Miller, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar W. Miller,[2] was born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri. As a girl, she had a screen test in Hollywood, but her mother was advised to take her home because she had no potential to be an actress.[3] She was born Ruth Mae Miller but changed her name to avoid confusion with another actress, Ruth Miller, who was already active in film.[4] She attended Mary Institute in St. Louis.[2]
In the later part of the decade Miller appeared chiefly in light romantic comedies, opposite such actors as Clive Brook and Edward Everett Horton. Among her film credits in the late 1920s are Broken Hearts of Hollywood (1926), A Hero for a Night (1927), Hot Heels (1928), and The Aviator (1929). She retired from films in 1931. She may have attempted a comeback when she appeared on stage in 1933 in "Eve the Fifth" at Harold Lloyd'sBeverly Hills Little Theatre for Professionals, although her intentions are not clear.[6] She made a cameo appearance in the 1951 film Quebec, which starred John Barrymore Jr., and stated in her autobiography that she had participated as a joke. She came out of retirement to do the film Mother in 1978 by Brian Pinette. She later achieved recognition as a writer. She won three O. Henry Awards for her short stories, wrote a novel, radio scripts, and plays. She also performed for a brief time on Broadway.
Personal life
Miller was married three times. The first two marriages ended in divorce. Her first husband was film director Tay Garnett and the second was screenwriter John Lee Mahin. Her third husband, businessman E. S. Deans, died in 1986. The frequent news about her love life once earned Miller the nickname "the most engaged girl in Hollywood."[1]
Book
In 1988, MagicImage Filmbooks published Miller's autobiography My Hollywood: When Both of Us Were Young (ISBN978-1593934897).[7] Reviewer Richard Brody of The New Yorker called the memoir "a hidden masterwork of the genre".[8]
Death
Patsy Ruth Miller died at her home at the age of 91 in Palm Desert, California.[1][9]
^ abc"Patsy Ruth Miller, Movie Actress, 91, An Early Esmeralda". The New York Times. July 19, 1995. Retrieved July 8, 2012. Patsy Ruth Miller, a silent-film star whose best-known role may have been that of the Gypsy dancing girl in the 1923 film "The Hunchback of Notre Dame", died on Sunday at her home here. She was 91. ...
^"Patsy Ruth Miller obit". Milwaukee Journal. July 20, 1995. Retrieved September 12, 2012. Palm Desert, Calif. Patsy Ruth Miller, silent film actress who played the Gypsy dancing girl opposite Lon Chaney in the 1923 film Hunchback of ...
Bibliography
My Hollywood: When Both of Us Were Young (autobiography, 1988)
Carrier, Jeffrey L. "Confessions of a Kept Man, My Strange Friendship with Silent Movie Star Patsy Ruth Miller" ISBN979-8-8230-1213-3. Author House, 2023. 106 pages, illustrated.
Carrier, Jeffrey L. "Love, as Always... Esmeralda - Corresponding with Patsy Ruth Miller" ISBN9798887712918. Bear Manor Media, 2023. 138 pages, illustrated.