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  1. Irving Grant Thalberg (May 30, 1899 – September 14, 1936) was an American film producer during the early years of motion pictures. He was called "The Boy Wonder" for his youth and ability to select scripts, choose actors, gather production staff, and make profitable films, including Grand Hotel, China Seas, A Night at the Opera, Mutiny on the Bounty, Camille and The Good Earth.

  2. Irving Thalberg (1899-1936) Irving Thalberg. Producer. Writer. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Irving Grant Thalberg was born in New York City, to Henrietta (Haymann) and William Thalberg, who were of German Jewish descent. He had a bad heart, having contracted rheumatic fever as a teenager and was plagued with other ailments all of his life.

    • January 1, 1
    • Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Santa Monica, California, USA
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    • Introduction
    • Family and Ethnic Background
    • Business Development
    • Social Status, Networks, Family, and Public Life
    • Conclusion

    Irving Grant Thalberg (born May 30, 1899 in Brooklyn, New York; died: September 4, 1936 in Santa Monica, California), the son of German-Jewish immigrants, considered a career as a merchant and a lawyer before using German-Jewish kinship and ethnic networks in mid-1918 to secure an entry-level position in the U.S. film industry. In just two years, t...

    Irving Grant Thalberg was born on May 30, 1899, in the Brooklyn apartment of his German immigrant parents William Thalberg and Henrietta Heyman Thalberg. Both his parents came from the German merchant class, and their families used immigration to expand their business enterprises and networks across the Atlantic, though with very different results....

    Despite the considerable health challenges he faced, Thalberg completed high school with great success around 1916. While he “had aspirations toward the law” and considered law school, financial need dictated otherwise. He decided to take business courses at New York University and other metropolitan-area schools; his choice of study reflected the ...

    Thalberg mentors and industry founders Laemmle and Mayer represented a first generation of immigrant entrepreneurs who struggled to achieve cultural, social, economic, and political legitimacy for themselves and their product, born of poor and working-class, urban, immigrant neighborhoods. Conversely, Thalberg was emblematic of a second generation ...

    On Labor Day weekend in 1936, Thalberg spent a working holiday at a Monterey resort where he fell ill. Though he took a few days off, he seemed to recover and resumed his usual punishing schedule. Then his cold turned to pneumonia. On the morning of Monday, September 14, Thalberg died in his Santa Monica beachside home with family and friends by hi...

  4. Sep 14, 2006 · Thalberg, MGM’s ‘Boy Wonder,’ dies. Sept. 14, 1936: Irving Thalberg, the head of production at MGM, died in his Santa Monica home at the age of 37. Thalberg, who had long suffered from ...

  5. May 21, 2018 · Irving Thalberg. Known as "Boy Wonder" for his considerable power at an early age, Irving Thalberg (1899-1936) was an influential film executive, first at Universal, then Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). Before his death at the age of 37, Thalberg helped redefine how movies are made within the studio system and became the consummate movie mogul.

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