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==== Effects of his young age ==== <!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Thalberg-sitting.jpg|thumb|{{center|Thalberg, 1929}}]] --> According to Flamini, his youth was a subject of conversation within the movie community. Executives from other studios, actors, and film crew, often mistook him to be a junior employee. Movie columnist [[Louella Parsons]], upon first being introduced to him, asked, "What's the joke? Where's the new general manager?" After five minutes of talking to Thalberg, however, she later wrote about "Universal's Boy Wonder": "He might be a boy in looks and age, but it was no child's mind that was being asked to cope with the intricate politics of Universal City."<ref name=Flamini />{{rp|37}} Novelist [[Edna Ferber]] responded the same way, writing that "I had fancied motion-picture producers as large gentlemen smoking oversized cigars. But this young man whose word seemed so final at Universal City ... impressed me deeply."<ref name=Vieira-1 />{{rp|9}} The male actors in the studio had a similar reaction. [[Lionel Barrymore]], who was nearly twice his age, recalled their meetings: {{blockquote|I used to go into his office with the feeling I was addressing a boy. In a moment, I would be the one who felt young and inexperienced. I would feel he was not one, but all the forty disciples.<ref name=Thomas>Thomas, Bob. ''Thalberg: Life and Legend'', New Millennium Press (1969)</ref>{{rp|39}}}} Thalberg likewise gained the respect of leading playwrights, some of whom also looked down on him due to his youth. [[George S. Kaufman]], co-author of ''Dinner at Eight'', several Marx Brothers films, and two George Gershwin plays, came from New York to meet with Thalberg. Afterward he confided to his friend, [[Groucho Marx]]: "That man has never written a word, yet he can tell me exactly what to do with a story. I didn't know you had people like that out here."<ref name=Vieira />{{rp|189}} Actress [[Norma Shearer]], whom he later married, was surprised after he greeted her at the door, then walked her to his office for her first job interview: "Then you're not the office boy?" she asked. He smiled, as he sat himself behind his desk: "No, Miss Shearer, I'm Irving Thalberg, vice-president of the Mayer Company. I'm the man who sent for you."<ref name=Thomas />{{rp|44}} His younger-than-normal age for a studio executive was usually mentioned even after he left Universal to help start up MGM. Screenwriter [[Agnes Christine Johnson]], who worked with Thalberg for years, described his contribution during meetings: {{blockquote|He's so marvelous that no one who doesn't know him can believe it. Seeing him sitting in with all the important people, looking such a boy, and deferred to by everybody, you'd think that either they were crazy or you were. But if you stayed and listened, you'd understand. He has a mind like a whip. Snap! He has an idea—the right idea—the only idea!<ref name=Vieira-1 />{{rp|73}}}} The same quality was observed by director and screenwriter [[Hobart Henley]]: "If something that read well in conference turns out not so good on the screen, I go to him and, like that—Henley snaps his fingers—he has a remedy. He's brilliant."<ref name=Vieira-1 />{{rp|74}} Another assistant producer to Thalberg explains: {{blockquote|Irving had a sixth sense about a manuscript. He was a film doctor. You could go out [to a preview] with a film, and if there was something that didn't quite come off, he could put his finger on it. Some of the great films that came out of Metro were ''re''made at his suggestion. He had that uncanny ability.<ref name=Vieira />{{rp|59–60}}}} His youth also contributed to his open-mindedness to the ideas of others. [[Conrad Nagel]], who starred in numerous Thalberg films, reported that Thalberg was generally empathetic to those he worked alongside: "Thalberg never raised his voice. He just looked into your eyes, spoke softly, and after a few minutes he cast a spell on you."<ref name=Vieira-1 />{{rp|74}} Studio attorney Edwin Loeb, who also worked to create [[AMPAS]], explained that "the real foundation of Irving's success was his ability to look at life through the eyes of any given person. He had a gift of [[empathy]], and almost complete perspective."<ref name=Vieira-1 />{{rp|74}} Those opinions were also shared by producer [[Walter Wanger]]: "You thought that you were talking to an Indian savant. He could cast a spell on anybody."<ref name=Hoberman /> His talent as a producer was enhanced by his "near-miraculous" powers of concentration, notes film critic [[J. Hoberman]].<ref name=Hoberman /> As a result, he was never bored or tired, and supplemented his spare time with reading for his own amusement, recalls screenwriter [[Bayard Veiller]], with some of his favorite authors being [[Francis Bacon]], [[Epictetus]], and [[Immanuel Kant]].<ref name=Hoberman />
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