- Beside her career as a movie actress she was also a busy operetta singer but also appeared in numerous theater plays, among others at the Rose-Theater in Berlin at the side of her second husband, the actor Hans Rose. This marriage also ended in divorce in 1944.
- Loni Pyrmont's career began with small roles in Rudolf Nelson's operetta productions, after which she took part in cabaret performances in the Rhineland and Westphalia.
- She belonged to the ensemble of the Berlin Rose Theater as Loni Rose-Pyrmont until the end of her stage career in 1944, and was also seen at the Theater in der Kommandantenstraße.
- The actress and singer Loni Pyrmont got acting lessons at the Schauspielhaus Berlin before she entered the film business in 1919 with "Die Japanerin" (1919).
- Loni Pyrmont made her best-known appearances in comedies, plays and operettas such as: Wenn man verliebt ist, Das Mädel von Davos, Der Raub der Sabinerinnen, Mein Leopold and Jean Gilbert's "Uschi".
- At the end of the war in 1918, Max Landa discovered Loni Pyrmont for the movies. From 1921 to 1924, she appeared in mostly minor productions by well-known directors such as Paul Heidemann, E. A. Dupont, Manfred Noa and Georg Jacoby. Film trips took her to Italy, France, Monaco and Switzerland.
- She was a German operetta singer and silent film actress with a short-term career in the early 1920s.
- On April 7, 1925, Loni Pyrmont married her colleague (actor and singer) Alfred Krafft-Lortzing, from whom she divorced in 1931.
- During the First World War she received her artistic training at the drama school of the Schauspielhaus Berlin.
- The theater director Martin Zickel became one of her patrons on the stage.
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