ActionScript ToolBox
Quotes, Bios, and more!
Browse by: Elsa Maxwell (Biography) (0.14 seconds)
 
 
Other authors named Elsa:
Author's popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
If you like or dislike this author in general or one or more of their quotes in particular, please give us your feedback by clicking on the Vote for this author icon to vote for, or the Vote against this author icon to vote against them.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
A bore is a vacuum cleaner of society, sucking up everything and giving nothing. Bores are always eager to be seen talking to you.
Popularity: -1
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
Bores put you in a mental cemetery while you are still walking.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
I don't hate anyone. I dislike. But my dislike is the equivalent of anyone else's hate.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
I make enemies deliberately. They are the sauce piquante to my dish of life.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
Serve the dinner backward, do anything-but for goodness sake, do something weird.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
Someone said that life is a party. You join in after it's started and leave before it's finished.
Popularity: 0
Vote: Vote +1 Vote -1
Under pressure, people admit to murder, setting fire to the village church or robbing a bank, but never to being bores.

Biography

Elsa Maxwell (May 24 1883-November 1 1963) was an American socialite, songwriter, radio host, and gossip columnist. She was dubbed “The Hostess with the Mostest” by the press. Maxwell has become an cultural icon in some quarters for what her fans regard as the campy quality of her endless name-dropping and snobbery.

Maxwell was born in Keokuk, Iowa and grew up in California. She left school at age 14 but later claimed to have continued her education at the University of California and the Sorbonne. In her early teens, she began to earn a living as a theater pianist and accompanist in her early teens, despite lack of any formal music studies.

In 1905, Maxwell joined a Shakespearean troupe as an odd-jobs girl and subsequently appeared in vaudeville and for a time in South African music halls. Maxwell was in San Fransisco during the 1906 earthquake. In 1907 she began to write songs and eventually published some eighty numbers.

Maxwell began showing up at parties in the United States and in Europe, meeting socially important people, and working her way up the social ladder. By the end of World War I, she was giving soirées for royalty and high society throughout Europe. In 1925 and 1926, she organized the International Motor Boat Races at the Lido in Venice. On behalf of the prince of Monaco, Maxwell planned the Monte Carlo Beach Club, the Casino Hotel, and the Piscine Restaurants of Monte Carlo in 1926.

Maxwell's lavish parties were noted not only for her famous guests but also for the entertainment she devised to keep them amused. She is thought to have invented the "scavenger hunt", a popular party game in the 1930s. She was also fond of costume parties. One of her guests, Elizabeth Varley, wrote about attending an Elsa Maxwell party while visiting with conductor Arturo Toscanini’s daughters, Wally and Wanda:

In the early 1930s, Maxwell returned to New York City, but the Great Depression prompted her to move to Hollywood in 1938, where she appeared in several not very successful movie shorts, including Elsa Maxwell's Hotel for Women (1939) and The Lady and the Lug (1940). She later appeared in Stage Door Canteen (1943).

In 1936, Maxwell's
I Live by My Wits was published in Harper's Bazaar. Two years later her Life of Barbara Hutton was serialized in Cosmopolitan.

In 1942, Maxwell was given her own radio program, "Elsa Maxwell's Party Line", and a syndicated gossip column. During this time, she continued to organize parties for famous people.

During the 1950s, she lived in New York, at a suite at the Waldorf-Astoria. In 1954, Maxwell published a memoir,
R.S.V.P. In 1957, she published How to Do It; The Lively Art of Entertaining . She also made weekly television appearances on Jack Paar's "Tonight" show.

At a party she threw for Maria Callas in 1957, she introduced the opera singer to Aristotle Onassis.

Maxwell died in New York in 1963 at age 80. Maxwell never married and is thought by some to have been a lesbian.

Further Reading

Party Girl : The Elsa Maxwell Story'' (1989), by Rosemary Kent, ISBN 1556110405

...(more on Wikipedia)

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Elsa Maxwell".
  About Us