Stage and film career At the age of five, she accompanied her sister Margaret on an audition because no babysitter was available. She was noticed by the director and given her first part. She began her stage career and frequently was employed afterward, widely noted for both her talent and visual appeal. To avoid
child labor laws while the 10-year-old was appearing in a play in Chicago in 1912, Charlotte Shelby obtained the birth certification of her older sister's deceased daughter from Louisiana, and Juliet became Mary Miles Minter. In her screen debut, in which she was billed as Juliet Shelby, she appeared in the 1-reel short film
The Nurse (1912). Her new
stage name was applied, and Minter starred in the role as Viola Drayton, the fairy, in the 5-reel drama
The Fairy and the Waif (1915). A reviewer in the
New York Dramatic Mirror declared: “Mary Miles Minter is the greatest child actress to be seen either on stage or before the camera. She is exquisitely fascinating, sympathetically charming, and delightfully childlike and human.” Minter's career steadily grew after that. She specialized in playing demure young women. With her photogenic features, blue eyes, and blonde curls, she emulated and later rivaled
Mary Pickford. Her first movie for director
William Desmond Taylor was
Anne of Green Gables (1919). It was well-received, and Taylor actively promoted Minter. According to Minter, a romantic relationship developed between them. However, Minter (who had grown up fatherless) said Taylor had reservations from the outset and later curtailed the romance, citing their 30-year age difference. Other people who knew Taylor and Minter said he never reciprocated her feelings. ''.
Scandal On February 1, 1922, Taylor was murdered in his home, a two-story bungalow apartment on
Alvarado Street, The ensuing scandal, following the
Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle scandal of Labor Day weekend 1921, and Arbuckle's murder trials, was the subject of widespread media speculation and embellishment. Newspapers reported that coded love letters written by Minter had been found in his bungalow after his death (these were later shown to have been written three years earlier in 1919). Minter was at the height of her success, having starred in more than 50 films, and newspaper revelations of the 20-year-old star's association with the 49-year-old murdered director was cause for a sensational scandal. There were several suspects (including her mother Charlotte Shelby) in the long investigation of Taylor's murder. In 1937, Minter publicly announced to the
Los Angeles Examiner newspaper: "Now I demand that I either be prosecuted for the murder committed fifteen years ago, or exonerated completely. If the District Attorney has any evidence, he should prosecute. If not, then I should be exonerated... Shadows have been cast upon my reputation." Taylor's murder was never solved, but neither film actress
Mabel Normand (who was the last person known to have seen Taylor alive), nor Minter was ever regarded as a serious suspect in the murder by police investigators. In a 1970 interview, during which she described Taylor as her "mate," Minter recalled going to view Taylor's body immediately after the murder. In shock, she demanded to be used for a blood transfusion to revive him, not believing he was dead until she touched his body in the morgue: "That deadly cold... convinced me as nothing else could have done. No life can return to this man." She broke down and sobbed: "They crucified Jesus. Now they've crucified... They've crucified my mate."
Later career and retirement Minter made four more motion pictures for Paramount, with her last being
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1923). The studio did not renew her contract: she was 23 years old. She received many other offers but declined them all, saying she had never been happy as an actress. ==Personal life==