The Man Who Made the Movies

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The Man Who Made the Movies Page 134

by Vanda Krefft


  Trotsky, Leon, 251

  Troublemakers, 262

  Truman, Harry S., 749, 754

  trusts, 23, 89, 113. See also antitrust

  Tucson Daily Citizen, 185

  Tulsa World, 229

  Tunney, Gene, 394

  Tunney, Thomas J., 487–88

  Turner, Frederick Jackson, 21

  Turner, George Kibbe, 39

  Twain, Mark, 21–22, 304, 311, 378

  Twentieth Century-Fox, 746

  death of Fox and, 753

  Fox’s attempt to get restitution, 720–21

  named with merger of Fox and Twentieth Century, 705

  warehouse explosion of 1937, 721–22

  Wurtzel fired by, 743–44

  Twentieth Century Pictures, 703–5

  Twist, Kid, 69

  Two Orphans, The, 137, 148, 169

  UFA studios, 244, 375, 395, 414, 424–25, 433, 539–40, 542

  Ulmer, Edgar G., 421

  Ultra studios, 317

  Unchastened Woman, The, 277

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin (film, 1927), 459–60

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin (play), 34

  Underworld, 426, 432

  Unfaithful Wife, The, 153

  Ungerleider Financial Corporation (UFC), 525–26

  Union Pacific Railway, 343–44

  Unique Theater (later Comedy Theater), 59–60

  United Artists, 282, 320, 333, 359, 406, 437, 663

  United Artists Theatre (L.A.), 462

  United Fruit Company, 246

  United Jewish Campaign (UJC), 402

  United Press, 299, 496

  U.S. Army, 196

  U.S. Army Air Forces, 741

  U.S. Army Signal Corps, 241

  U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, 23

  U.S. Committee on Public Information, 204, 236

  U.S. Congress, 23, 101, 237

  U.S. Court of Appeals, 87, 626, 631

  Second Circuit, 697, 724

  Third Circuit, 695–97, 714–15, 719, 723–24, 732

  U.S. District Court

  Eastern District of New York, 694, 697

  Middle District of Pennsylvania, 694–95, 719

  U.S. House of Representatives, 95, 195, 696n

  Judiciary Committee, 732

  U.S. Patent Office, 447, 493, 529, 693

  U.S. Senate, 23, 195

  Banking and Currency Committee, 680–85, 690–91, 712, 729

  Judiciary Committee, 326–27

  U.S. Supreme Court, 113n, 114–15, 603, 695, 698–701, 720

  United States v. Motion Picture Patents Co., 112–13

  United War Work Campaign, 236

  Universal City, 151–52, 170

  Universal Film Studios (formerly Independent Moving Pictures), 118, 130, 148, 170, 238, 320, 329, 346, 371, 399, 437, 445, 459, 653, 672

  Universal News, 298

  Universal theater chain, 366

  University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), 330, 364

  Untermyer, Alvin, 601, 625, 634

  Untermyer, Samuel, 95, 107, 134, 592–93, 595, 601–4, 609, 613–14, 617, 624–25, 633–34, 636–37, 639–40, 647, 675

  Upstream, 453

  Upton Sinclair Presents William Fox (Sinclair), 687–89, 693, 706–7

  Utilities Power and Light Corporation, 523, 648

  Valentino, Rudolph, 320, 322

  Valiant, The, 469

  “Vampire, The” (Kipling), 135

  Van Curler Opera House, 203

  Vanderbilt, Cornelius, 24–25

  Vanderbilt, Mrs. W. K., 234

  Vanderbilt, William Henry, 24

  Vanderbilt, William Kissam, 24

  Vanderbilt family, 226

  Variety, 73, 74, 79, 80, 110, 112, 144, 220, 227, 272, 273, 276, 277, 280, 283, 290–91, 294–95, 315, 322, 328, 348, 369, 428, 430, 480, 483, 716

  vaudeville, 32–33, 60, 69, 77, 305

  Vaudeville Managers’ Protective Association, 82

  Victim, The, 155

  Victoria Theatre (St. Louis), 291. See also William Fox Liberty Theatre

  Vidor, King, 459

  Viertel, Berthold, 472

  Viertel, Salka, 414, 472, 675

  Views and Films Index, 58, 64

  Village Blacksmith, The, 330

  Vitagraph Company, 54, 247n, 285, 388

  Vitaphone, 388–89, 391–92, 396–99, 437–39, 446, 482, 567, 592

  Vixen, The, 155

  Vogt, Hans, 395

  “Voices of Italy,” 427

  Walcott, Frederic C., 681

  Waldo, Rhinelander, 4, 119–20

  Walker, Alexander, 76–77, 102–3

  Walker, Elisha, 598, 599

  Walker, Jimmy, 380, 401, 525, 548–49, 581

  Walking Down Broadway, 702

  Wall, J. M., Machine Company, 661–62

  Walls of Jericho, The, 122

  Wall Street Journal, 362

  Walsh, George, 322

  Walsh, Raoul, 119, 138, 143, 146, 155–56, 164–65, 212, 217, 219, 241, 255, 260–61, 279, 284, 294, 322, 375, 379, 450–51, 454, 456, 468, 473, 629, 654, 660

  Walter Reade chain, 521

  Wanamaker, Rodman, 404

  War Board, 252

  War Brides, 186–87

  War Bride’s Secret, The, 186–87

  Warburg, Felix M., 231–33, 290, 402, 647

  Ward, George Cabot, 191

  Ward, Crosby & Neal, 696

  War Department, 196, 204

  Wardman Realty and Construction, 509

  Warfield, David, 488

  War Industries Board, 241

  Warnack, Henry Christeen, 219

  Warner, Albert, 396

  Warner, Charles Dudley, 21

  Warner, Harry M., 366, 396, 398, 483–84

  Warner, Irma, 36

  Warner, Jack, 36, 396, 522

  Warner, Sam, 388, 396

  Warner Bros., 3, 118, 317, 366, 388–89, 391, 393, 396–99, 408, 426, 429, 432, 437–39, 443, 445, 481–83, 485–86, 489, 493, 513, 519, 531, 559–61, 563, 566–70, 576, 592–93, 629, 653, 743, 746

  Warners’ Theatre (NYC), 408

  Warren, Fred, 175, 180–81

  War Revenue Act (1917), 241

  Washington, Booker T., 49–50

  Washington, George, 67

  Washington Post, 323, 602

  Washington Theatre (Detroit), 292

  Washington Theatre (Newark), 80

  Washington Theatre (NYC), 76

  Waters, Percy L., 92–93

  Watts, Frank O., 668

  Wayne, John, 216, 654–55, 658

  Webb, Millard, 328

  Webb, Robert D., 702

  Weber and Fields, 32

  Web of Chance, The, 295

  Weigall, Arthur, 193

  Weiner, Joseph, 723

  Wells, Dr. Carlton, 473

  Wells, H. G., 426

  Wesco Holding Corp., 463–64, 500–501, 504, 508

  West, Mae, 675

  West, Roland, 164

  West & Co., 664

  West Coast division, 191, 296–97, 363, 468, 484

  West Coast Theaters chain, 366–70, 403, 463–64, 478, 489, 500–501, 557, 566–70, 621, 629, 631, 662–63, 669, 691

  West End theater (NYC), 62

  Western Electric, 387–88, 393, 396–98, 408, 437–38, 441, 447, 483, 493–94, 521, 529, 541, 543, 661

  Westinghouse, 387, 392–93, 553, 562

  Wharton, Edith, 167

  What Price Glory, 378–80, 397–98, 425, 451, 458, 537, 629, 755

  What’s the Matter with New York (Thomas and Blanshard), 616

  What Women Never Tell (Bara), 277–78

  When a Woman Sins, 222

  When Washington Shut Down Wall Street (Silber), 124

  Whistler, James McNeill, 169

  White, John J., 242, 283

  White, Pearl, 282

  White, Stanford, 282

  White, Walter, 462

  White, Weld & Co., 705

  Whitehurst theater cha
in, 371

  White Star Features, 118

  Whitman, Charles S., 100

  Whitney, Claire, 121

  Whitney, George, 553

  “Who’s Who in America,” 299

  Why America Will Win, 237, 284, 415

  Why Europe Leaves Home (Roberts), 324

  Why I Would Not Marry, 218

  Why Leave Home?, 538

  Wickersham, George W., 95–96, 108

  widescreen technology, 522–25, 538–39, 544, 556, 599, 654–58, 661–62

  Wid’s Daily (Wid’s), 157, 168, 187, 203, 222, 237, 264, 271–73, 281, 283, 286, 290, 305

  Wiene, Robert, 313

  Wife’s Sacrifice, A, 177

  Wiggin, Albert H., 510, 524, 574, 584, 647–49, 650, 667–69

  Wilde, Oscar, 169

  Willat Studio, 122

  William Fox Liberty Theatre (St. Louis), 291

  William Fox Movietone Follies of 1929, The, 458, 538, 654

  William Morris company, 77

  Williams, J. D., 489

  Willis, Frank B., 164

  Willis, H. Parker, 510

  Wilmer & Vincent theater chain, 694, 696

  Wilson, C. H., 116

  Wilson, Woodrow, 114, 184, 199, 212n, 227, 236, 240–41, 292, 299, 393, 571

  Wings, 426, 432, 457

  Without Compromise, 323

  Wolf, Joseph, 337

  Wolf Fangs, 456

  Wolf-Ferrari, Ermanno, 142

  Woman and the Law, 217–18

  Woman’s Honor, A, 164

  Woman’s Resurrection, A, 139

  Woman There Was, A, 272

  Woodmere Club, 227, 707

  Woods, A. H., 275

  Woollcott, Alexander, 275, 357, 375

  Woolworth, F. W., 46, 49

  Words and Music, 538

  World Film Corporation, 185, 188

  World’s Work magazine, 327

  World War I, 124–25, 127, 187, 194–96, 199, 233–42, 248, 252–53, 270–71, 284, 286, 378–79, 451, 491

  World War II, 741

  World Wide Pictures, 489

  Wormwood, 154

  Wright, Alfred, 440

  Wurtzel, Ben, 660

  Wurtzel, Harry, 469

  Wurtzel, Lillian, 331

  Wurtzel, Sol, 255–57, 259–60, 262, 264, 279, 281–82, 293, 297, 322, 328, 331, 333, 341–43, 362, 375, 380, 419–21, 463, 469–72, 599–600, 632, 638–39, 651, 658–60, 671–72, 701, 720–21, 743–44, 753

  Yellow Dog Catcher, The, 302–3

  YMCA, 63

  YMHA, 231

  Young, Loretta, 522

  Young, Owen D., 393–95

  Young, Rida Johnson, 452

  Young Judaea, 231

  Zanft, John, 131n, 526–27, 579–80, 613, 651

  Zanuck, Darryl F., 703–4

  Ziegfeld, Florenz, 380

  Zola, Emile, 153

  Zukor, Adolph, 53, 118, 130, 158, 181, 188n, 233, 286–91, 296–97, 314–15, 365–66, 369–71, 374, 387, 402, 404, 485, 531, 533–35, 538–39, 543, 566–67, 645, 677, 743

  PHOTOGRAPH SECTION

  Both of Fox’s parents influenced him profoundly: his father as a negative example of leadership and his mother as a source of infinite faith and courage. No early photos of them are known to exist, but once William became successful, he refashioned their images as he thought they ought to be: Michael became “an early version of Adolphe Menjou,” while Anna—the model for many saintly, self-sacrificing Fox Film mothers—received expensive clothes, furs, and jewelry. (Author’s collection)

  Through an astute business alliance with corrupt but charismatic Tammany Hall politician “Big Tim” Sullivan, Fox emerged as a leading Manhattan movie exhibitor in the early 1910s. (Bain News Service, Library of Congress)

  Fox’s first runaway hit, A Fool There Was (1915), starred previously unknown actress Theda Bara as a “vamp” who gleefully ruins men through sex. (Courtesy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)

  The screen’s first brand-name sex symbol, Theda achieved her greatest triumph in Fox’s lavish Cleopatra (1917). To her left is Thurston Hall as Antony; to the right are Dorothy Drake as Charmian and Art Acord as Kephren. (Courtesy of Phillip Dye)

  Fox Film’s top male star during the 1910s and early 1920s, William Farnum embodied Fox’s vision of manliness as a combination of physical strength, moral courage, and social adeptness. Farnum, circa 1915–1916.

  In the “virile” Western Fighting Blood (1916).

  As Jean Valjean in Les Miserables (1917), “a soul transfigured and redeemed, purified through heroism and glorified through suffering.” (All photographs from author’s collection)

  Bent on establishing a lasting legacy, Fox allegedly spent a record $1 million on the fantasy love story A Daughter of the Gods (1916). Star Annette Kellermann survived daredevil stunts involving crocodiles, 25-foot waves, and a 103-foot dive. (Author’s collection)

  Generally unimpressed by actors, Fox believed that directors and writers were the primary architects of motion picture success. Among his early directing staff, seen here circa 1915–1916, were the elegant, statesmanlike J. Gordon Edwards (Cleopatra, Salome); “boy genius” Herbert Brenon (A Daughter of the Gods); Frank Powell (A Fool There Was); and Edgar Lewis (The Nigger and The Bondman). (Courtesy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)

  Aiming for cultural respectability, and copyright-free material, Fox made many of his early movies from classic stories. The Scarlet Letter (1917) starred frequent Fox Film villain Stuart Holmes as Arthur Dimmesdale, Mary Martin as Hester Prynne, and Kittens Reichert as Pearl. (Author’s collection)

  The first of the “Fox Kiddie Features,” Jack and the Beanstalk (1917) starred eight-foot-six Jim Tarver, four-year-old Virginia Lee Corbin (left), and five-year-old Francis Carpenter (right). (Author’s collection)

  After the United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917, Fox threw the studio’s weight behind jingoistic propaganda efforts. Pausing from her role as Cleopatra (1917), Theda Bara greeted U.S. Army Major General Hunter Liggett on the set in Los Angeles. (Author’s collection)

  Fox expected all his stars, such as ingénue June Caprice, shown here in a wartime studio publicity still, to demonstrate ardent patriotism. (Author’s collection)

  “There are 10,000 Foreign Enemy Secret Police Lurking and Scheming in the United States,” warned advertising for Fox’s first pro-war movie, The Spy (1917), which depicted Germans as pompous, posturing dolts. The movie starred Dustin Farnum (brother of William) and his future wife, Winifred Kingston. (Author’s collection)

  Fox had high hopes for the talented actress Jewel Carmen and starred her opposite William Farnum in A Tale of Two Cities and Les Miserables, but her troubled past and his stubborn nature ruined her chance at major stardom. (Author’s collection)

  Given a second chance at Fox Film, broken-down cowboy actor Tom Mix became one of the studio’s most consistently profitable stars, “the rent man” to many exhibitors. In 3 Gold Coins (1920), he appeared with his frequent costar and loyal sidekick, Tony the Wonder Horse. (Author’s collection)

  A predilection for melodrama, rooted in Fox’s early experiences of privation and struggle, would always characterize Fox Film’s release slate. In Stolen Honor (1918), Virginia Pearson played an artist who is framed by a romantic rival for the theft of a valuable painting. (Author’s collection)

  When his lack of a nationwide theater circuit forced him to scale back production costs in the postwar years, Fox came up with his “mother love” triumph, Over the Hill (1920). Made for $100,000 and relentlessly promoted, the movie earned more than $3 million. It would always remain a personal favorite for Fox. (Author’s collection)

  Head of Fox Film’s Western Avenue studio since 1917, Fox’s former private secretary Sol Wurtzel suffered torrents of abuse from his ever-watchful boss. In 1921, according to a colleague, Wurtzel had a nervous breakdown. (Courtesy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)

&nb
sp; In 1924, Fox returned to the industry’s forefront with The Iron Horse, an epic romantic drama about the building of the transcontinental railroad. Starring George O’Brien and Madge Bellamy, the movie became a critical and commercial success and established John Ford as one of Hollywood’s leading directors. (Image courtesy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences; permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox, The Iron Horse © 1924)

  Fox always credited his wife, Eva, as a key to his success. (Courtesy of Susan Fox-Rosellini)

  For Fox, golf was a passion, his only form of recreation. Seen here in 1924 at the Woodmere Club, adjacent to Fox Hall on Long Island, he had to play one-armed because of a childhood accident that crippled his left arm. (Author’s collection)

  Fox Film’s general manager in charge of sales for a decade, Winfield R. Sheehan officially became head of production in 1926. With questionable accuracy, he would claim credit for ushering in the studio’s boom years. (Author’s collection; permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox)

  What Price Glory (1926), which depicted exuberant young U.S. Marines sent out into an apocalyptic “rain of blood and steel,” revealed Fox’s true feelings about the folly of the Great War. The movie starred (from the left) Victor McLaglen, Dolores Del Rio, and Edmund Lowe; next to them are co-writer and war veteran Laurence Stallings and director Raoul Walsh. (Author’s collection; permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox, What Price Glory © 1926)

  Another of Hollywood’s great directors, Howard Hawks, got his start at Fox Film. Although his first movie there failed, his next project, the romantic comedy Fig Leaves (1926), with George O’Brien and Olive Borden, became an instant hit. (Author’s collection; permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox, Fig Leaves © 1926)

  Among all Fox Film directors, Frank Borzage probably came closest to matching Fox in sensibility. Soaringly romantic yet acutely realistic, Borzage paired Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in three incandescently beautiful movies about true love in a fallen world: 7th Heaven (1927), Street Angel (1928), and, shown here, Lucky Star (1929). (Author’s collection, permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox, Lucky Star © 1929)

  In a rare moment, publicity-averse Fox posed with Sol Wurtzel (left) and Frank Borzage on the Fox lot, circa 1926–1927. The studio was entering a golden age of artistic achievement. (Image courtesy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences; permission courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox)

 

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