastated Loos offered him a divorce; Emerson refused and suggested they live apart with him giving her a suitable "allowance". Blaming herself for his unhappiness, she moved to an apartment on East Sixty-Ninth Street. However, her new life allowed her to finally spend "her allowance"; that is, her portion of what she earned for the couple, in any way she liked.[3]

When the Emerson-Loos team got an offer to write pictures for Irving Thalberg at MGM, Emerson refused to go. Loos took the $1,000 a week salary alone.[3]

Broadway

Publicity photo for Red-Headed Woman with Jean Harlow and Anita Loos

The first project Thalberg handed Loos was Jean Harlow's Red-Headed Woman since F. Scott Fitzgerald was having no luck adapting Katherine Brush's book. The picture, completed in May 1932 was a smash and established Harlow as a star and put Loos once again in the front rank of screenwriters.[13]

"She was a very valuable asset for MGM, because the studio had so many femmes fatales – Garbo, Crawford, Shearer, and Harlow – that we were always on the lookout for 'shady lady' stories. But they were problematic because of the censorship code. Anita, however, could be counted on to supply the delicate double entendre, the telling innuendo. Whenever we had a Jean Harlow picture on the agenda, we always thought of Anita first." – Sam Marx.[3]

Now happy and successful, Loos moved to an apartment in Hollywood, where she was unexpectedly and unpleasantly joined by Emerson. Though Emerson expressed contrition about his previous behavior, he did nothing to change it. While Emerson busied himself offering screen tests to young starlets, Loos was now free to see whomever she pleased, including her now quite ill friend Wilson Mizner. Mizner, who had abused his body through drink and drugs, wasted away until passing April 3, 1932, a date Loos would continue to mark.

At MGM Loos happily turned out scripts, however she would have to use Emerson as a conduit to communicate with some directors and other executives who balked at dealing with a woman on equal footing.[3] This worked well to promote the idea they were a writing "team" and a happy couple. She bought a modest house in Beverly Hills in 1934, where she could write in the garden when weather permitted. There seemed to be no world or life outside of Hollywood; during the day it was work, and at night parties given by other MGM folk, like the Thalbergs, the Selznicks, and the Goldwyns. Loos was a frequent attendee at George Cukor's Sunday Brunches, which was the closest Hollywood had to a literary salon.

In 1935 around the time of the Writer's Guild formation, she was paired with Robert Hopkins, who would later become a frequent collaborator. Their work on San Francisco got a nomination for Best Original Screenplay. Thalberg had taken ill again and gave Emerson a two-year contract as a producer at $1,250 a week. By mid-1937 Loos had decided not to renew her contract with MGM; since Thalberg's death in Sept 1936 things had not been going well at the studio and every film felt like a struggle. She signed with Samuel Goldwyn at United Artists for $5,000 a week and almost immediately regretted it. Loos soldiered on, working on "unworkable" scripts.

Life alone

In October, Loos and her brother Clifford checked Emerson into a very expensive sanatorium where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia.[7] Loos, who had always left the finances to Emerson, soon discovered that most of her money was no longer in joint accounts but in his own private accounts.[2] Overworked at the studio and under stress from Emerson, she became more and more depressed. After seventeen years of his nonsense, she finally asked Emerson for a divorce and he agreed. Loos who promptly bought herself out of her United Artists contract and re-signed with MGM, bought a beach-front house in Santa Monica. Emerson would continue to find ways to stave off any talk of divorce plans, making finalization impossible.[3] When Emerson was deemed well enough to leave the sanatorium she paid for a nurse to care for him in an apartment of his own.

MGM had bought the film rights to Clare Booth Luce's 1936 smash Broadway hit The Women in 1937. Many writers had taken a stab at a screenplay version, but the studio handed it to Loos and veteran scriptwriter Jane Murfin, and three weeks later Loos handed Cukor a script he loved.[13] Unfortunately the censorship board did not. They insisted on changing over 80 lines, and the film had to go into production. Loos was apprehensive, but Cukor insisted she do the changes on set, amongst his all-star bevy of leading ladies. Loos made immediate friends with Paulette Goddard, who was surprisingly well-read. She also had Aldous and Maria Huxley as houseguests, and encouraged Huxley to stay in California and continue to write there. When war was declared in September 1939, Loos convinced Huxley that it would be safer for his family if they stayed in the U.S., rather than returning to England, and she got him a job adapting screenplays at MGM.

When Hunt Stromberg, the last producer she respected, left MGM to produce independently, Loos tried to get out of her contract as well, but by then she had grown into too valuable a property to the studio. Throughout the War Loos wrote screenplays, grew vegetables in her victory garden and knitted socks and sweaters for the boys overseas. MGM let her go before her contract ran out; this time she decided to become a free agent, and even returned to New York to work on a new play. When she returned to California, she had a new partner who had a drink problem; the relationship would be short-lived.

Return to New York

In the fall of 1946, Loos returned to New York to work on Happy Birthday, a Saroyanesque cocktail party comedy written for Helen Hayes.[7] The play already had several false starts the previous year, but now proceeded with Joshua Logan as director, and produced by Rodgers and Hammerstein. It opened in Boston, but the audiences hated it at first. Loos kept on improving the script throughout the Boston run; when it opened in New York at the Broadhurst, it was a hit and ran for 600 performances.[4] Katharine Hepburn was eager to play in the screen version, but the Hollywood censors weren't ready for a woman to be "sloshed" on screen for two acts and be rewarded with a happy ending. Loos sold her Santa Monica house to her niece, and despite his time-worn histrionics, she made certain Emerson understood he would not be joining her in New York under any circumstances.

Once again at home in New York, she and her old friend screenwriter Frances Marion, worked on an unproduced play for Zasu Pitts. A few romances came her way including Maurice Chevalier. Two Broadway producers had their eye on a musical version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, and brought in Joseph Fields as co-author. After initial stops and starts, Loos threatened to quit the production unless they assured her she would never have to speak to Fields again. The show opened in Philadelphia with a then unknown Carol Channing, by the time it arrived in New York it was another success. Carol Channing was soon elevated to an A-list star, the show played for 90 weeks and went on tour for another year. The producers closed the show when Channing became pregnant. Herman Levin commented: "I was convinced the show wouldn't work without Carol, and in my opinion it never has."[3] A musical film version was produced in 1953, directed by Howard Hawks and adapted by Charles Lederer. It starred Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe. Loos had nothing to do with the production, but thought Monroe was inspired casting.

Anita loos rediscovered.jpg

The success of Blondes the second time around, meant Loos had a greater profile than ever before. She moved to a more spacious apartment at the Langdon Hotel, and bought a car; she and her companion Gladys Tipton would travel to visit friends whenever the mood struck. In 1950 Loos began writing A Mouse is Born, another novel, and when it was safely in the hands of the publisher she left for the continent, her first trip to Europe in twenty years.[3] A Mouse is Born had a lukewarm reception, but by then Loos was already working on a dramatic adaptation of Colette's Gigi.[7] The production was underway before Colette wired that she had found their "Gigi", she had seen Audrey Hepburn in a hotel lobby in Monte Carlo.[10] Gigi opened in the fall of 1951 and would run until the spring of 1952; by then Hepburn had been elevated to an A-list star, contracted to Paramount Pictures.

For the next few years, Loos worked on more adaptations and traveled to see friends, while she and Gladys moved into a spacious apartment on West Fifty-Seventh Street. Her next musical, The Amazing Adele, starring Tammy Grimes and with music by Jules Stine, never got off the ground when it opened in Boston and swiftly closed. Both Emerson and Helen Hayes' husband Charles MacArthur died with a few weeks of each other, and the women threw themselves into their work together, with Anita working on an adaptation for Hayes filming Anastasia in London. Loos worked and traveled even while being treated for a painful hand ailment that prevented her from writing. In 1959, Loos opened another Colette adaptation, Chéri, with Kim Stanley and Horst Buchholz in the title role, but it ran for only two months.

Memoirist

Loos would continue writing, always a constant magazine contributor and appearing regularly in Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. Biographer Gary Carey notes: "She was a born storyteller and was always in peak form when reshaping a real-life encounter to make an amusing anecdote."[3] Loos began a volume of memoirs, A Girl Like I, which would be published in September 1966. Her 1972 book Twice Over Lightly: New York Then and Now was written in collaboration with friend and actress Helen Hayes. Kiss Hollywood Good-by (1974) was another Hollywood memoir, this time about the MGM years and would be very successful. Her book The Talmadge Girls (1978) is about the actress sisters Constance Talmadge and Norma Talmadge.

Loos would become a virtual New York institution, an assiduous partygoer and diner-out, conspicuous at fashion shows, theatrical and movie events, balls and galas.[4] A celebrity anecdotalist, she was also never one to let facts spoil a good story:

"With each book came a new spate of interviews and as one of the last survivors of the silent era, Anita's stories became more exaggerated and she was soon reported to have sold her first scenario at the age of twelve. She continued to thrive on interesting people and interesting activities – and held an opinion on everything – but worked hard on keeping the vivacious and flippant image and hiding her loneliness."[8]

She once commented, "I've enjoyed my happiest moments when trailing a Mainbocher evening gown across the sawdust-covered floor of a saloon. [14]

After spending several weeks with a lung infection, Anita Loos died in New York City at the age of 93 from natural causes.[4] At the memorial service, friends Helen Hayes, Ruth Gordon and Lillian Gish, regaled the mourners with humorous anecdotes and Jules Styne played songs from Loos' musicals, including "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend".[8]

Works

Fiction

Nonfiction

  • w/ John Emerson How to Write Photoplays NY:James A McCann, 1920
  • w/ John Emerson. Breaking Into the Movies. NY:James A McCann, 1921
  • "This Brunette Prefers Work", Woman's Home Companion, 83 (March 1956)
  • A Girl Like I. NY:Viking Press, 1966
  • w/ Helen Hayes. Twice Over Lightly: New York Then and Now. NY:Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1972
  • Kiss Hollywood Good-by. NY:Viking Press, 1974
  • Cast of Thousands: a pictorial memoir of the most glittering stars of Hollywood. NY:Grosset and Dunlap, 1977
  • The Talmadge Girls.NY:Viking Press, 1978

Broadway credits

Film credits

  • My Baby (1912; writer)
  • The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912; writer)
  • The New York Hat (1912; writer)
  • A Narrow Escape (1913; scenario)
  • The Wedding Gown (1913; scenario)
  • His Hoodoo (1913; scenario; story "The Making of a Masher")
  • Pa Says (1913; story "The Queen of the Carnival")
  • A Cure for Suffragettes (1913; story)
  • A Fallen Hero (1913; story)
  • A Horse on Bill (1913; story)
  • Binks' Vacation (1913; story)
  • Highbrow Love (1913; story)
  • How the Day Was Saved (1913; story)
  • Oh, Sammy! (1913; story)
  • The Hicksville Epicure (1913; story)
  • The Power of the Camera (1913; story)
  • The Suicide Pact (1913; story)
  • His Awful Vengeance (1913; writer)
  • The Lady in Black (1913; writer)
  • The Mistake (1913; writer)
  • The Telephone Girl and the Lady (1913; writer)
  • The Widow's Kids (1913; writer)
  • The Sisters (1914/I; scenario)
  • A Lesson in Mechanics (1914; scenario)
  • Nearly a Burglar's Bride (1914; scenario)
  • Some Bull's Daughter (1914; scenario)
  • The Deceiver (1914; scenario)
  • The Road to Plaindale (1914; scenario)
  • The Saving Grace (1914; scenario)
  • The Saving Presence (1914; scenario)
  • A Corner in Hats (1914; story)
  • A Flurry in Art (1914; story)
  • Gentleman or Thief (1914; story)
  • Nell's Eugenic Wedding (1914; story)
  • The Fatal Dress Suit (1914; story)
  • The Man on the Couch (1914; story)
  • The Million Dollar Bride (1914; story)
  • The Gangsters of New York (1914; uncredited)
  • A Bunch of Flowers (1914; writer)
  • Billy's Rival (1914; writer)
  • For Her Father's Sins (1914; writer)
  • Izzy and His Rival (1914; writer)
  • The Girl in the Shack (1914; writer)
  • The Hunchback (1914; writer)
  • The Last Drink of Whiskey (1914; writer)
  • The White Slave Catchers (1914; writer)
  • When the Road Parts (1914; writer)
  • A Ten-Cent Adventure (1915; scenario)
  • Mixed Values (1915; scenario)
  • The Deacon's Whiskers (1915; scenario)
  • The Lost House (1915; scenario)
  • The Fatal Finger Prints (1915; writer)
  • Stranded (1916/I; writer)
  • Macbeth (1916; intertitles)
  • A Calico Vampire (1916; scenario)
  • Laundry Liz (1916; scenario)
  • The French Milliner (1916; scenario)
  • The Americano (1916; scenario; titles)
  • The Wharf Rat (1916; screenplay; story)
  • A Corner in Cotton (1916; story)
  • American Aristocracy (1916; story)
  • Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages (1916; titles)
  • The Mystery of the Leaping Fish (1916; titles)
  • A Wild Girl of the Sierras (1916; writer)
  • His Picture in the Papers (1916; writer)
  • The Children Pay (1916; writer)
  • The Half-Breed (1916; writer)
  • The Little Liar (1916; writer)
  • The Matrimaniac (1916; writer)
  • The Social Secretary (1916; writer)
  • In Again, Out Again (1917/II; writer)
  • A Daughter of the Poor (1917; writer)
  • Down to Earth (1917; writer)
  • Reaching for the Moon (1917; writer)
  • Wild and Woolly (1917; writer)
  • Good-Bye, Bill (1918; screenplay; producer; story Gosh Darn the Kaiser)
  • Hit-the-Trail Holliday (1918; writer)
  • Let's Get a Divorce (1918; writer)
  • Come on In (1918; writer; producer)
  • A Virtuous Vamp (1919; scenario)
  • A Temperamental Wife (1919; scenario; producer)
  • Oh, You Women! (1919; scenario; story)
  • Under the Top (1919; story)
  • Getting Mary Married (1919; writer)
  • The Isle of Conquest (1919; writer)
  • The Branded Woman (1920; adaptation)
  • Dangerous Business (1920; producer; writer)
  • Two Weeks (1920; scenario)
  • The Perfect Woman (1920; screenplay; story)
  • The Love Expert (1920; writer; producer
  • In Search of a Sinner (1920; writer; producer; uncredited)
  • Woman's Place (1921; story)
  • Mama's Affair (1921; writer)
  • Polly of the Follies (1922; screenplay; story)
  • Red Hot Romance (1922; screenplay; story; executive producer)
  • Dulcy (1923; writer)
  • Three Miles Out (1924; writer)
  • Learning to Love (1925; screenplay; story)
  • The Whole Town's Talking (1926; play)
  • Stranded (1927; story)
  • Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1928; novel; screenplay; titles)
  • The Fall of Eve (1929; story)
  • Ex-Bad Boy (1931; story "The Whole Town's Talking")
  • The Struggle (1931; writer)
  • Blondie of the Follies (1932; dialogue)
  • Red-Headed Woman (1932; writer)
  • Hold Your Man (1933; screenplay; story)
  • Midnight Mary (1933; story)
  • The Barbarian (1933; writer)
  • The Girl from Missouri (1934; original screenplay)
  • The Cat and the Fiddle (1934; screenplay contributor; uncredited)
  • The Social Register (1934; story)
  • Biography of a Bachelor Girl (1935; writer)
  • Riffraff (1936; screenplay)
  • San Francisco (1936; writer)
  • Saratoga (1937; screenplay; story)
  • Mama Steps Out (1937; writer)
  • The Cowboy and the Lady (1938; contributing writer; uncredited)
  • Another Thin Man (1939; contributing writer; uncredited)
  • The Women (1939; screenplay)
  • Babes in Arms (1939; uncredited)
  • Strange Cargo (1940; adaptation; uncredited)
  • Susan and God (1940; screenplay)
  • Blossoms in the Dust (1941; screenplay)
  • When Ladies Meet (1941; screenplay)
  • They Met in Bombay (1941; writer)
  • I Married an Angel (1942; screenplay)
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945 uncredited)
  • The Buick Circus Hour (1952; teleplays)
  • Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953; play)
  • Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955; novel "But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes")
  • Producers' Showcase "Happy Birthday" (1956; writer)

References

Notes

  1. ^ Funk. 1936.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Norman. 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Carey. 1988.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g NYT Obit. 1981
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Loos. 1966.
  6. ^ a b Schmidt. 1917
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Scribners.1998.
  8. ^ a b c d Beauchamp. 1997
  9. ^ a b Loos. 1977.
  10. ^ a b c d Gale Group. 2001
  11. ^ Acker. 1991.
  12. ^ Loos. 1974
  13. ^ a b Jacobs. 1998.
  14. ^ Loos, 1966, p. 36.

Bibliography

  • Acker, Ally (1991). Reel women: pioneers of the cinema 1896 to the present. London: Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-6960-9. 
  • Beauchamp, Cari (1997). Without lying down: Frances Marion and the powerful women of early Hollywood. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21492-7. 
  • Carey, Gary (1988). Anita Loos: a biography. New York: A.A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-53127-2. 
  • Funk, Charles Earle (1936). What's the Name, Please?. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. 
  • Encyclopedia of World Biography Supplement, Vol. 21.. New York, N.Y: Gale Group. 2001. 
  • Jacobs, Katrien ; Foster, Gwendolyn Audrey; Unterburger, Amy L. (1998). Women filmmakers & their films. London: St. James Press. ISBN 1-55862-357-4. 
  • Loos, Anita (1966). A Girl Like I. New York: The Viking press. ISBN 0-670-34112-6. 
  • Loos, Anita (1974). Kiss Hollywood Good-by. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-41374-7. 
  • Loos, Anita (1977). Cast of Thousands. New York: Grosset and Dunlap. ISBN 0448122642. 
  • Norman, Marc (2007). What Happens Next: A History of American Screenwriting. New York, N.Y: Harmony. ISBN 0-307-38339-3. 
  • "Anita Loos, interview by Karl Schmidt". Everybody's Magazine. June, 1917. 
  • The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Volume 1: 1981–1985. New York, N.Y: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1998. 
  • Whitman, Alden (1981-08-19). "Anita Loos Dead At 93; Screenwriter, Novelist". New York Times. http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F20D1EF63E5F0C7A8DDDA10894D9484D81. Retrieved 2008-04-06. 

External links


 
 
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Happy Birthday (American Theater)
The Americano (1917 Drama Film)
Reaching for the Moon (1917 Comedy Film)

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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