Friday 19 November 2021

GOLDWYN PICTURES IS FOUNDED IN CULVER CITY, CA

Today, The Grandma is relaxing at home. She has decided to watch some classic films, and she has chosen Goldwyn Pictures ones, a corporation that was founded on a day like today in 1916.

Goldwyn Pictures Corporation was an American motion picture production company that operated from 1916 to 1924 when it was merged with two other production companies to form the major studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

It was founded by Samuel Goldwyn.

The studio proved moderately successful, but became most famous due to its iconic Leo the Lion trademark. Although Metro was the nominal survivor, the merged studio inherited Goldwyn's old facility in Culver City, California where it would remain until 1986. The merged studio also retained Goldwyn's Leo the Lion logo.

Lee Shubert of Shubert Theater was an investor in the company.

Goldwyn Pictures Corporation was founded on November 19, 1916, by Samuel Goldfish (an executive at Paramount -formerly the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation-, also better known as Samuel Goldwyn) partnering with Broadway producers Edgar and Archibald Selwyn using an amalgamation of both last names to create the name.

Goldfish had left Lasky's Feature Play Company, of which he was a co-founder, in 1916 when Feature Play merged with Famous Players. Margaret Mayo, Edgar's wife & play writer, and Arthur Hopkins, a Broadway producer, joined the trio as writer and director general.

More information: The Famous People

At the beginning, Goldwyn Pictures rented production facilities from Solax Studios when it and many other early film studios in America's first motion picture industry were based in Fort Lee, New Jersey. The company's first release was Polly of the Circus, an adaptation of Mayo's 1907 play Polly of the Circus, in September 1917 starting Mae Marsh.

By April 1917, Goldwyn Pictures agreed to rent the Universal Pictures studios in Fort Lee, then having the second-largest stage, and had two film companies operating at the time with plans for more production companies. The company management planned on having 12 films done by September 1, 1917, without distributing the films to be able to show advanced footage to the theatres.

Goldfish also associated the company with Columbia University via Professor Victor Freeburg's Photoplay Writing class in 1917 to increase the company's artistic standings. The company also released other production companies films with Marie Dressler's Dressler Producing Corporation film, The Scrub Lady, in 1917.

The company was forced in October 1917 to switch out The Eternal Magalene for Fighting Odds, both starring Maxine Elliott, after the National Board of Review cleared the Magalene film while censors in Pennsylvania state and Chicago city did not approve the film. Thais starring Mary Garden was released in late 1917 which was a costly loss.

In January 1918, Goldfish signed director Raoul Walsh and prematurely announced it, as there were two years left on Walsh's contract with Fox. With Thais being the company's second costly loss, Goldwyn decreased film budgets, partly by not using theatre divas to cross over to film and reducing design driven films. Instead, he relied on comedies starring Madge Kennedy and Mabel Normand.

In August 1918, Goldwyn Pictures signed Will Rogers, at that time a Broadway Follies favourite, to star in a Rex Beach production, Laughing Bill Hyde, filmed at the Fort Lee studio for release in September. The company purchased the Triangle Studios in Culver City in 1918.

Goldwyn then headed west out of Culver City in the Winter of 1918 which opening operations there also caused an increase in film expenses. Seeing an opportunity in December, Samuel Goldfish then had his name legally changed to Samuel Goldwyn.

In 1919, Frank Joseph "Joe" Godsol became an investor in Goldwyn Pictures. Since 1912 Frank Joseph Godsol had been making deals for the Shubert organization in the U.S. and abroad.

Goldwyn began looking to follow other film companies, like Loews Theaters/Metro Pictures and First National, into vertical integration. Goldwyn and the company backers were looking at renting the Astor Theatre for film premiers. Instead, with the Capitol Theatre's financial problems in May 1920, the backer purchased a controlling interest in that theatre. Shubert and Godsol, however, did not want the theatre to rely only on Goldwyn films and operated it separately from the company.

By 1920 in addition to owning its Culver City studio, Goldwyn Pictures was renting two New York studios and nearly ceased operations in Fort Lee.

After personality clashes, Sam Goldwyn left the company in 1922. Frank Godsol became Chairman of the Board and President of Goldwyn Pictures in 1922.

In 1923 Lee Shubert of Shubert Theater contacted Marcus Loew about merging the company with Loew's Metro. Loew agreed to the merger. Louis B. Mayer heard about the pending merger and contacted Loew, and Frank Godsol, president of Goldwyn Pictures, about adding his Louis B. Mayer Productions into the post merger company, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

More information: MGM


God makes stars. I just produce them.

Samuel Goldwyn

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