Silent film era Mae's first film appearances are reputed to be in
The Agitator and
The Water Nymph, both released in 1912. There is some doubt about Mae's being in these films, as the production of both films in California appears to clash with Busch's commitments in New York. In 1915, she began working at
Keystone Studios, where she appeared in comedy
two-reelers. Her dalliance with studio chief
Mack Sennett famously ended his engagement to actress
Mabel Normand—who had actually been Busch's mentor and friend—when Normand walked in on the pair. According to an unverifiable claim by
Minta Durfee, Busch, who was known for pinpoint throwing accuracy, inflicted a serious head injury on Normand by striking her with a vase. At the pinnacle of her film career, Busch was known as the "versatile vamp". She starred in such feature films as ''
The Devil's Pass Key (1920) and Foolish Wives (1922), both directed by Erich von Stroheim, and in The Unholy Three'' (1925), with
Lon Chaney. She soon walked out on her contract at
Metro–Goldwyn–Mayer and had a nervous breakdown. She regained her health and resumed working at both major and minor studios; her best opportunity was a starring role in Universal's 1927 drama
Perch of the Devil, with Busch cast against type as a sympathetic young bride confronted by a rival. The film's climax was a spectacular flood sequence; this footage from
Perch of the Devil was reused in later Universal productions for more than a decade.
Work with Laurel and Hardy In 1926, producer
Hal Roach began casting "name" dramatic stars in his short comedies:
Priscilla Dean,
Theda Bara,
Herbert Rawlinson,
Agnes Ayres, and
Lionel Barrymore among them. Mae Busch joined Roach's "All Stars" for a leading role in ''
Love 'em and Weep (1927), which began her long association with Laurel and Hardy. The short received good distribution and resulted in Busch resuming her feature-film career, including a return to MGM for the 1928 Lon Chaney feature While the City Sleeps''. In 1929, many stars of silent films faced an uncertain future, with their talents less in demand as talking pictures caught on. When a short-subject assignment came along, Busch grabbed it. It was again for the Hal Roach studio in the Laurel & Hardy comedy
Unaccustomed as We Are (1929). It was the team's first "all-talking" comedy, and stage-trained Mae Busch handled her dialogue well as Hardy's put-upon wife. She appeared in 12 more Laurel and Hardy comedies, often displaying her versatility. She alternated between shrewish, gold-digging floozies (
Chickens Come Home,
Come Clean),
Oliver Hardy's volatile wife (
Sons of the Desert,
Their First Mistake), and more sympathetic roles (
Them Thar Hills,
Tit for Tat,
The Fixer Uppers). Her last role in a Laurel and Hardy film was in
The Bohemian Girl, again as Hardy's combative spouse, released in 1936.
Later roles and legacy The same year, she was featured in the low-budget serial
The Clutching Hand, but it did not advance her career. From then, her film roles were often uncredited. Overall, she had roles in approximately 130 movies from 1912 to 1946. Jackie Gleason later mentioned her name on his TV show as "the ever-popular Mae Busch". In 2014
The Grim Game, the believed-lost 1919 film that was the first feature to star
Harry Houdini, was discovered and restored by
Rick Schmidlin for Turner Classic Movies. Busch appears, credited as Bush. == Personal life and death ==