Torres played a Polynesian beauty in
White Shadows in the South Seas (1928), a silent film shot in
Tahiti which was
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's first feature fully synchronized with music and effects. She gained the role after 300 applicants were rejected. She also became the first person to have her voice recorded as part of "a new system in the selection of motion picture talent". The next year she was third-billed behind
Lili Damita and
Ernest Torrence in
The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1929), the first film version of the classic
Thornton Wilder novel, which was a part-talkie. This Oscar winner (for Art Direction) was an early disaster movie that bonded a group of strangers who see their lives flash before their eyes while trapped on a collapsing bridge. Torres' other 1929 film was
The Desert Rider (1929), a standard western in which she provided spicy diversion opposite cowboy star
Tim McCoy. and Torres in
The Sea Bat (1930) Torres continued the tropical island pace with
The Sea Bat (1930) and
Aloha (1931) playing various island girls and biracial beauty types. Also in 1931, she had a vaudeville act in New York. On Broadway, she played Teresa in
Adam Had Two Sons (1932). In her last year of filming, she played a sexy foil to the raucous comedy teams of
Bert Wheeler and
Robert Woolsey in
So This Is Africa (1933) and the
Marx Brothers in
Duck Soup (1933). It was Torres to whom Groucho delivered his classic line: "I could dance with you until the cows came home. On second thought, I'd rather dance with the cows until you came home." Torres abruptly retired following her marriage to businessman Stephen Ames in 1935. Her husband later produced postwar "B" films but she never returned to the film industry even with her husband's connections. ==Romance and marriages==