Marriage and children In March 1930, Goetz married Edith Mayer (1905–1988), daughter of
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio head
Louis B. Mayer – who was less than enthusiastic about the match. The couple had two daughters, Judith and Barbara. Goetz and Mayer remained married until his death in 1969. Goetz's sister-in-law was theatrical producer
Irene Mayer Selznick. Goetz's brother-in-law was film producer
David O. Selznick to whom Irene was married from April 1930 to 1949.
Politics Goetz was a liberal
Democrat and enthusiastically campaigned for
Adlai Stevenson II in the
1952 presidential election. The producer angered his
Republican Party father-in-law, Louis B. Mayer, when he announced plans to host a party for Stevenson at the
Beverly Hills Hotel. Mayer was further angered when he learned that the party was to be co-hosted by film executive
Dore Schary, the man with whom Mayer had worked with (and often fought with) at MGM and who replaced Mayer as the head of Metro in 1951. Although Mayer adored his daughter Edith, he had a difficult relationship with Goetz. This episode further strained their relationship, and Mayer never spoke to his son-in-law again.
Hobbies self-portrait called
Study by Candlelight A very wealthy man, Goetz raised thoroughbred racehorses. His horse
Your Host won the 1950
Santa Anita Derby and subsequently sired
Kelso, a
Hall of Fame inductee and one of the greatest horses in racing history. Goetz and his wife also were major investors in art, acquiring a significant collection of
Impressionist and
Post-Impressionist works. They owned paintings and sculptures by artists such as
Edgar Degas,
Paul Gauguin,
Claude Monet,
Paul Cézanne,
Berthe Morisot,
Édouard Manet,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
Pablo Picasso,
Amedeo Modigliani,
Chaïm Soutine,
Pierre Bonnard,
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, and
Henri Fantin-Latour. In 1949, a controversy erupted over a
Vincent van Gogh self-portrait titled
Study by Candlelight that Goetz had purchased two years earlier. The painting was declared a fake by art expert
Willem Sandberg and the artist's nephew, V. W. van Gogh, resulting in an international debate among art experts. The painting remained controversial and was not put up for auction with the rest of the Goetz collection following Edith Goetz's death in 1987. The painting was exhibited April 13–25, 2013 in the
Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada.
Death On August 15, 1969, Goetz died of cancer at his
Holmby Hills, Los Angeles home at the age of 66. ==References==