Mayo Methot was born on March 3, 1904 in Portland, Oregon, USA. She was an actress, known for Marked Woman (1937), The Night Club Lady (1932) and Virtue (1932). She was married to Humphrey Bogart, Percy Tredegar Morgan Jr. and John M. La Mond. She died on June 9, 1951 in Multnomah, Oregon.
She performed with the Baker Stock Company in Portland, Oregon until 1922 when she left for to New York, to appear in "Great Day", "All the King's Men", "The Song and Dance Man", and "The Medicine Man", among other productions.
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At her death, she had $1,400 in cash and a Los Angeles rental property producing $3,000 a month, both of which she left to her mother Evelyn Methot.
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Mayo's mother said to the press at the time of her death that her daughter never took her film roles seriously, and that "it was just for fun".
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Her father, Captain Jack Methot, died December 20, 1929. Her mother, Evelyn W. Methot died November 27, 1956, surviving her daughter by 5 and a half years. They are placed together at the Portland Memorial Mausoleum in Portland, Oregon.
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Married her first husband, Cosmopolitan Productions cameraman John M. La Mond, at the age of 19.
Humphrey Bogart was a tough guy in films but suffered from the "battered husband" syndrome during his stormy seven-year marriage to Mayo. She was known around the Hollywood circuit for her excessive drinking and violent temper.
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A strong Broadway presence in the 1920s before joining Warner Brothers in the 1930s.
Had a turbulent marriage to Humphrey Bogart. On one occasion she had a gun and argued violently with him. Dinner guests Gloria Stuart and her husband feared for their lives, but no one was shot, fortunately.
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She introduced the song "More Than You Know" (by Billy Rose, Edward Eliscu and Vincent Youmans) in the 1929 Broadway musical "Great Day". The recording survives.