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12 December 1926 Louella Parsons spots her stepping out at the Club New Yorker with actor/director Lowell Sherman
31 July 1932 guests at the Frolics last Saturday night were treated to a little free entertainment. Helene Costello, looking very lovely and accompanied by John Barrymore Colt and Mary Duncan, took a table at the Frolics. A few minutes later Lowell Sherman with Geneva Mitchell in tow sat down at the very next table. Helene took one look at her former husband and called over the head waiter. "Kindly give us another table," she asked, before Mr. Sherman could catch his breath. The management, embarrassed, was unable to find another table. Finally, the head waiter prevailed upon another party to change places with Miss Costello.
24 January 1933 is expected to become Lowell Sherman’s fourth wife
13 February 1933
accompanies Sherman to Sebastian’s Cotton Club
23 May 1933 she and Lowell Sherman are still that way about each other. They were glimpsed having a tete a tete supper at Sardi's at 1 a.m.
3 November 1933 is attendance to hear Gus Arnheim and his band play to a mob at the Beverly Wilshire. She’s with Lowell Sherman and a bad case of laryngitis.
17 November 1933 lunches with Sherman at the Brown Derby
18 January 1934 Louella reports: “Sally Blane, all done up in orchids, celebrating Russ Columbo's birthday with him at the Beverly Wilshire; Spencer Tracy, Loretta Young, Lowell Sherman and his current flame, Geneva Mitchell, with the John Waynes at the birthday celebration.”
19 February 1934
is out with Lowell Sherman again, this time at the Gold Room at Beverly Wilshire
15 October 1934 rumors that she and Lowell Sherman were married secretly were denied today by both
29 December 1934 Lowell Sherman dies at age 47. He suffered for the past year from laryngitis, which all but robbed him of his voice. He suddenly was taken seriously ill yesterday and was rushed to the hospital from the Pathe studio, where he was directing an all-color picture. His physician, Dr. C. D. Cass, said the actor-director's resistance was so low that when he contracted pneumonia; death came quickly.
1 January 1935 Louella writes: “The sympathy of all of Hollywood goes out to Lowell Sherman's mother, whose devotion to him is one of Hollywood's famous stories. Lowell married three times and on each occasion came home to live with his mother who had made him so comfortable and who had understood him so well he missed her. I asked him a few weeks ago if there was any truth in the report that he and Geneva Mitchell were planning to elope. ‘No truth,’ he said, ‘although Geneva is a grand girl, I don't believe I shall marry again. Mother makes me too comfortable.’ Sympathy also goes out to Geneva, who was devoted to Lowell up to the moment of his sad and unexpected death.”
35
takes the witness stand on behalf of the late Lowell Sherman’s business manager in a suit against the Sherman estate. The resulting hullabaloo barely dies down when she is back in court, this time accused of forcing her agent, George H. Talbot, into duping the authorities with a publicity hoax. Reportedly, Talbot had concocted a false holdup stunt merely to get his client into the newspapers. The unfortunate agent was sentenced to pay a fine or spend 100 days in jail and although Mitchell herself was acquitted for lack of evidence, the judge pointedly suggested that she pay Talbot's fine.