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Goldwyn Pictures

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 on November 19, 1916, by Samuel Goldfish (who later changed his name to Goldwyn), an executive at Lasky's Feature Play Company, and Broadway producer brothers Edgar and Archibald Selwyn, using an amalgamation of both last names to name the company.

Goldwyn Pictures Corporation
Studio's 1917 opening logo, featuring a lion
IndustryFilm studio
FoundedNovember 19, 1916; 107 years ago (1916-11-19)
FoundersSamuel Goldwyn
Edgar Selwyn
Archibald Selwyn
DefunctApril 17, 1924; 99 years ago (1924-04-17)
FateMerged with Metro Pictures Corporation and Louis B. Mayer Pictures to form Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
SuccessorsStudio:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Library:
Warner Bros.
(through Turner Entertainment Co.)
Public domain
Headquarters,
U.S.
ProductsMovies

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 The Shubert Organization was an investor in the company.[1]

History edit

Samuel 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 Selwyn's wife and play writer, and Arthur Hopkins, a Broadway producer, joined the trio as writer and director general.[1]

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 of the same name, released in September 1917 and starting Mae Marsh.[2][3] 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 so as to be able to show advanced footage to the theaters. 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.[1] 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 movie 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.[1]

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, Goldfish decreased film budgets partly by not using theater 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 favorite, to star in a Rex Beach production, Laughing Bill Hyde, filmed at the Fort Lee studio for release in September.[1] The company purchased the Triangle Studios in Culver City in 1918.[2][4] Goldfish then headed west to Culver City, California in 1918; opening operations there also caused an increase in film expenses.[1] 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.[5] Since 1912 Godsol had been making deals for the Shubert Organization in the U.S. and abroad.[6]

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 movie premiers. Instead, with the Capitol Theatre's financial problems in May 1920, the backer purchased a controlling interest in that theater. Shubert and Godsol, however, did not want the theater to rely only on Goldwyn films and operated it separately from the company.[7]

By 1920 in addition owning its Culver City studio, Goldwyn Pictures was renting two New York studios and operations in Fort Lee.[2]

After personality clashes, Samuel Goldwyn left the company in 1922. Godsol became chairman of the board and President of Goldwyn Pictures in 1922.[8] In 1923 Lee Shubert of The Shubert Organization contacted Marcus Loew about merging the company with Loew's Metro Pictures. Loew agreed to the merger. Louis B. Mayer heard about the pending merger and contacted Loew and Godsol,[9] about adding his Louis B. Mayer Productions into the post merger company, which became the blockbuster Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[10]

Feature staff edit

Filmography edit

A 1965 fire in an MGM storage facility destroyed many negatives and prints, including the best-quality copies of every Goldwyn picture produced prior to 1924; over half of MGM's feature films from before 1930 are completely lost.[citation needed] On March 25, 1986, Ted Turner and his Turner Broadcasting System company purchased the pre-May 1986 MGM films (including Goldwyn Pictures films) from Kirk Kerkorian for $600 million.

Title Status
Polly of the Circus (1917) (Extant)
Baby Mine (1917) (Extant)
Fighting Odds (1917) (Extant)
The Spreading Dawn (1917) (Fragment)
Sunshine Alley (1917) (considered lost)
Nearly Married (1917) (incomplete)
The Cinderella Man (1917) (Extant)
Thais (1917) (Extant)
Fields of Honor (1918) (considered lost)
Dodging a Million (1918) (considered lost)
Go West, Young Man (1918) (considered lost)
Our Little Wife (1918) (considered lost)
The Beloved Traitor (1918) (considered lost)
The Floor Below (1918) (Extant)
The Splendid Sinner (1918) (considered lost)
The Face in the Dark (1918) (considered lost)
The Danger Game (1918) (Extant)
Joan of Plattsburg (1918) (considered lost)
The Fair Pretender (1918) (Extant)
All Woman (1918) (considered lost)
The Venus Model (1918) (considered lost)
The Service Star (1918) (considered lost)
The Glorious Adventure (1918) (considered lost)
Back to the Woods (1918) (considered lost)
The Border Legion (1918) (considered lost)
Friend Husband (1918) (considered lost)
Money Mad (1918) (considered lost)
The Turn of the Wheel (1918) (considered lost)
Peck's Bad Girl (1918) (considered lost)
Just for Tonight (1918) (Extant)
The Kingdom of Youth (1918) (considered lost)
Hidden Fires (1918) (considered lost)
Thirty a Week (1918) (considered lost)[2]
A Perfect 36 (1918) (considered lost)
The Hell Cat (1918) (considered lost)
A Perfect Lady (1918) (Fragment)
The Racing Strain (1918) (considered lost)
Day Dreams (1919) (considered lost)
The Bondage of Barbara (1919) (considered lost)
Shadows (1919) (fragment)
The Woman on the Index (1919) (considered lost)
Sis Hopkins (1919) (considered lost)
Daughter of Mine (1919) (considered lost)
Spotlight Sadie (1919) (considered lost)
A Man and His Money (1919) (Extant)
The Pest (1919) (considered lost)
The Eternal Magdalene (1919) (considered lost)
The Stronger Vow (1919) (considered lost)
One Week of Life (1919) (considered lost)
Leave It to Susan (1919) (considered lost)
When Doctors Disagree (1919) (Extant)
One of the Finest (1919) (considered lost)
The Fear Woman (1919) (considered lost)
The Crimson Gardenia (1919) (incomplete)
The City of Comrades (1919) (considered lost)
Through the Wrong Door (1919) (considered lost)
Upstairs (1919) (considered lost)
The Peace of Roaring River (1919) (considered lost)
Heartsease (1919) (considered lost)
Lord and Lady Algy (1919) (considered lost)
The World and Its Woman (1919) (Extant)
Strictly Confidential (1919) (fragment)
Almost a Husband (1919) (considered lost)
Flame of the Desert (1919) (Extant)
Bonds of Love (1919) (considered lost)
Jubilo (1919) (Extant)
The Loves of Letty (1919) (considered lost)
Jinx (1919) (considered lost)
Toby's Bow (1919) (considered lost)
The Gay Lord Quex (1919) (considered lost)
Pinto (1920) (considered lost)
Water, Water, Everywhere (1920) (considered lost)
The Blooming Angel (1920) (considered lost)
The Paliser Case (1920) (considered lost)
Duds (1920) (considered lost)
The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come (1920) (considered lost)
The Woman and the Puppet (1920) (Extant)
The Strange Boarder (1920) (considered lost)
The Woman in Room 13 (1920) (considered lost)
Jes' Call Me Jim (1920) (Extant)
Dollars and Sense (1920) (Extant)
A Double-Dyed Deceiver (1920) (considered lost)
The Great Accident (1920) (considered lost)
Cupid the Cowpuncher (1920) (considered lost)
The Penalty (1920) (Extant)
The Slim Princess (1920) (considered lost)
Earthbound (1920) (Extant)
The Truth (1920) (considered lost)
Stop Thief (1920) (Extant)
Milestones (1920) (considered lost)
Honest Hutch (1920) (Extant)
Madame X (1920) (Extant)
Officer 666 (1920) (considered lost)
The Man Who Had Everything (1920) (Extant)
Just Out of College (1920) (considered lost)
The Great Lover (1920) (considered lost)
Guile of Women (1920) (considered lost)
What Happened to Rosa (1920) (Extant)
Help Yourself (1920) (considered lost)
Bunty Pulls the Strings (1921) (considered lost)
The Girl with the Jazz Heart (1921) (considered lost)
Hold Your Horses (1921) (considered lost)
The Highest Bidder (1921) (considered lost)
The Concert (1921) (considered lost)
Boys Will Be Boys (1921) (considered lost)
For Those We Love (1921) (considered lost)
A Tale of Two Worlds (1921) (Extant)
Roads of Destiny (1921) (considered lost)
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1921, originally released in 1920 in Germany) (Extant)
An Unwilling Hero (1921) (considered lost)
Snowblind (1921) (considered lost)
Made in Heaven (1921) (considered lost)
A Voice in the Dark (1921) (Extant)
The Old Nest (1921) (Extant)
Don't Neglect Your Wife (1921) (considered lost)
Oh Mary Be Careful (1921) (Extant)
The Ace of Hearts (1921) (Extant)
All's Fair in Love (1921) (considered lost)
Beating the Game (1921) (Fragment)
Dangerous Curve Ahead (1921) (considered lost)
Doubling for Romeo (1921) (incomplete)
The Invisible Power (1921) (considered lost)
The Grim Comedian (1921) (considered lost)
The Man from Lost River (1921) (considered lost)
Pardon My French (1921) (considered lost)
The Poverty of Riches (1921) (considered lost)
From the Ground Up (1921) (considered lost)
A Poor Relation (1921) (considered lost)
Voices of the City (1921) (considered lost)
Grand Larceny (1922) (considered lost)
Man with Two Mothers (1922) (considered lost)
Watch Your Step (1922) (considered lost)
Sherlock Holmes (1922) (Extant)
Come on Over (1922) (considered lost)
When Romance Rides (1922) (considered lost)
Head over Heels (1922) (Extant)
Yellow Men and Gold (1922) (considered lost)
His Back Against the Wall (1922) (Extant)
Mr. Barnes of New York (1922) (Extant)
The Wall Flower (1922) (considered lost)
The Strangers' Banquet (1922) (considered lost)
Dust Flower (1922) (considered lost)
Remembrance (1922) (considered lost)
The Sin Flood (1922) (considered lost)
Brothers Under the Skin (1922) (incomplete)
Hungry Hearts (1922) (Extant)
A Blind Bargain (1922) (considered lost)
Broken Chains (1922) (Extant)
The Glorious Fool (1922) (considered lost)
The Christian (1923) (Extant)
Little Old New York (1923) (Extant)
Gimme (1923) (considered lost)
Look Your Best (1923) (considered lost)
Unseeing Eyes (1923) (considered lost)
Under the Red Robe (1923) (Extant)
The Love Piker (1923) (considered lost)
Lost and Found on a South Sea Island (1923) (incomplete)
Vanity Fair (1923) (considered lost)
Souls for Sale (1923) (Extant)
Three Wise Fools (1923) (Extant)
The Spoilers (1923) (Extant)
Red Lights (1923) (considered lost)
Six Days (1923) (considered lost)
Dr. Sunshine (1923)
The Eternal Three (1923) (Extant)
The Steadfast Heart (1923) (Extant)
Slave of Desire (1923) (Extant)
The Last Moment (1923) (considered lost)
The Day of Faith (1923) (considered lost)
The Green Goddess (1923) (Extant)
In the Palace of the King (1923) (considered lost)
The Rendezvous (1923) (Extant)
Reno (1923) (Extant)
The Ragged Edge (1923) (considered lost)
Wild Oranges (1924) (Extant)
Name the Man (1924) (Extant)
Through the Dark (1924) (incomplete)
Second Youth (1924) (Extant)
Three Weeks (1924) (Extant)
Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model (1924) (Extant)
True as Steel (1924) (Extant)
The Rejected Woman (1924) (Extant)
The Recoil (1924) (Extant)
Tarnish (1924) (considered lost)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Koszarski, Richard (2004). "18. Goldwyn". Fort Lee: The Film Town. Indiana University Press. pp. 286–311. ISBN 0-86196-653-8.
  2. ^ a b c d e f . Fort Lee Film Commission. Archived from the original on October 20, 2018. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  3. ^ Fort Lee Film Commission (2006). Fort Lee: Birthplace of the Motion Picture Industry. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-4501-5.
  4. ^ . Sony Picture Museum. Sony Pictures Entertainment. p. 1. Archived from the original on February 5, 2015. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  5. ^ Lewis, Kevin; Lewis, Arnold (June–July 1988). "Include Me out: Samuel Goldwyn and Joe Godsol". Film History. 2 (2). Indiana University Press: 133–153. JSTOR 3815031.
  6. ^ Berg, Scott (September 1998). "Goldwyn – A Biography". Film History (1). Riverhead Books: 95. ISBN 1-57322-723-4.
  7. ^ Melnick, Ross (March 4, 2014). "Part One Roxy and Silent Film Exhibition". American Showman: Samuel "Roxy" Rothafel and the Birth of the Entertainment Industry, 1908–1935 (Reprint ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-231-15905-0. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  8. ^ "Godsol Heads Goldwyn Pictures". The New York Times. March 11, 1922.
  9. ^ Masek, Mark. "Hollywood Remains to Be Seen – Louis B. Mayer". Hollywood Remains to Be Seen.
  10. ^ Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. History. International Directory of Company Histories. Vol. 25. St. James Press. 1999. Retrieved December 20, 2014.

External links edit

  • American Film Institute Catalog
  • Silent Era.com
    • Goldwyn Distributing Corporation
    • Goldwyn Pictures Corporation
    • Goldwyn Producing Corporation

goldwyn, pictures, corporation, american, motion, picture, production, company, that, operated, from, 1916, 1924, when, merged, with, other, production, companies, form, major, studio, metro, goldwyn, mayer, founded, november, 1916, samuel, goldfish, later, ch. 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 on November 19 1916 by Samuel Goldfish who later changed his name to Goldwyn an executive at Lasky s Feature Play Company and Broadway producer brothers Edgar and Archibald Selwyn using an amalgamation of both last names to name the company Goldwyn Pictures CorporationStudio s 1917 opening logo featuring a lionIndustryFilm studioFoundedNovember 19 1916 107 years ago 1916 11 19 FoundersSamuel GoldwynEdgar SelwynArchibald SelwynDefunctApril 17 1924 99 years ago 1924 04 17 FateMerged with Metro Pictures Corporation and Louis B Mayer Pictures to form Metro Goldwyn MayerSuccessorsStudio Metro Goldwyn MayerLibrary Warner Bros through Turner Entertainment Co Public domainHeadquartersFort Lee New Jersey U S ProductsMoviesThe 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 The Shubert Organization was an investor in the company 1 Contents 1 History 2 Feature staff 2 1 Actors 2 2 Directors 3 Filmography 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editSamuel 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 Selwyn s wife and play writer and Arthur Hopkins a Broadway producer joined the trio as writer and director general 1 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 of the same name released in September 1917 and starting Mae Marsh 2 3 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 so as to be able to show advanced footage to the theaters 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 1 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 movie 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 1 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 Goldfish decreased film budgets partly by not using theater 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 favorite to star in a Rex Beach production Laughing Bill Hyde filmed at the Fort Lee studio for release in September 1 The company purchased the Triangle Studios in Culver City in 1918 2 4 Goldfish then headed west to Culver City California in 1918 opening operations there also caused an increase in film expenses 1 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 5 Since 1912 Godsol had been making deals for the Shubert Organization in the U S and abroad 6 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 movie premiers Instead with the Capitol Theatre s financial problems in May 1920 the backer purchased a controlling interest in that theater Shubert and Godsol however did not want the theater to rely only on Goldwyn films and operated it separately from the company 7 By 1920 in addition owning its Culver City studio Goldwyn Pictures was renting two New York studios and operations in Fort Lee 2 After personality clashes Samuel Goldwyn left the company in 1922 Godsol became chairman of the board and President of Goldwyn Pictures in 1922 8 In 1923 Lee Shubert of The Shubert Organization contacted Marcus Loew about merging the company with Loew s Metro Pictures Loew agreed to the merger Louis B Mayer heard about the pending merger and contacted Loew and Godsol 9 about adding his Louis B Mayer Productions into the post merger company which became the blockbuster Metro Goldwyn Mayer 10 Feature staff editActors edit Mae Marsh Mabel Normand Pauline Frederick Madge Kennedy Tallulah Bankhead Will Rogers E K Lincoln 2 Directors edit Raoul Walsh Ralph Ince Frank Lloyd 2 Sidney OlcottFilmography editA 1965 fire in an MGM storage facility destroyed many negatives and prints including the best quality copies of every Goldwyn picture produced prior to 1924 over half of MGM s feature films from before 1930 are completely lost citation needed On March 25 1986 Ted Turner and his Turner Broadcasting System company purchased the pre May 1986 MGM films including Goldwyn Pictures films from Kirk Kerkorian for 600 million Title StatusPolly of the Circus 1917 Extant Baby Mine 1917 Extant Fighting Odds 1917 Extant The Spreading Dawn 1917 Fragment Sunshine Alley 1917 considered lost Nearly Married 1917 incomplete The Cinderella Man 1917 Extant Thais 1917 Extant Fields of Honor 1918 considered lost Dodging a Million 1918 considered lost Go West Young Man 1918 considered lost Our Little Wife 1918 considered lost The Beloved Traitor 1918 considered lost The Floor Below 1918 Extant The Splendid Sinner 1918 considered lost The Face in the Dark 1918 considered lost The Danger Game 1918 Extant Joan of Plattsburg 1918 considered lost The Fair Pretender 1918 Extant All Woman 1918 considered lost The Venus Model 1918 considered lost The Service Star 1918 considered lost The Glorious Adventure 1918 considered lost Back to the Woods 1918 considered lost The Border Legion 1918 considered lost Friend Husband 1918 considered lost Money Mad 1918 considered lost The Turn of the Wheel 1918 considered lost Peck s Bad Girl 1918 considered lost Just for Tonight 1918 Extant The Kingdom of Youth 1918 considered lost Hidden Fires 1918 considered lost Thirty a Week 1918 considered lost 2 A Perfect 36 1918 considered lost The Hell Cat 1918 considered lost A Perfect Lady 1918 Fragment The Racing Strain 1918 considered lost Day Dreams 1919 considered lost The Bondage of Barbara 1919 considered lost Shadows 1919 fragment The Woman on the Index 1919 considered lost Sis Hopkins 1919 considered lost Daughter of Mine 1919 considered lost Spotlight Sadie 1919 considered lost A Man and His Money 1919 Extant The Pest 1919 considered lost The Eternal Magdalene 1919 considered lost The Stronger Vow 1919 considered lost One Week of Life 1919 considered lost Leave It to Susan 1919 considered lost When Doctors Disagree 1919 Extant One of the Finest 1919 considered lost The Fear Woman 1919 considered lost The Crimson Gardenia 1919 incomplete The City of Comrades 1919 considered lost Through the Wrong Door 1919 considered lost Upstairs 1919 considered lost The Peace of Roaring River 1919 considered lost Heartsease 1919 considered lost Lord and Lady Algy 1919 considered lost The World and Its Woman 1919 Extant Strictly Confidential 1919 fragment Almost a Husband 1919 considered lost Flame of the Desert 1919 Extant Bonds of Love 1919 considered lost Jubilo 1919 Extant The Loves of Letty 1919 considered lost Jinx 1919 considered lost Toby s Bow 1919 considered lost The Gay Lord Quex 1919 considered lost Pinto 1920 considered lost Water Water Everywhere 1920 considered lost The Blooming Angel 1920 considered lost The Paliser Case 1920 considered lost Duds 1920 considered lost The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come 1920 considered lost The Woman and the Puppet 1920 Extant The Strange Boarder 1920 considered lost The Woman in Room 13 1920 considered lost Jes Call Me Jim 1920 Extant Dollars and Sense 1920 Extant A Double Dyed Deceiver 1920 considered lost The Great Accident 1920 considered lost Cupid the Cowpuncher 1920 considered lost The Penalty 1920 Extant The Slim Princess 1920 considered lost Earthbound 1920 Extant The Truth 1920 considered lost Stop Thief 1920 Extant Milestones 1920 considered lost Honest Hutch 1920 Extant Madame X 1920 Extant Officer 666 1920 considered lost The Man Who Had Everything 1920 Extant Just Out of College 1920 considered lost The Great Lover 1920 considered lost Guile of Women 1920 considered lost What Happened to Rosa 1920 Extant Help Yourself 1920 considered lost Bunty Pulls the Strings 1921 considered lost The Girl with the Jazz Heart 1921 considered lost Hold Your Horses 1921 considered lost The Highest Bidder 1921 considered lost The Concert 1921 considered lost Boys Will Be Boys 1921 considered lost For Those We Love 1921 considered lost A Tale of Two Worlds 1921 Extant Roads of Destiny 1921 considered lost The Cabinet of Dr Caligari 1921 originally released in 1920 in Germany Extant An Unwilling Hero 1921 considered lost Snowblind 1921 considered lost Made in Heaven 1921 considered lost A Voice in the Dark 1921 Extant The Old Nest 1921 Extant Don t Neglect Your Wife 1921 considered lost Oh Mary Be Careful 1921 Extant The Ace of Hearts 1921 Extant All s Fair in Love 1921 considered lost Beating the Game 1921 Fragment Dangerous Curve Ahead 1921 considered lost Doubling for Romeo 1921 incomplete The Invisible Power 1921 considered lost The Grim Comedian 1921 considered lost The Man from Lost River 1921 considered lost Pardon My French 1921 considered lost The Poverty of Riches 1921 considered lost From the Ground Up 1921 considered lost A Poor Relation 1921 considered lost Voices of the City 1921 considered lost Grand Larceny 1922 considered lost Man with Two Mothers 1922 considered lost Watch Your Step 1922 considered lost Sherlock Holmes 1922 Extant Come on Over 1922 considered lost When Romance Rides 1922 considered lost Head over Heels 1922 Extant Yellow Men and Gold 1922 considered lost His Back Against the Wall 1922 Extant Mr Barnes of New York 1922 Extant The Wall Flower 1922 considered lost The Strangers Banquet 1922 considered lost Dust Flower 1922 considered lost Remembrance 1922 considered lost The Sin Flood 1922 considered lost Brothers Under the Skin 1922 incomplete Hungry Hearts 1922 Extant A Blind Bargain 1922 considered lost Broken Chains 1922 Extant The Glorious Fool 1922 considered lost The Christian 1923 Extant Little Old New York 1923 Extant Gimme 1923 considered lost Look Your Best 1923 considered lost Unseeing Eyes 1923 considered lost Under the Red Robe 1923 Extant The Love Piker 1923 considered lost Lost and Found on a South Sea Island 1923 incomplete Vanity Fair 1923 considered lost Souls for Sale 1923 Extant Three Wise Fools 1923 Extant The Spoilers 1923 Extant Red Lights 1923 considered lost Six Days 1923 considered lost Dr Sunshine 1923 The Eternal Three 1923 Extant The Steadfast Heart 1923 Extant Slave of Desire 1923 Extant The Last Moment 1923 considered lost The Day of Faith 1923 considered lost The Green Goddess 1923 Extant In the Palace of the King 1923 considered lost The Rendezvous 1923 Extant Reno 1923 Extant The Ragged Edge 1923 considered lost Wild Oranges 1924 Extant Name the Man 1924 Extant Through the Dark 1924 incomplete Second Youth 1924 Extant Three Weeks 1924 Extant Nellie the Beautiful Cloak Model 1924 Extant True as Steel 1924 Extant The Rejected Woman 1924 Extant The Recoil 1924 Extant Tarnish 1924 considered lost See also editSamuel Goldwyn Productions Samuel Goldwyn s next production company Samuel Goldwyn Studio informal name for the Pickford Fairbanks Studios lot in Hollywood The Samuel Goldwyn Company founded by Samuel Goldwyn Jr in 1979 active through 1997 Samuel Goldwyn Films founded by Samuel Goldwyn Jr References edit a b c d e f Koszarski Richard 2004 18 Goldwyn Fort Lee The Film Town Indiana University Press pp 286 311 ISBN 0 86196 653 8 a b c d e f Studios and Films Fort Lee Film Commission Archived from the original on October 20 2018 Retrieved May 30 2011 Fort Lee Film Commission 2006 Fort Lee Birthplace of the Motion Picture Industry Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 4501 5 Lot History Sony Picture Museum Sony Pictures Entertainment p 1 Archived from the original on February 5 2015 Retrieved February 5 2015 Lewis Kevin Lewis Arnold June July 1988 Include Me out Samuel Goldwyn and Joe Godsol Film History 2 2 Indiana University Press 133 153 JSTOR 3815031 Berg Scott September 1998 Goldwyn A Biography Film History 1 Riverhead Books 95 ISBN 1 57322 723 4 Melnick Ross March 4 2014 Part One Roxy and Silent Film Exhibition American Showman Samuel Roxy Rothafel and the Birth of the Entertainment Industry 1908 1935 Reprint ed Columbia University Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 231 15905 0 Retrieved February 5 2015 Godsol Heads Goldwyn Pictures The New York Times March 11 1922 Masek Mark Hollywood Remains to Be Seen Louis B Mayer Hollywood Remains to Be Seen Metro Goldwyn Mayer Inc History International Directory of Company Histories Vol 25 St James Press 1999 Retrieved December 20 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Goldwyn Pictures American Film Institute Catalog Goldwyn Pictures Corp permanent dead link Goldwyn Distributing Corp permanent dead link Silent Era com Goldwyn Distributing Corporation Goldwyn Pictures Corporation Goldwyn Producing Corporation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goldwyn Pictures amp oldid 1213255863, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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