American Decades
Thalberg, Irving 1899-1936
MOVIE PRODUCER
Boy Wonder.
Irving Thalberg became an icon of American success mythology, but he did not rise from poverty; his German-Alsatian Jewish family was middle class. A Brooklyn boy who had not finished high school because of illness, Thalberg was employed at eighteen as a secretary in the New York office of Universal Pictures; he became general manager of the California studio when he was twenty. The story went around Hollywood that he was running a major studio before he was old enough to sign the payroll.
M-G-M.
In 1923 Thalberg joined Louis B. Mayer as vice president of the Mayer Company. When Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was formed by Loew's, Inc., in 1924, Thalberg became second vice president and supervisor of production. Mayer as president and Thalberg built the largest and most successful studio in Hollywood, based on its stable of stars and expensive productions. The M-G-M slogan was "More stars than...
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1920's The Arts
- Overview
- Topics in the News
-
Headline Makers
- Armstrong, Louis 1901-1971
- Berlin, Irving 1888-1989
- Chaplin, Charlie 1889-1977
- Fitzgerald, F. Scott 1896-1940
- Gershwin, George 1898-1937
- Held, John, Jr. 1889-1958
- Hemingway, Ernest 1899-1961
- Hughes, Langston 1902-1967
- Jolson, Al 1866-1950
- Lardner, Ring W. 1885-1933
- O'Neill, Eugene 1888-1953
- Rosenbach, A. S. W. 1876-1952
- Smith, Bessie 1894-1937
- Thalberg, Irving 1899-1936
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in The Arts, 1920–1929
