Ida Brockway "Kay" Koverman (May 15, 1876 – November 24, 1954) was an American film executive. She is best known as the woman who "ran MGM" as Louis B. Mayer's executive secretary and, later, director of public relations for the studio.
Early life and work
Ida Brockway was born on May 15, 1876, in Cincinnati.[1] As a teenager, she worked in a local jewelry store. After attending business school, she became a stenographer and joined the U. S. Customs office in Cincinnati. In the wake of a sensational scandal, in 1910, she married Oscar H. Koverman. She then moved to New York where she held various jobs until she was hired by the company Gold Fields American Development Corporation (GFADC), not Herbert Hoover's better known Consolidated Gold Fields of South Africa. Oscar and Ida divorced in 1923. He remarried and died tragically in 1934.[2]
After moving to California, Ida Koverman worked as the executive secretary of the Los Angeles County Central Committee of the state Republican Party. Working alongside engineer-entrepreneur Ralph Arnold, and allying with like-minded women leaders, she helped to lead the vanguard that won the White House for Herbert Hoover in 1928.
Career at MGM
In 1929, Louis B. Mayer hired Koverman as his executive secretary. Previously, she had facilitated Mayer's entre into the state Republican party and facilitated Mayer's relationship with Herbert Hoover. Already a well-known politico, when she joined MGM, the press noted that as "a political expert" she was employed "to keep Mr. Mayer advised politically."[3]
Long known as a conservative Republican, Koverman supported causes that reflected her political persuasion. In 1947, Koverman helped form the Hollywood Republican Committee with Robert Montgomery and George Murphy. She campaigned for Thomas E. Dewey in 1948 and for Richard Nixon's 1950 senate run.[8]
It is alleged that Howard Hughes once offered her $1000 a week to work for him at RKO. Koverman declined.[9] She worked as Louis B. Mayer's executive secretary until 1951, when Nicholas Schenck made her head of public relations for MGM.[8]
Ida Koverman died on November 24, 1954, in Los Angeles.
Koverman appears as a character in Adriana Trigiani's novel All the Stars in the Heavens.[10]
References
^Smyth, J. E., 1977- (2018). Nobody's girl Friday : the women who ran Hollywood. New York, NY, United States of America. p. 75. ISBN9780190840822. OCLC1002654326.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^She Damn Near Ran the Studio: The Extraordinary Lives of Ida R. Koverman,Jacqueline R. Braitman (UPM, 2020)