Stromberg joined newly formed
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1925 and became one of its key executives, listed as one of the studio's "Big Four" with
Louis B. Mayer,
Irving Thalberg, and
Harry Rapf—later with Thalberg,
David O. Selznick, and
Walter Wanger. He was the first production supervisor to get a "produced by" credit on-screen, well deserved considering his achievements. He produced: • all of
Jean Harlow's films •
Joan Crawford's breakthrough films •
Greta Garbo's first American film,
Torrent (1926) • the
Nelson Eddy/
Jeanette MacDonald operetta cycle • the
William Powell/
Myrna Loy "
Thin Man" series as well as such prestige milestones as Academy Award-winning
The Great Ziegfeld (1936),
Marie Antoinette (1938),
The Women (1939), and
Pride and Prejudice (1940). At the height of his career, MGM was producing 52 films a year, or an average of one film a week, staying in the black despite the
Great Depression. Stromberg was one of the top ranked money makers of Hollywood, with a salary to match: US $8,000 a week, guaranteed. In 1937, he was included in management's inner circle and received an additional 1.5% of
Loews Theaters profits. The Treasury Department listed Stromberg as one of the ten highest paid executives in the United States. But there were substantial changes in those years. Thalberg died in 1936, while Selznick and Wanger left MGM in 1937, leaving Mayer in sole, hands-on control. There are conflicting interpretations of what caused the rift, but by the end of 1941 it was over: after 18 years Stromberg walked away from a contract worth millions, and Mayer let him go on February 10, 1942. ==Independent again==