Humphrey Bogart Is Number One

Mayo Methot’s third husband Humphrey Bogart remains the top male screen legend as compiled by the American Film Institute.

Pronouncing Mayo Methot

One of the more challenging celebrity names to pronounce is that of Humphrey Bogart’s wife, Mayo Methot. Have you ever wondered how to properly pronounce Mayo Methot? Read this newspaper article from 1931 and you’ll be saying ‘Mayo Methot’ correctly in no time!

Mayo Methot: The Story Behind Her Name

In addition to her successful acting career and marriage to Humphrey Bogart, Mayo Methot has long aroused curiosity because of her unusual name.

This compelling news story from 1931 suggests why she never changed it.

The Song That Started It All

Many songs associated with film icon Humphrey Bogart were featured in his films. Some of these include ‘Knock On Wood’ and ‘As Time Goes By,’ both from the 1942 film ‘Casablanca.’ There’s also the tune ‘Am I Blue’ from the 1944 movie ‘To Have And Have Not’ and ‘Moanin’ Low’ from 1948’s ‘Key Largo.’

Some contemporary songs are associated with Bogie, too. This includes the 1981 hit ‘Key Largo’ by Bertie Higgins. Before both were featured in 1937’s ‘Marked Woman,’ Bogie and future wife Mayo Methot re-acquainted after years apart.

Yet the song that started it all for them wasn’t a new one. The tune they first danced to had been released a few years earlier in 1934 by Ray Noble, titled ‘The Very Thought Of You.’ Here’s the original version they likely enjoyed, arm-in-arm.

The Very Thought Of You
Music & Lyrics by Ray Noble

The very thought of you and I forget to do
The little ordinary things that everyone ought to do
I’m living in a kind of daydream
I’m happy as a king
And foolish though it may seem
To me that’s everything

The mere idea of you, the longing here for you
You’ll never know how slow the moments go till I’m near to you
I see your face in every flower
Your eyes in stars above
It’s just the thought of you
The very thought of you, my love

The mere idea of you, the longing here for you
You’ll never know how slow the moments go till I’m near to you
I see your face in every flower
Your eyes in stars above
It’s just the thought of you
The very thought of you, my love

Visiting Mayo Methot’s Crypt

If you’ll be anywhere near Portland, Oregon this Memorial Day, you may wish to pay respects at the resting place of a celebrity from long ago. That person is Humphrey Bogart’s erstwhile wife, Mayo Methot. Your destination? Wilhelm’s Portland Memorial mausoleum.

Mayo Methot
Mayo Methot’s Crypt, Photo Copyright Roy Widing

Mayo was married to ‘Bogie’ for nearly seven years and their union is considered by many to be the stuff of lore. Since their disagreements frequently played out in public, Mayo & Humphrey were sometimes called the “Battling Bogarts.”

Yet Mayo’s fame was not simply due to marrying the number one leading man in movies, as voted by the American Film Institute. Before meeting Humphrey Bogart, Mayo herself was a star of both Broadway and film.

Mayo’s crypt is located on the entry level at Wilhelm’s Portland Memorial. However, it’s a massive structure, so feel free to ask for assistance in order to best navigate your way around.

Mayo Methot’s Compelling Life Story

If all you know about Broadway and film star Mayo Methot is her marriage to leading Hollywood actor Humphrey Bogart, there’s much more to the story. Here’s a glimpse into what convinced her biographer into writing ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby.’

David Niven Talks Humphrey Bogart & Mayo Methot

Actor David Niven became a close friend of Humphrey Bogart. Click here or on the image below for his candid account of the feisty dynamic between Bogie & Mayo.

Humphrey Bogart, Mayo Methot, David Niven, Hollywood

Actor David Niven

Mayo Methot’s Secret Romance

News of Mayo Methot’s budding romance with a mystery beau hit newspapers in June, 1947.  At this point, Mayo had been single for two years after her divorce from Humphrey Bogart.

mayo methot, humphrey bogart, hollywood, broadway
Yet who was this mystery man? Find out  by ordering the biography of Mayo Methot, ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby’ here.

Sluggy, Bogie's Other Baby, Humphrey Bogart, Mayo Methot, Hollywood

Humphrey Bogart & Mayo Methot: Smooth Sailing

The below 1943 news column by journalist Jimmy Fidler provides an often overlooked perspective about the relationship between Humphrey Bogart and his wife, Mayo Methot. Fidler suggests their much-reported tempestuous relationship was calmer at sea in the absence of others, especially away from the white hot media spotlight.

Sluggy, Bogie's Other Baby, Humphrey Bogart, Mayo Methot, Hollywood

Click Image for Details

The couple’s mutual nautical interests were aided by the fact that Bogart was a Navy veteran and Mayo’s father a sea captain.

Humphrey Bogart, Mayo Methot, Hollywood, Hollywood Couples

Mayo & Bogie, Happy at Sea

While aboard their boat the ‘Sluggy,’ the case can be made that these two professional actors didn’t have an audience egging them on, so it was easier to simply enjoy each other’s company.   Get the real story behind film icon Humphrey Bogart’s seven year marriage to stage and screen actress Mayo Methot here in the new book ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby.’

Mayo Methot, 1943, Humphrey Bogart, Hollywood, Sluggy, Bogie, Bogart, Bogie's Other Baby, Biography, History, California, Movies, Broadway

Click Image to Enlarge

Book Trailer for ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby’ Released

‘Sluggy’ is the biography of Mayo Methot, third wife of film star Humphrey Bogart during the peak of his career. Anyone curious about their seven year roller-coaster Hollywood marriage will find ‘Sluggy’ a revealing view into the mercurial relationship that even movie ‘tough guy’ Humphrey Bogart couldn’t control. His later wife was called ‘Bogie’s Baby.’ Yet years before her, was ‘Bogie’s Other Baby,’ Mayo Methot. Buy ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby.’ Available at Amazon here. 

‘Sluggy’ Book Excerpt: Humphrey Bogart On His Wife’s Cooking

Mayo Methot, Humphrey Bogart, Sluggy, Bogies Other Baby, ebook, e-book, Book, Hollywood, Broadway

The following book excerpt is from ‘Sluggy: Bogie’s Other Baby,’ scheduled for release on October 17, 2019. Order your ebook copy today.

It was an August, 1938 trip to Portland soon after their marriage that signaled both Mayo’s commitment to new husband Humphrey Bogart and her disengagement from acting. Mayo had a minor role in the film ‘The Sisters’ released on October 14, 1938, starring Errol Flynn and Bette Davis. Yet when the topic of her future was raised in a front page Oregon Journal story on August 24, 1938, Mayo stated “…I’m not interested in my career anymore. Humphrey’s career is my interest.” Humphrey responded with “Thank you, darling. And to my surprise and amazement, the bride can cook.” However, Hollywood’s hold on Mayo hadn’t completely loosened.

Mayo Methot’s Portland Connection

Mayo Methot, Humphrey Bogart, Portland, Oregon, Portland Oregon, Portland Memorial, Hollywood, Bogie's Other Baby, Sluggy, Broadway, Sluggy Bogie's Other Baby

Humphrey Bogart’s third wife, Hollywood and Broadway performer Mayo Methot, is interred at Wilhelm’s Portland Memorial in Portland, Oregon. Known as ‘The Portland Rosebud’, Mayo’s hometown experiences were key in shaping her later success. 

Bogie’s Other Baby

Mayo Methot was Humphrey Bogart’s third wife. Born in 1904, she was twenty years older than Lauren Bacall, Bogart’s fourth wife.  Before Bacall’s 1924 birth, Mayo Methot was already performing on the Broadway stage, as noted in this newspaper article. 

Mayo Methot, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall

Click Above Image to View

Given their age difference, fourth wife Lauren Bacall was sometimes called ‘Bogie’s Baby.’ But long before Bacall was Mayo Methot, ‘Bogie’s Other Baby.’ The first ever biography about Mayo Methot is scheduled for release on October 17th, 2019, with book pre-orders now available here. 

Mayo Methot

Click for e-Book Details

‘Sluggy’

Mayo Methot’s first biography is scheduled for release on October 17, 2019, with orders available here. Keep updated using the ‘Follow Blog via Email’ link located at the top right side menu on this page.

Mayo Methot

Mayo Methot’s Grandmother Paved Way to Stardom

Mayo Methot’s paternal grandmother Minnie helped pave the way for her granddaughter’s entertainment future.

mayo methot, mayo bogart, humphrey bogart

Public Domain Image

Minnie Methot both sang opera and composed numerous songs, like ‘Don’t Be So Unruly.’

Six Degrees of Separation With Mayo Methot’s Alma Mater

Oregon’s Catlin Gabel Campus in Autumn

‘Six degrees of separation’ involves the concept that we’re all six or fewer personal connections from each other. This means if you follow the ‘friend of a friend’ link far enough, any two people can be linked within a maximum of six steps. While the theory has been popularized more recently, an early proponent of ‘six degrees of separation’ was Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy in 1929.

‘Six Degrees’ proponent Frigyes Karinthy

Mayo Methot’s educational background is shared by well known luminaries. Like Mayo, some have been been involved in acting and/or film. Here are a few of Mayo’s fellow celebrities from Oregon’s Catlin Gabel School, previously known as ‘Miss Catlin’s School.’ 

Catlin Students
Margaux Hemingway-Model, actress & granddaughter of novelist Ernest Hemingway.

Margaux Hemingway

Gus Van Sant, Jr. -Film Director

Gus Van Sant, Jr.

Catlin Faculty
James Beard-Chef

James Beard

Mayo Methot’s Final Resting Place

Mayo Methot rests at Wilhelm’s Portland Memorial, a historic mausoleum founded in 1901. It’s appropriately located in Portland, Oregon, the place Mayo long called home.

‘Fight Club’ author Chuck Palahniuk describes navigating the massive mausoleum, a resting place for nearly 100,000:

“Within ten minutes you’ll be confused and lost. But while you’re hunting for the way out, look for the crypt of Mayo Methot…”  

Also named on Mayo’s crypt are her parents, father Jack Methot and mother, Evelyn.

Mayo Methot

Rosebuds for the Portland Rosebud   Photo © Roy Widing/All Rights Reserved

Another Side of Mayo Methot

Mayo Methot and Humphrey Bogart had much in common, but once they married, media outlets increasingly portrayed her as somewhat of a shrieking shrew.

Mayo Methot, MayoMethot.com, MayoMethot, Mayo Bogart

Mayo Methot circa 1940

By the time the above photo was taken, Mayo had all but disengaged from both the theatre and film. When the topic of her future was raised, Mayo stated “I’m not interested in my career anymore. Humphrey’s career is my interest.” Bogart responded with “Thank you, darling. And to my surprise and amazement, the bride can cook.”