[January 10th marks the 100th anniversary of the renaming, rebranding, and relaunch of Columbia Pictures, one of the foundational and most iconic American film studios. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Columbia’s many film innovations over its first few decades, leading up to a special weekend tribute to one of our preeminent 21st century FilmStudiers!]
On three pre-1924
efforts where we can see the studio’s humbler but unmistakable origins.
1)
Screen Snapshots (1920+): A
Hollywood film studio is an interesting entity—obviously its primary purpose is
to help produce films, and I’ll highlight a couple early examples for this
studio in a moment; but at the same time, it exists as part of the amorphous
and ambiguous yet hugely influential (even in its earlier moments) community
that is “Hollywood.” As last year’s 1923 anniversary
post on the Hollywood Sign reflects, that community was really being
created in this early 1920s period, and the studio that became Columbia played
a role in that creation through Screen
Snapshots: a series of documentary shorts, launched in 1920 and continued
until the late 1950s, that sought to portray the realities of Hollywood stars,
parties, and life behind the film curtain. Hollywood was always as much about
image as any concrete institutions or texts, and nothing contributed more to
the creation of that image in its early days than did Screen Snapshots.
2)
Hallroom Boys (early 1920s):
No film studio could survive without actual films to put out (and thus artists
under contract with the studio), of course, and in its early days this studio
focused, as many did in the 1910s and 20s, on translating Vaudeville
comedy and acts onto the silver screen. The most famous such translation
involved a trio of violent brothers about whom I’ll write in tomorrow’s post, but
the first Vaudeville artists under contract to this studio were the Hallroom Boys,
the act founded by performers Edward
Flanagan and Neely Edwards. In recent years, spurred by specific topics
like Blackface entertainment, I’ve started to think about just how
influential Vaudeville was on 20th century American culture, and the
central role of Vaudeville acts in early film is another example worth further thought
for sure.
3)
More
to Be Pitied Than Scorned (1922): If Screen Snapshots and the Hallroom
Boys helped put this new studio on the map, it certainly needed actual
feature film productions to be recognized as a serious Hollywood player (and
perhaps to get to the level of success necessary for the 1924 rebranding and
relaunch). The first such feature film produced by CBC
Film Sales Corporation (named in that earlier iteration for its co-founders
Harry and Jack Cohn and Joe Brandt) was 1922’s melodrama More to Be Pitied Than Scorned, a sadly lost silent film that
starred Alice Lake (frequent
screen costar of another Vaudeville legend, Fatty Arbuckle). I obviously can’t
say much about this lost film, but it’s interesting to think about casting another
famous comic performer in a serious film seeking to launch a new side to the
emerging studio. That balance would endure into the next decades, as we’ll see
all week.
Next
Columbia context tomorrow,
Ben
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