As described in a film magazine reviews,[4] Maggie, a homely but lovable musical comedy star yearns for love, a home, and children. She marries Al Cassidy, a happy-go-lucky fellow. Her happiness is complete at the birth of a baby. Her husband leaves on business and gets into trouble with another woman. A friend of Maggie’s informs her of this. When her husband begins to confess, she seals his lips, declaring everything untrue and foolish.
Pretty Ladies marked the first credited appearance of "Lucille Le Sueur", soon to be known as Joan Crawford. According to Lawrence J. Quirk, author of The Films of Joan Crawford, this film was the only time Crawford was credited by her real name[6] (Crawford is also billed as LeSueur in the 1925 promotional film MGM Studio Tour).[7]
It was also one of the first screen appearances of Myrna Loy (then still performing under her real last name Williams),[8] who signed a seven-year contract with Warner Bros. in 1925 and then finally signed with MGM where she became a star in 1934 with the release of The Thin Man.[9]
^"New Pictures: Pretty Ladies", Exhibitors Herald, 22 (8), Chicago, Illinois: Exhibitors Herald Company: 49, August 16, 1925, retrieved July 17, 2022 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.