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Home > Index > Advertising > Mascots (Animals) > MGM Lion (Leo)
       
  Advertising Mascots - Animals    
       
 

Click for MGM StudiosMGM Lion - MGM's trademark lion mascot (a.k.a."Leo") is seen at the beginning of every MGM feature film. Leo first roared July 31, 1928 for the debut of the movie White Shadows of the South Seas. The roar was heard via a phonograph record since it was a silent movie. The MGM lion logo was created in 1916 for the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation by advertising executive Howard Dietz. The logo was based on the Columbia University fight song Roar, Lion, Roar. In 1924, when Goldwyn merged with Metro and Louis B. Mayer, the lion logo became the trademark for the new company. Over the years a number of lions have portrayed Leo including Slats, Jackie and Tanner. Around the circle that framed Leo the Lion in the beginning of each film, the MGM motto "Ars Gratia Artis" (Art for Art's Sake) was displayed. The history of the MGM Studios was chronicled in the video When the Lion Roars (1991). TRIVIA NOTE: The Mary Tyler Moore MTM productions parodied the MGM lion logo by using a sweet little kitty cat meowing at the end of each of their show's. Leo the lion was also the name of the simple hand puppet with wide eyes and spiky whiskers used as commercial spokesperson for the Lyons Moving & Storage Company in the 1950s. Leo wore a moving man's uniform with bow-tie and a hat reading Lyons.  See also -  CATS: "MTM Kitty (Mimsey)"  Metro Goldwyn Meyer Website  

 
 


             

 

                    
 

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