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.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
The Women
From Screenplay by |
2008 | |||
|
Gigi
Play Author |
1958 | |||
|
Gentlemen Marry Brunettes
Book Author |
1955 | |||
|
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Play Author |
1953 | |||
|
The Pirate
Screenwriter |
1948 | |||
|
I Married an Angel
Screenwriter |
1942 | |||
|
Blossoms in the Dust
Screenwriter |
1941 | |||
|
They Met in Bombay
Screenwriter |
1941 | |||
|
When Ladies Meet
Director, Screenwriter |
1941 | |||
|
Susan and God
Screenwriter |
1940 | |||
|
The Women
Screenwriter |
1939 | |||
|
Mama Steps Out
Screenwriter |
1937 | |||
|
Saratoga
Screenwriter |
1937 | |||
|
San Francisco
Screenwriter |
1936 | |||
|
Biography of a Bachelor Girl
Screenwriter |
1935 | |||
|
Riff Raff
Screenwriter |
1935 | |||
|
The Girl from Missouri
Screenwriter |
1934 | |||
|
The Social Register
Short Story Author |
1934 | |||
|
Hold Your Man
Screenwriter |
1933 | |||
|
Midnight Mary
Short Story Author |
1933 | |||
|
The Barbarian
Screenwriter |
1933 | |||
|
Blondie of the Follies
Dialogue Writer, Screenwriter |
1932 | |||
|
Red Headed Woman
Screenwriter |
1932 | |||
|
Ex-Bad Boy
Play Author |
1931 | |||
|
The Struggle
Screenwriter |
1931 | |||
|
The Fall of Eve
Short Story Author |
1929 | |||
|
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Intertitle Writer, Play Author, Screenwriter |
1928 | |||
|
Publicity Madness
Short Story Author |
1927 | |||
|
Learning to Love
Screen Story, Screenwriter |
1925 | |||
|
Dulcy
Screenwriter |
1923 | |||
|
Polly of the Follies
Screenwriter |
1922 | |||
|
Red Hot Romance
Screenwriter |
1922 | |||
|
Mama's Affair
Screenwriter |
1921 | |||
|
Woman's Place
Screenwriter |
1921 | |||
|
Dangerous Business
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
In Search of a Sinner
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
Love Expert
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
Perfect Woman
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
The Branded Woman
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
Two Weeks
Screenwriter |
1920 | |||
|
A Temperamental Wife
Screenwriter |
1919 | |||
|
A Virtuous Vamp
Screenwriter |
1919 | |||
|
Getting Mary Married
Screenwriter |
1919 | |||
|
Good-Bye, Bill
Producer, Screenwriter |
1919 | |||
|
Isle of Conquest
Screenwriter |
1919 | |||
|
Come on In
Producer, Screenwriter |
1918 | |||
|
Hit-the-Trail Holliday
Screenwriter |
1918 | |||
|
Down to Earth
Screenwriter |
1917 | |||
|
In Again-Out Again
Screenwriter |
1917 | |||
|
Reaching for the Moon
Screenwriter |
1917 | |||
|
The Americano
Screenwriter |
1917 | |||
|
Wild and Woolly
Screenwriter |
1917 | |||
|
A Corner in Cotton
Short Story Author |
1916 | |||
|
An American Aristocracy
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
Half Breed
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
His Picture in the Papers
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
The Deadly Glass of Beer
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
The Little Liar
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
The Matrimaniac
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
The Social Secretary
Screenwriter |
1916 | |||
|
For Her Father's Sins
Screenwriter |
1914 | |||
|
The Gangsters of New York
Screenwriter |
1914 | |||
|
Pa Says
Screenwriter |
1913 | |||
|
The Lady in Black
Screenwriter |
1913 | |||
|
The Mistake
Screenwriter |
1913 | |||
|
The Telephone Girl and the Lady
Screenwriter |
1913 | |||
|
My Baby
Screenwriter |
1912 | |||
|
The Musketeers of Pig Alley
Screenwriter |
1912 | |||
|
The New York Hat
Screenwriter |
1912 |






