- Peggy Hopkins Joyce
infobox actress
caption = Peggy in 1925
birthname = Marguerite Upton
birthdate = birth date|1893|5|26
birthplace =Berkley, Virginia
deathdate = death date and age|1957|9|12|1895|5|26
deathplace =New York City, New York
occupation =Stage actress
yearsactive = 1916 - 1926
spouse = Everett Archibald, Jr. (m.1910)
Sherburne Hopkins (1913-1915)
J. Stanley Joyce (1920-1921)
Gustave Morner (1924-1928)
Anthony Easton (m.1945)
Andrew Meyer (1953-1957)Peggy Hopkins Joyce (
May 26 ,1893 –June 12 ,1957 ) was an American actress and celebrity, famed as much for her several marriages to wealthy men, colorful divorces, scandalous affairs, and generally lavish lifestyle as for her work on stage or screen.Born Marguerite Upton in Berkley,
Virginia , she was known as "Peggy", a traditional nickname for Margaret or Marguerite. "Hopkins" and "Joyce" were the surnames of her second and third husbands, respectively (of six overall).She debuted on the Broadway stage in 1917 in the
Ziegfeld Follies . In 1923 she caused a sensation in the annualEarl Carroll's Vanities . In 1933, she played herself in the movie International House, which contained some good-natured joshing about her love life.She owned the
Portuguese Diamond , one of the most expensive in the world that she later sold toHarry Winston and which is now on display at theSmithsonian Institution inWashington, D.C. Her name was frequently incorporated into song lyrics of the 1920s and 1930s to invoke images of excess and naughtiness. For example, "I've Got Five Dollars" by
Richard Rodgers andLorenz Hart includes: "Peggy Joyce has a business/All her husbands have gold..."InCole Porter 's "They Couldn't Compare to You" (from "Out of This World "), the god Mercury sings of his affairs with women real and fictional through history: "... When betwixt Nell Gwyn / And Anne Boleyn / I was forced to make my choice, / I became so confused / I was even amused / And abused by Peggy Joyce..."Peggy Hopkins Joyce died in New York City in 1957.
Disambiguation
Zora Neale Hurston refers to Peggy Hopkins Joyce in her essay [http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MA01/Grand-Jean/Hurston/Chapters/how.html "How it Feels to be Colored Me"] . Hurston compares her own positive self-image to Joyce as "aristocratic" and says that Jocye has "nothing on me". Hurston, and presumably also Joyce, is then "the eternal feminine with its string of beads."References
"Gold Digger: The Outrageous Life and Times of Peggy Hopkins Joyce" by
Constance Rosenblum (2000)Henry Holt & Company (ISBN 0-8050-5089-2)External links
*ibdb|47282
*imdb|0431591
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