Margaretta Tuttle


Margaretta Muhlenberg Tuttle was an American author and writer of the early 20th century.

Life

Margaretta Tuttle was born in Cleveland, the daughter of lawyer and newspaper editor George Perkins and Gertrude Withers Perkins of Cincinnati. Margaretta's father committed suicide by poison, leaving a note complaining of ill health. Margaretta was educated at the University of Cincinnati. She married businessman Frederic Crosby Tuttle and had two daughters, Margaretta and Katherine. Stories and articles by her started to appear in 1910, starting with the article "Maternity and the Woman Intellectual” and the story "The Greatest of These".
Tuttle wrote fiction and articles for markets such as Collier's, Ainslee's Magazine, Metropolitan Magazine, Harper's Weekly, the Women's Home Companion, the Ladies' Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, and the Saturday Evening Post from 1910 to 1932. Tuttle supported women's suffrage and wrote a number of articles encouraging women to attend college and enter the workforce. She also wrote about health and diet. Her best-known work of fiction was probably the novel "Feet of Clay", which was filmed by Cecil B. DeMille as Feet of Clay and published in several editions, including one with images from the "photoplay". Another story was filmed in 1925 as "The Unguarded Hour" by Lambert Hillyer.
Tuttle was sued in 1924 by agent Laura Wilck who claimed that Tuttle had cheated her out of her commission on the sale of "Feet of Clay" to Famous Players/Lasky for $25,000; Tuttle won the case and got court costs from Wilck.
In the late 1920s Tuttle attempted to get screenwriting work in Hollywood, and her daughter Margaretta "Gretta" Tuttle also attempted to break into the business. Gretta had a bit part in the 1929 movie "The Sophomore".

Works

Her longer works included: