Wing began working on-screen at age 9. Her father was an assistant director for Paramount Pictures. In 1931, she became one of the first Goldwyn Girls, and she started her film career in Palmy Days. In 1932, she was seen in Mack Sennett-produced comedies made by Paramount, one starring Bing Crosby. Wing made an impression with producers and moviegoers, but she seldom broke through to leading roles. Many of her roles were small and barely clothed, before the introduction of the 1934 Production Code, but she became widely recognized as a sex symbol. Since her contracted studio was mired in bankruptcy during much of her career, her work was done on loan, primarily at Warner Bros., and later after her release, on low-budget efforts on a per-film basis. Wing enjoyed a far more successful sideline doing product endorsements and was featured in innumerable fan magazines from 1933-38. She was also well known off-screen for her romances, and was linked to Jackie Coogan, Maurice Chevalier, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. Toby Wing played a few leading roles in B features and short subjects. In 1936 and 1937, she worked opposite singer-songwriter Pinky Tomlin in two of his low-budget musical features, With Love and Kisses and Sing While You're Able. The two stars were engaged briefly during late 1937, with the romance ending before their planned wedding, but they remained close until Tomlin's death. Her last leading role was in The Marines Come Thru, although filmed in Florida in 1938, it did not see general release until 1943 as Fight On, Marines! She retired from movies after marrying the pilotDick Merrill, more than 20 years her senior, on October 19, 1938, in Fredericksburg, Virginia. Wing completed her acting career on Broadway in the unsuccessful 1938 Cole Porter musical You Never Know, which starred Lupe Vélez, Clifton Webb, Libby Holman, and J. Harold Murray. The couple retired to DiLido, Florida, where Merrill was assigned Eastern Airlines' New York-Miami route for the remainder of his career. Wing became successful in real estate in California and Florida. Wing and Merrill later settled in Virginia, where they lived together until Merrill's death in 1982. On February 8, 1960, Wing was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6561 Hollywood Blvd.
Personal life
Wing and Merrill married via elopement when she was 22. They had two sons, neither of whom had survived. Their first son died of what was then termed "crib death" and their second son, Ricky, was murdered in their Miami home in September 1982 at age 42. His murder was reportedly related to his involvement in a large-scale marijuana-smuggling operation in New Orleans. At the time of his death, he was free on appeal of a drug-smuggling conviction. The Merrills were living in Virginia at the time and the case is still listed as unsolved. The couple was survived by two granddaughters.
Relatives
Wing's father, a career reserve Army officer, was reactivated for service prior to World War II and was captured by the Japanese in the Philippines in 1942. He survived the Bataan Death March and was later rescued in the Raid at Cabanatuan by U.S. Army Rangers and Filipino guerillas, a story told in The Great Raid. Paul Wing died in May 1957, in a veteran's hospital in Portsmith, VA, following a coronary. Her younger sister, Pat Wing Gill, was also an actress and chorus girl who largely worked for Warner Bros. Her brother, Paul Reuben Wing, was a billionaire real estate mogul who led a quiet life away from the Hollywood limelight in Lake Elsinore, California.