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Carl Laemmle

Carl Laemmle (/ˈlɛmli/ ; born Karl Lämmle; January 17, 1867 – September 24, 1939) was a German-American film producer and the co-founder and, until 1934, owner of Universal Pictures. He produced or worked on over 400 films.

Carl Laemmle
Portrait, Exhibitors' Times, 1913
Born
Karl Lämmle

(1867-01-17)January 17, 1867
DiedSeptember 24, 1939(1939-09-24) (aged 72)
Resting placeHome of Peace Cemetery, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Years active1909–1939
SpouseRecha Stern
ChildrenRosabelle Laemmle Bergerman (1903–1965)
Carl Laemmle Jr. (1908–1979)
FamilyStanley Bergerman (son-in-law)
Carla Laemmle (niece)
Signature
Birthplace of Carl Laemmle in Laupheim

Regarded as one of the most important of the early film pioneers, Laemmle was born in what is now Germany. He immigrated to the United States in 1884 and worked in Chicago for 20 years before he began buying nickelodeons, eventually expanding into a film distribution service, the Laemmle Film Service, then into production as Independent Moving Pictures Company (IMP), later renamed Universal Film Manufacturing Company, and later still renamed Universal Pictures Company.

Early life and education edit

Karl Lämmle was born in 1867 to Julius Baruch Lämmle and Rebekka Lämmle, a Jewish couple in the Radstrasse, a street in the Jewish quarter of Laupheim, in the Kingdom of Württemberg.[1] His father was a cattle merchant, also involved in land transactions. The family struggled financially and lived in poverty: Of his eleven siblings only 3 reached adulthood.[2] He was one of the youngest children, and close to his mother, who enrolled him in a Jewish school. When he was 13, she arranged a three-year apprenticeship for him in Ichenhausen, a nearby village, where he learned accounting and sales, and worked to support his family.[3]

Career edit

After his mother died in 1883, Laemmle decided to emigrate to the US for a better life, also following his thirteen-year-older brother Joseph. For his 17th birthday, his father had given him the tickets for an Atlantic crossing on the steamboat SS Neckar plus fifty dollars. He left Bremerhaven on January 28, 1884, and arrived in New York on February 14, 1884.[2] He settled in Chicago. Here he lived for about twenty years as a bookkeeper and office manager.[4] In 1889, he became a naturalized American citizen.[3] Laemmle worked a variety of jobs, but by 1894 he was the bookkeeper of the Continental Clothing Company in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where he introduced a bolder advertising style.[3]

In 1906, at the age of 39, Laemmle quit his job. He initially wanted to open a network of cheap retail stores, but changed his mind after entering a nickelodeon.[2] He started one of the first motion picture theaters in Chicago, The White Front on Milwaukee Avenue, and quickly branched out into film exchange services.[3] He challenged Thomas Edison's monopoly on moving pictures, the Motion Picture Patents Company, under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890.[3] As part of his offensive against Edison's company, Laemmle began advertising individual "stars," such as Mary Pickford and Florence Lawrence, thus increasing their individual earning power, and thus their willingness to side with the "Independents."[3]

After moving to New York,[when?] Carl Laemmle became involved in producing movies, forming Independent Moving Pictures (IMP); the city was the site of many new movie-related businesses. On April 30, 1912, in New York, Laemmle brought together Pat Powers of Powers Motion Picture Company, Mark Dintenfass of Champion Film Company, William Swanson of Rex Motion Picture Company, David Horsley of Nestor Film Company, as well as Charles Baumann and Adam Kessel of the New York Motion Picture Company, to merge their companies with IMP as the "Universal Film Manufacturing Company", with Laemmle assuming the role of president.[5][6] They founded the Company with studios in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where at the beginning of the 20th century many early film studios in America's first motion picture industry were based.[7][8][9][10]

On March 15, 1915, Laemmle opened the world's largest motion picture production facility, Universal Studios Hollywood, on a 230-acre (0.9-km2) converted farm in the San Fernando Valley, just over the Cahuenga Pass from Hollywood.[11]

Universal maintained two East Coast offices: The first was located at 1600 Broadway, New York City. This building, initially known as the Studebaker Building, was razed around 2004 or 2005. The second location to house Universal's executive offices was at 730 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Many years later, 445 Park Avenue was the location of Universal's executive offices. In 1916, Laemmle sponsored the $3,000 three-foot-tall solid silver Universal Trophy for the winner of the annual Universal race at the Uniontown Speedway board track in southwestern Pennsylvania. Universal filmed each race from 1916 to 1922.[citation needed]

In 1936, Laemmle and his son were removed from the company he founded by a hostile takeover. He briefly resumed distribution with a partner, Michael Mindlin, specializing in foreign films as CL Imports, in the mid-1930s, but for the most part remained in secluded retirement until his death.[citation needed]

Personal life edit

In 1898, Laemmle married Recha Stern, the niece of Sam Stern, his employer at Continental Clothing Company. Recha gave birth to Rosabelle in 1903 and Julius Laemmle (Carl Laemmle Jr.) in 1908. Rosabelle Laemmle Bergerman was later married to Stanley Bergerman.

After moving to California, Laemmle purchased as a residence for his family the former home of film pioneer Thomas Ince on Benedict Canyon Drive, Beverly Hills, a house which was razed in the early 1940s. Laemmle also maintained a large apartment for himself and his two children at 465 West End Avenue, New York City, one block off Riverside Drive near the Hudson River.

Recha Stern Laemmle contracted the Spanish flu and died from pneumonia on January 13, 1919, at age 43.[12]

Asked how to pronounce his surname, he told The Literary Digest, "The name means little lamb, and is pronounced as if it were spelled 'lem-lee'."[13]

His niece, Rebekah Isabelle Laemmle, known professionally as Carla Laemmle, appeared in several films until her retirement from acting at the end of the 1930s. His great-nephew, Michael Laemmle, is a well-known resident of Darwin, California, and was featured in the 2011 documentary Darwin: No Services Ahead. His great-grandniece, Antonia Carlotta, talks about him at length in Universally Me, her web series about the history of Universal Studios.[14]

Poet Ogden Nash observed the following about Laemmle's habit of giving his son and nephews top executive positions in his studios:[15]

Uncle Carl Laemmle
Has a very large faemmle.

Family members involved in the film industry included Isadore Bernstein,[16] Joseph Stern, and Abe Stern, all brothers-in-law, and Ernst Laemmle, Edward Laemmle and Max and Kurt Laemmle. The great director William Wyler was his cousin.

Death edit

Laemmle died from cardiovascular disease on September 24, 1939, in Beverly Hills, California, at the age of 72.[5] Laemmle was entombed in the Chapel Mausoleum at Home of Peace Cemetery.

Awards and honors edit

Legacy edit

Laemmle, although having made hundreds of films in his active years as a producer (1909–1934), is remembered for The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923), The Phantom of The Opera (1925), both with Lon Chaney Sr. in the title role, and The Man Who Laughs (1928) and most of the early sound horror films, such as Dracula (1931) and Frankenstein (1931), with his son, Carl Jr.

Laemmle remained connected to his home town of Laupheim throughout his life, providing financial support to it. In the 1930s he sponsored hundreds of Jews from Laupheim and Württemberg to emigrate from Nazi Germany to the United States, paying both emigration and immigration fees,[18] thus saving them from the Holocaust. To ensure and facilitate their immigration, Laemmle contacted American authorities, members of the House of Representatives and Secretary of State Cordell Hull. He also intervened to try to secure entry for the refugees on board the SS St. Louis, who were ultimately sent back from Havana to Europe in 1939, where many were murdered in the Holocaust.[19]

 
Carl Laemmle (seated far right) and Irving Leroy Ress (sitting, far left) at Laemmle's 70th birthday celebration (1937).

Representation in other media edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sabine Maucher. "The Jewish Past of Laupheim". www.culturespace.de. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Cristina Stanca Mustea. "Carl Laemmle". Immigrant Entrepreneurship. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Stanca Mustea, Cristina. "Carl Laemmle." In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present, vol. 4, edited by Jeffrey Fear. German Historical Institute. Last modified June 19, 2012.
  4. ^ "Film History". Taylor & Francis. August 31, 1989 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b "Carl Laemmle Sr., Film Pioneer, Dies. Man Who Ran $3,600 Invested in Nickelodeon Into Millions Stricken in Hollywood. Formed First Exchange. Organized Independent Movie Companies Into Universal, With Its Vast Studio". The New York Times. Associated Press. September 24, 1939. Carl Laemmle Sr., pioneer motion-picture producer, died in his home here today at the age of 72. Mr. Laemmle had been ill for some time. Death resulted from a heart attack, which came as he lay in bed. He had suffered two other attacks earlier in the day. ...
  6. ^ Dick, Bernard F. (May 1, 1997). City of Dreams: The Making and Remaking of Universal Pictures. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813120164.
  7. ^ Rose, Liza (April 29, 2012), "100 years ago, Fort Lee was the first town to bask in movie magic", The Star-Ledger, retrieved November 11, 2012
  8. ^ Koszarski, Richard (2004), Fort Lee: The Film Town, Rome, Italy: John Libbey Publishing -CIC srl, ISBN 0-86196-653-8
  9. ^ . Fort Lee Film Commission. Archived from the original on April 25, 2011. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  10. ^ Fort Lee Film Commission (2006), Fort Lee Birthplace of the Motion Picture Industry, Arcadia Publishing, ISBN 0-7385-4501-5
  11. ^ "Making moving pictures" The National Magazine, 42: 409–417. Boston: Chapple Publishing, 1915.
  12. ^ "Mrs. Carl Laemmle Dies of Pneumonia". lantern.mediahist.org. January 25, 1919. p. 531. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  13. ^ Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.
  14. ^ Hilb, Rosemary. . The Official Laemmle Family Website. Archived from the original on May 19, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
  15. ^ . Jewish Currents. Archived from the original on April 1, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  16. ^ Flamini, Roland (1994). Thalberg : the last tycoon and the world of M-G-M (1st ed.). New York: Crown Publishers. p. 26. ISBN 0-517-58640-1. OCLC 28336345.
  17. ^ Carl-Laemmle-Exhibit. "The Inventor of Hollywood". www.carl-laemmle-presents.de. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  18. ^ Geiger, Patricia (November 4, 2012), "Laemmles Bürgschaften retteten vielen das Leben", Schwäbische Zeitung (in German), retrieved November 7, 2012
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on November 12, 2007. Retrieved December 11, 2007.
  20. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1bUQ_j_z7g
  21. ^ https://www.theater-lindenhof.de/wp content/uploads/2023/05/Programmheft_Marlene_Dietrich_in_Hollywood_web.pdf
  22. ^ https://www.theater-lindenhof.de/spielplan-2/stuecke/marlene-dietrich-in-hollywood/

Further reading edit

  • Drinkwater, John (1931). The Life and Adventures of Carl Laemmle. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Schochet, Stephen (2010). Hollywood Stories. Los Angeles: Hollywood Stories Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9638972-5-1.
  • Stanca-Mustea, Cristina (2013). Carl Laemmle - Der Mann der Hollywood erfand: Biographie (in German). Hamburg: Osburg Verlag. ISBN 978-3-9551-0005-6.
  • Bayer, Udo (2013). Carl Laemmle und die Universal. Eine transatlantische Biographie (in German). Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann. ISBN 978-3-8260-5120-3.
  • Bayer, Udo (2018). Carl Laemmle. From Laupheim to Hollywood: The biography of the founder of Universal Studios in pictures, stories and documents. CARL LAEMMLE Press Laupheim. ISBN 978-3-9818444-4-3.

External links edit

  • "Carl Laemmle". Immigrant Entrepreneurship. German Historical Institute. 2017. — Biography sponsored by the Transatlantic Program of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany
  • The Jewish Past of Laupheim
  • Carl Laemmle at IMDb
  • Carl Laemmle at Find a Grave
  • A film clip "Carl Laemmle Arrives Home, 1933/10/25 (1933)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
  • Carl Laemmle at Virtual History
  • A 9 minute video produced by Universal City Studios from 2013

carl, laemmle, this, article, about, founder, universal, pictures, born, karl, lämmle, january, 1867, september, 1939, german, american, film, producer, founder, until, 1934, owner, universal, pictures, produced, worked, over, films, portrait, exhibitors, time. This article is about the founder of Universal Pictures For his son see Carl Laemmle Jr Carl Laemmle ˈ l ɛ m l i born Karl Lammle January 17 1867 September 24 1939 was a German American film producer and the co founder and until 1934 owner of Universal Pictures He produced or worked on over 400 films Carl LaemmlePortrait Exhibitors Times 1913BornKarl Lammle 1867 01 17 January 17 1867Laupheim Kingdom of Wurttemberg now Germany DiedSeptember 24 1939 1939 09 24 aged 72 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeHome of Peace Cemetery Los Angeles California U S Years active1909 1939SpouseRecha SternChildrenRosabelle Laemmle Bergerman 1903 1965 Carl Laemmle Jr 1908 1979 FamilyStanley Bergerman son in law Carla Laemmle niece SignatureBirthplace of Carl Laemmle in LaupheimRegarded as one of the most important of the early film pioneers Laemmle was born in what is now Germany He immigrated to the United States in 1884 and worked in Chicago for 20 years before he began buying nickelodeons eventually expanding into a film distribution service the Laemmle Film Service then into production as Independent Moving Pictures Company IMP later renamed Universal Film Manufacturing Company and later still renamed Universal Pictures Company Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Awards and honors 6 Legacy 7 Representation in other media 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editKarl Lammle was born in 1867 to Julius Baruch Lammle and Rebekka Lammle a Jewish couple in the Radstrasse a street in the Jewish quarter of Laupheim in the Kingdom of Wurttemberg 1 His father was a cattle merchant also involved in land transactions The family struggled financially and lived in poverty Of his eleven siblings only 3 reached adulthood 2 He was one of the youngest children and close to his mother who enrolled him in a Jewish school When he was 13 she arranged a three year apprenticeship for him in Ichenhausen a nearby village where he learned accounting and sales and worked to support his family 3 Career editAfter his mother died in 1883 Laemmle decided to emigrate to the US for a better life also following his thirteen year older brother Joseph For his 17th birthday his father had given him the tickets for an Atlantic crossing on the steamboat SS Neckar plus fifty dollars He left Bremerhaven on January 28 1884 and arrived in New York on February 14 1884 2 He settled in Chicago Here he lived for about twenty years as a bookkeeper and office manager 4 In 1889 he became a naturalized American citizen 3 Laemmle worked a variety of jobs but by 1894 he was the bookkeeper of the Continental Clothing Company in Oshkosh Wisconsin where he introduced a bolder advertising style 3 In 1906 at the age of 39 Laemmle quit his job He initially wanted to open a network of cheap retail stores but changed his mind after entering a nickelodeon 2 He started one of the first motion picture theaters in Chicago The White Front on Milwaukee Avenue and quickly branched out into film exchange services 3 He challenged Thomas Edison s monopoly on moving pictures the Motion Picture Patents Company under the Sherman Anti Trust Act of 1890 3 As part of his offensive against Edison s company Laemmle began advertising individual stars such as Mary Pickford and Florence Lawrence thus increasing their individual earning power and thus their willingness to side with the Independents 3 After moving to New York when Carl Laemmle became involved in producing movies forming Independent Moving Pictures IMP the city was the site of many new movie related businesses On April 30 1912 in New York Laemmle brought together Pat Powers of Powers Motion Picture Company Mark Dintenfass of Champion Film Company William Swanson of Rex Motion Picture Company David Horsley of Nestor Film Company as well as Charles Baumann and Adam Kessel of the New York Motion Picture Company to merge their companies with IMP as the Universal Film Manufacturing Company with Laemmle assuming the role of president 5 6 They founded the Company with studios in Fort Lee New Jersey where at the beginning of the 20th century many early film studios in America s first motion picture industry were based 7 8 9 10 On March 15 1915 Laemmle opened the world s largest motion picture production facility Universal Studios Hollywood on a 230 acre 0 9 km2 converted farm in the San Fernando Valley just over the Cahuenga Pass from Hollywood 11 Universal maintained two East Coast offices The first was located at 1600 Broadway New York City This building initially known as the Studebaker Building was razed around 2004 or 2005 The second location to house Universal s executive offices was at 730 Fifth Avenue New York City Many years later 445 Park Avenue was the location of Universal s executive offices In 1916 Laemmle sponsored the 3 000 three foot tall solid silver Universal Trophy for the winner of the annual Universal race at the Uniontown Speedway board track in southwestern Pennsylvania Universal filmed each race from 1916 to 1922 citation needed In 1936 Laemmle and his son were removed from the company he founded by a hostile takeover He briefly resumed distribution with a partner Michael Mindlin specializing in foreign films as CL Imports in the mid 1930s but for the most part remained in secluded retirement until his death citation needed Personal life editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carl Laemmle news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1898 Laemmle married Recha Stern the niece of Sam Stern his employer at Continental Clothing Company Recha gave birth to Rosabelle in 1903 and Julius Laemmle Carl Laemmle Jr in 1908 Rosabelle Laemmle Bergerman was later married to Stanley Bergerman After moving to California Laemmle purchased as a residence for his family the former home of film pioneer Thomas Ince on Benedict Canyon Drive Beverly Hills a house which was razed in the early 1940s Laemmle also maintained a large apartment for himself and his two children at 465 West End Avenue New York City one block off Riverside Drive near the Hudson River Recha Stern Laemmle contracted the Spanish flu and died from pneumonia on January 13 1919 at age 43 12 Asked how to pronounce his surname he told The Literary Digest The name means little lamb and is pronounced as if it were spelled lem lee 13 His niece Rebekah Isabelle Laemmle known professionally as Carla Laemmle appeared in several films until her retirement from acting at the end of the 1930s His great nephew Michael Laemmle is a well known resident of Darwin California and was featured in the 2011 documentary Darwin No Services Ahead His great grandniece Antonia Carlotta talks about him at length in Universally Me her web series about the history of Universal Studios 14 Poet Ogden Nash observed the following about Laemmle s habit of giving his son and nephews top executive positions in his studios 15 Uncle Carl Laemmle Has a very large faemmle Family members involved in the film industry included Isadore Bernstein 16 Joseph Stern and Abe Stern all brothers in law and Ernst Laemmle Edward Laemmle and Max and Kurt Laemmle The great director William Wyler was his cousin Death editLaemmle died from cardiovascular disease on September 24 1939 in Beverly Hills California at the age of 72 5 Laemmle was entombed in the Chapel Mausoleum at Home of Peace Cemetery Awards and honors editOscar 1930 for All Quiet on the Western Front 17 Legacy editLaemmle although having made hundreds of films in his active years as a producer 1909 1934 is remembered for The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1923 The Phantom of The Opera 1925 both with Lon Chaney Sr in the title role and The Man Who Laughs 1928 and most of the early sound horror films such as Dracula 1931 and Frankenstein 1931 with his son Carl Jr Laemmle remained connected to his home town of Laupheim throughout his life providing financial support to it In the 1930s he sponsored hundreds of Jews from Laupheim and Wurttemberg to emigrate from Nazi Germany to the United States paying both emigration and immigration fees 18 thus saving them from the Holocaust To ensure and facilitate their immigration Laemmle contacted American authorities members of the House of Representatives and Secretary of State Cordell Hull He also intervened to try to secure entry for the refugees on board the SS St Louis who were ultimately sent back from Havana to Europe in 1939 where many were murdered in the Holocaust 19 nbsp Carl Laemmle seated far right and Irving Leroy Ress sitting far left at Laemmle s 70th birthday celebration 1937 Representation in other media editas a main character in the novel The Dream Merchants 1949 by Harold Robbins a former Universal Studios employee as a historical character in the TV series The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones 1992 as a main character in the novel Sweet Memories 2012 David Menefee German actor Berthold Biesinger plays Carl Laemmle in the theatre play Marlene in Hollywood by Hannes Stohr 20 Marlene in Hollywood premiered in May 2023 at the Theater Lindenhof in Germany deals with Marlene Dietrich and her time in Hollywood Carl Laemmle is extensively honored on stage as the inventor of Hollywood Erich Maria Remarque novel author of All quiet on the western front introduces Carl Laemmle 21 The play was supported by the Deutsche Kinemathek 22 See also editHistory of the Jews in Laupheim Laemmle TheatresReferences edit Sabine Maucher The Jewish Past of Laupheim www culturespace de Retrieved July 6 2022 a b c Cristina Stanca Mustea Carl Laemmle Immigrant Entrepreneurship Retrieved July 6 2022 a b c d e f Stanca Mustea Cristina Carl Laemmle In Immigrant Entrepreneurship German American Business Biographies 1720 to the Present vol 4 edited by Jeffrey Fear German Historical Institute Last modified June 19 2012 Film History Taylor amp Francis August 31 1989 via Google Books a b Carl Laemmle Sr Film Pioneer Dies Man Who Ran 3 600 Invested in Nickelodeon Into Millions Stricken in Hollywood Formed First Exchange Organized Independent Movie Companies Into Universal With Its Vast Studio The New York Times Associated Press September 24 1939 Carl Laemmle Sr pioneer motion picture producer died in his home here today at the age of 72 Mr Laemmle had been ill for some time Death resulted from a heart attack which came as he lay in bed He had suffered two other attacks earlier in the day Dick Bernard F May 1 1997 City of Dreams The Making and Remaking of Universal Pictures University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813120164 Rose Liza April 29 2012 100 years ago Fort Lee was the first town to bask in movie magic The Star Ledger retrieved November 11 2012 Koszarski Richard 2004 Fort Lee The Film Town Rome Italy John Libbey Publishing CIC srl ISBN 0 86196 653 8 Studios and Films Fort Lee Film Commission Archived from the original on April 25 2011 Retrieved May 30 2011 Fort Lee Film Commission 2006 Fort Lee Birthplace of the Motion Picture Industry Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 4501 5 Making moving pictures The National Magazine 42 409 417 Boston Chapple Publishing 1915 Mrs Carl Laemmle Dies of Pneumonia lantern mediahist org January 25 1919 p 531 Retrieved December 16 2022 Charles Earle Funk What s the Name Please Funk amp Wagnalls 1936 Hilb Rosemary The New Generation The Official Laemmle Family Website Archived from the original on May 19 2015 Retrieved January 15 2015 Carl Laemmle Jewish Currents Archived from the original on April 1 2014 Retrieved September 4 2012 Flamini Roland 1994 Thalberg the last tycoon and the world of M G M 1st ed New York Crown Publishers p 26 ISBN 0 517 58640 1 OCLC 28336345 Carl Laemmle Exhibit The Inventor of Hollywood www carl laemmle presents de Retrieved July 6 2022 Geiger Patricia November 4 2012 Laemmles Burgschaften retteten vielen das Leben Schwabische Zeitung in German retrieved November 7 2012 Judische Zeitung Archived from the original on November 12 2007 Retrieved December 11 2007 https www youtube com watch v I1bUQ j z7g https www theater lindenhof de wp content uploads 2023 05 Programmheft Marlene Dietrich in Hollywood web pdf https www theater lindenhof de spielplan 2 stuecke marlene dietrich in hollywood Further reading editDrinkwater John 1931 The Life and Adventures of Carl Laemmle New York G P Putnam s Sons Schochet Stephen 2010 Hollywood Stories Los Angeles Hollywood Stories Publishing ISBN 978 0 9638972 5 1 Stanca Mustea Cristina 2013 Carl Laemmle Der Mann der Hollywood erfand Biographie in German Hamburg Osburg Verlag ISBN 978 3 9551 0005 6 Bayer Udo 2013 Carl Laemmle und die Universal Eine transatlantische Biographie in German Wurzburg Konigshausen amp Neumann ISBN 978 3 8260 5120 3 Bayer Udo 2018 Carl Laemmle From Laupheim to Hollywood The biography of the founder of Universal Studios in pictures stories and documents CARL LAEMMLE Press Laupheim ISBN 978 3 9818444 4 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carl Laemmle Carl Laemmle Immigrant Entrepreneurship German Historical Institute 2017 Biography sponsored by the Transatlantic Program of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany Official Laemmle family website Universal Studios Archives amp Collections The Jewish Past of Laupheim Carl Laemmle at IMDb Carl Laemmle at Find a Grave A film clip Carl Laemmle Arrives Home 1933 10 25 1933 is available for viewing at the Internet Archive Carl Laemmle at Virtual History A 9 minute video produced by Universal City Studios from 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carl Laemmle amp oldid 1193660765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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