Dubbed "The Girl with the Bee Stung Lips" and "The Gardenia of the Screen," silent screen star Mae Murray was born in New York City as Marie Adrienne Koenig on May 10, 1885. The middle of three children born to French and German ƩmigrƩs, she began studying dance at a young age.
Mae's professional career hit an early break when she partnered with ballroom extraordinaire
Vernon Castle in the 1906 Broadway show "About Town." She continued in the chorus with such New York shows as "The Great Decide" (1906), "Fascinating Flora" (1907), "The Hoyden" (1907) and "The Merry-Go-Round" (1908). The lovely lady eventually joined the "Ziegfeld Follies" chorus line in 1908. After moving up in status with featured/co-star roles in the Broadway productions of "The Young Turk" (1910), "The Broadway Belles" (1910) and "The Little Highness" (1913) and "The Daisy" (1914), Mae moved up to become a Ziegfeld headliner in 1915. Mae played the top clubs in Paris and in America in an act that accentuated her dancing prowess. Other highly smooth dance partners would follow, including
Clifton Webb,
Rudolph Valentino and
John Gilbert.
In 1916, the strikingly exotic beauty with the frizzy blonde hair moved to films a year later starring as Lady Joselyn alongside handsome
Wallace Reid as Captain Ralph Percy in the
To Have and to Hold (1916), produced by pioneer producer
Jesse L. Lasky. The success of that film helped move her quickly up the ladder with Lasky starring her in such romantic comedies and dramas as the title role in
Sweet Kitty Bellairs (1916), plus
The Dream Girl (1916),
The Plow Girl (1916),
A Mormon Maid (1917) and
The Primrose Ring (1917).
Mae became Universal Picture's new darling in the films
Princess Virtue (1917),
On Record (1917),
The Bride's Awakening (1918),
Her Body in Bond (1918),
Modern Love (1918),
Big Little Person (1919) and
The Scarlet Shadow (1919). Many of her films, containing dance sequences designed especially for her, were
written and produced by her third husband (of four),
Robert Z. Leonard, whom she married in 1918 and divorced in 1925. Mae remained a top star, moving around for different studios playing opposite a number of handsome leading men, including
The Gilded Lily (1921) with
Lowell Sherman;
Peacock Alley (1922) and
Broadway Rose (1922) both with
Monte Blue;
Jazzmania (1923) and
The French Doll (1923) both with
Rod La Rocque; and, most notably,
The Delicious Little Devil (1919) and
Big Little Person (1919) both opposite
Rudolph Valentino.
Brought over to MGM, Mae's most acclaimed film would be
The Merry Widow (1925) opposite matinƩe idol
John Gilbert and written and directed by
Erich von Stroheim. She also starred in the romantic drama
The Masked Bride (1925) and appeared in the title role in
Valencia (1926);
Altars of Desire (1927). Her last silent film was the MGM romantic drama
Altars of Desire (1927) opposite
Conway Tearle.
Mae's movie career faded with the advent of sound. Her first sound film,
Peacock Alley (1930), received lackluster reviews and failed at the box office. As time had taken its leading lady toll on her (she was now past 40), her voice and mannerisms were not deemed suited to talkies. She might have remained on the MGM for a few more years; however, her fourth and last husband, Prince David Mdvani, who she allowed control over her business affairs, ill-advisedly had her leave the studio. Mae only made two more films. She was billed third, behind
Lowell Sherman and
Irene Dunne in the romantic dramedy
Bachelor Apartment (1931) and a co-starring role opposite Sherman again in the crime caper
High Stakes (1931). Divorcing Mdvani in 1934, Mae lost her son in a nasty custody battle.
The former actress grew more eccentric over the years and was eventually forced to declare bankruptcy, living in abject poverty for the better part of her later life. The 74-year-old lady managed to co-write her autobiography in 1959 entitled "The Self-Enchanted" and ended her days in the Motion Picture Country Home in Woodland Hills, CA. She died of a heart ailment on March 23, 1965. Although forgotten for the most part, in her heyday, Mae was a huge draw and above-the-title star, becoming one of the few Ziegfeld dancer attractions to hit big-screen stardom.