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   » » Wiki: Gold Digger
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A gold digger is a person, typically a woman, who engages in a type of transactional sexual relationship for money and social status rather than love.

(2025). 9781498202671
If it turns into marriage, it is a type of marriage of convenience.


Etymology and usage
The term "gold digger" is a slang term that has its roots among and in the early 20th century. In print, the term can be found in 's 1911 book, The Ne'er-Do-Well, and in the 1915 memoir My Battles with Vice by . The Oxford Dictionary and 's Dictionary of Historical Slang state the term is distinct for women because they were much more likely to need to marry a wealthy man in order to achieve or maintain a level of socioeconomic status.

The term rose in usage after the popularity of 's play The Gold Diggers in 1919. Hopwood first heard the term in a conversation with Ziegfeld performer .

(1989). 9780472109630, University of Michigan Press.
As an indication on how new the slang term was, Broadway producers urged him to change the title because they feared that the audience would think that the play was about mining and the Gold Rush.
(2025). 9781469660288, University of North Carolina Press.


Society and culture

General
There exist several cases where female public figures have been perceived as exemplars of the gold digger stereotype by the public. The best-known gold digger of the early 20th century was Peggy Hopkins Joyce. Joyce was a former who married and divorced millionaires. She was characterized as a gold digger during her divorce battle with Stanley Joyce during the early 1920s. Some have argued that she was the real-life inspiration for Lorelei Lee, the protagonist in ’ 1925 novel Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
(2025). 9781469660288, University of North Carolina Press.
which holds gold digging as a central theme. Additionally, some have contended that the term "gold digger" was coined to describe her.
(2025). 9781627798242, Henry Holt and Company.
Former Olympian was dubbed the "swimming gold digger" for her divorce contest with Broadway impresario during the 1950s.
(2025). 9781469660288, University of North Carolina Press.
The press and public described model/actress Anna Nicole Smith as a gold digger for marrying multi-millionaire octogenarian J. Howard Marshall II. There was even a book published as a Little Blue Book (Little Blue Book No. 1392, Confessions of a Gold Digger, by Betty Van Deventer, 1929).


Law
The recurring image of the gold digger in Western popular media throughout the 1920s and 1930s developed into an important symbol of a moral panic surrounding frivolous lawsuits. Sharon Thompson's research has demonstrated how public perception of the prevalence of gold digging has created disadvantages for female spouses without their own source of income in the negotiation of cases and prenuptial agreements. The gold digger stereotype triggered public discussions about legislation during the 1930s, particularly breach of promise cases. Public outrage surrounding the image of frivolous lawsuits and unfair alimony payouts related to the gold digger archetype contributed to a nationwide push throughout the middle and late 1930s to outlaw heart balm legislation in the United States.
(2025). 9781469660288, University of North Carolina Press.


Popular culture

Film
The gold digger emerged as a dominant trope in American popular culture beginning in the 1920s. Stephen Sharot stated that the gold digger supplanted the popularity of the in 1920s cinema.
(2025). 9783319824321, Springer.

By the 1930s, the term "gold digger" had reached the United Kingdom through a British remake of The Gold Diggers. While the film received negative critical reception, several sequels with the same title have been produced.

In the 1930s, the gold digger trope was used in a number of popular American films, most notably Gold Diggers of 1933, Gold Diggers of 1935, Baby Face, , Dinner at Eight, and . Film historian Roger Dooley notes that the gold digger is one of the most common of the “stock company of stereotypes that continually reappear in the films of the 1930s.”

(1979). 9780151337897, Harcourt, Brace, and Jovanovich.
Gold diggers in 1930s cinema were often portrayed in positive, sometimes heroic, ways.
(1997). 9780520207905, University of California Press.
The character has featured in many films since the 1930s such as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) and How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), both starring , or as a villainous foil, as in both versions of Disney's film The Parent Trap.


Music
The gold digger image or trope appears in several popular songs, including "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" (1938), "Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend" (1949), "" (1953), "She Got the Goldmine (I Got The Shaft)" (1982), and "" (1984). 's use of the "gold digger script" is one of a few prevalent sexual scripts that is directed at young women. The 2005 hit "Gold Digger" by Kanye West was the ninth best selling and ninth most played song of the 2000s, according to People Magazine.


See also

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