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Bryna Productions

Bryna Productions (later renamed The Bryna Company) is an American independent film and television production company established by actor Kirk Douglas in 1949. The company also produced a handful of films through its subsidiaries, Michael Productions, Joel Productions and Douglas and Lewis Productions, and outside the United States through Brynaprod. Other subsidiaries included Eric Productions, which produced stage plays, Peter Vincent Music, a music publishing company, Bryna International, a photographic service company, and Public Relations Consultants, which supervised the publicity of its early films.[1] Douglas named the main company after his mother, Bryna Demsky (Bryna Danielovitch), while its primary subsidiaries were named after his sons: Michael Douglas, Joel Douglas, Peter Douglas and Eric Douglas.[2][3] In 1970, Bryna Productions was renamed The Bryna Company, when Douglas welcomed his children and second wife into the firm. Nevertheless, Michael, Joel and Peter, wanting to establish individual identities, went on to form their own independent film production companies.[4]

Bryna Productions
Bryna Productions logo, designed in November 1956, as it appears in the opening screen credits of Ride Out for Revenge.
Bryna Productions, Incorporated
Company typePrivately held company
Industry
FoundedSeptember 28, 1949; 74 years ago (1949-09-28) in Hollywood, California, United States
Founder
Successors
  • The Bryna Company
  • Bryna Industries
  • TBC Merger
Headquarters141 El Camino Drive, Suite 209, ,
United States
Key people
ProductsMotion pictures
Subsidiaries
  • Bryna Corporation
  • Bryna International
  • Brynaprod
  • Cameron Productions
  • Douglas and Lewis Productions
  • Eric Productions
  • Joel Productions
  • Michael Productions
  • Peter Vincent Music
  • Public Relations Consultants

The company had some major film successes, including Paths of Glory, The Vikings, Spartacus, Seven Days in May, Seconds, Grand Prix, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, The Final Countdown, and Something Wicked This Way Comes. Four of the films Bryna Productions made have been deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States National Film Preservation Board and have been selected for preservation in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry: Paths of Glory in 1992, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1993, Seconds in 2015 and Spartacus in 2017.[5] The company was also recognized by the American Cinematheque in 1989, when it held a three-day festival with the screening of eight Bryna Productions films.[6]

Twenty-one of Bryna Productions' films have won and been nominated for awards and prizes at various ceremonies and film festivals, including the Academy Awards, the Golden Globe Awards, the British Academy Film Awards, the Grammy Awards, the Saturn Awards, the Primetime Emmy Awards, the Genie Awards, the Bodil Awards, the Directors Guild of America Award, the Writers Guild of America Awards, the Laurel Awards, the David di Donatello Awards, the Bambi Award, the Belgian Film Critics Association Award, the New York Film Critics Circle Awards, the National Society of Film Critics Awards, the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, the Turkish Film Critics Association Awards, the National Board of Review Awards, the People's Choice Awards, the Kinema Junpo Awards, the Sant Jordi Awards, the César Awards, the Nastro d'Argento Award, the Jussi Awards, the Huabiao Awards, the Golden Screen Award, the CableACE Awards, the Golden Reel Awards, the International Film Music Critics Award, the Edgar Allan Poe Award, the Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award, the American Cinema Editors Award, the Fotogramas de Plata Award, the Hugo Awards; and at the Cannes Film Festival, the Berlin International Film Festival, the San Sebastián International Film Festival, the Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival and the Chicago International Film Festival.

Bryna Productions often co-produced films with other notable independent film production companies, including Burt Lancaster, Harold Hecht and James Hill's Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Films, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh's Curtleigh Productions, Rock Hudson's Gibraltar Productions, James Garner's Cherokee Productions, Stanley Kubrick and James B. Harris' Harris-Kubrick Pictures, Saul Zaentz's Fantasy Films, John Frankenheimner's John Frankenheimer Productions, Richard Quine's Quine Productions, Hal B. Wallis' Wallis-Hazen Productions, Martin Ritt's Martin Ritt Productions, Ray Stark's Seven Arts Productions, Harold Jack Bloom's Thoroughbred Productions, Harold Greenberg's Astral Film Productions, Roland W. Betts' Silver Screen Partners II and Walt Disney's Walt Disney Productions and Touchstone Pictures. It also had financing and distribution deals with major Hollywood studios like United Artists, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Paramount Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Universal-International Pictures, Rank Film Distributors, National General Pictures and Buena Vista, for motion pictures, as well as United Artists Television, NBC, CBS and HBO, for television.

History edit

Formation of Bryna Productions and early projects (1949–1954) edit

Kirk Douglas formed an independent film production company at the suggestion of his friend and I Walk Alone co-star, Burt Lancaster, who was already having success with his own film production company, Norma Productions. Lancaster and his agent, Harold Hecht, formed Norma Productions in 1947, at a time when many actors, directors and producers were forming their independent units, which quickly became the largest and most successful independent film production unit in Hollywood during the 1950s.[7][8][9] Douglas registered his new company, Bryna Productions, Incorporated, on September 28, 1949, and immediately began optioning properties and securing writers and directors, though it would take more than five years for a project to make it before the cameras.[10] Douglas' mother, Bryna Demsky, after whom the company was named, was a stockholder in the firm.[11]

The first property acquired by Bryna Productions was Ben Hecht's short story The Shadow, about a magician who seeks vengeance against his twin brother for the alienation of his blind wife. Douglas made a deal with lawyer-turned-agent-turned-producer Charles K. Feldman (who, ironically, had tried to sue Lancaster and Norma Productions in 1948) to head Bryna Productions and produce The Shadow at Republic Pictures.[12][13] Feldman hired screenwriter Charles O'Neal to write the screenplay (O'Neal retitled the film Mr. Shadow), which was to star Douglas in dual roles of the twin brothers.[12] In the role of the estranged wife, Douglas first wanted to cast Jane Greer, then Jane Wyman.[14][15] By early 1952, Bryna Productions was attempting to film The Shadow in England.[15]

In June 1950, Bryna Productions optioned Irwin Gielgud's story The Life of David Garrick, a story about the life and career of English actor David Garrick. The property was to be filmed under the title Garrick's Gayeties, for which Douglas hoped to co-star with Judy Garland in the role of Peg Woffington.[16][17] In September 1950, Bryna Productions procured Ivan Thors' screenplay Nowhere to Go, a story about a displaced person fighting for a new home in the United States.[18] Bryna Productions also owned the filming rights to Darwin Teihet's novel The Fear Makers, which Douglas hoped to direct himself.[17][19][20]

In March 1952, Douglas revealed plans for Bryna Productions to make three films a year, with him to star in only one of the three yearly films.[21] Producer William Schorr, who had previously been attached to Billy Wilder and produced the Douglas-starring film Ace in the Hole, became an executive partner at Bryna Productions.[22] Schorr was to oversee the production of films, as associate producer, while Douglas would star in the pictures; Schorr would remain instrumental to Bryna Productions for the next four years.[22][19] That year, Bryna Productions became tied to Strange Harvest, a yarn about a World War II G.I. who returns to visit Italy with his new American wife, only to discover that he has a young son from a war-time fling with an Italian women.[23] Strange Harvest was written by Sy Bartlett and Harold Conrad; Bartlett co-wrote the screenplay with Schorr, and the film was to be directed by David Miller on location in Italy.[24][19]

Douglas hoped to film most of his early productions in Europe.[25] In 1953, he and Schorr attempted to secure a two-picture deal with Italian producers Carlo Ponti and Dino De Laurentiis.[26] The plan was for Douglas to star in the Italian producers' film Ulysses, in exchange for a co-production deal to film The Shadow, which Douglas hoped to finally get underway with Anatole Litvak secured as director.[27][26][28] Ulysses came through but The Shadow was never made. In June 1953, Bryna Productions discussed a co-production deal with Sidney Sheldon to film Alice in Arms in Italy, adapted from a play in which Douglas had appeared on Broadway in 1945.[25]

By January 1954, the local for Strange Harvest had been changed from Italy to Japan, when a financing deal was secured there, and Bryna Productions wanted Marlon Brando to star in the picture.[29] Later in 1954, Bryna Productions acquired Robert Carson's story The Quality of Mercy, though its filming rights were up to challenge.[30] Bryna Productions had been given permission by the author via a verbal agreement, whereas John Wayne and his business partner Robert Fellows had received a written agreement from Carson's agent, through their film production company Batjac Productions.[30] A partnership was then formed between Batjac Productions and Bryna Productions to co-produce the film together, with Douglas starring and Ben Hecht writing the screenplay.[30][31] Batjac Productions' existing Warner Brothers Pictures financing and distribution deal would back the picture, though it was ultimately never made.[30] In April 1954, it was reported that Douglas was interested in producing and starring in a television series through Bryna Productions.[32] In September 1954, Bryna Productions showed interest in filming Robert Wright Campbell's already-written film script The Dangerous Game.[33]

Six-picture deal with United Artists (1955) edit

In early January 1955, Douglas formally activated Bryna Productions by signing a six-picture, three-year financing and distribution deal with United Artists.[34] After signing the deal, Douglas and his second wife, Anne Douglas, were invited out to celebrate with cocktails at 21 Club in New York City by United Artists executives, president Arthur B. Krim and board chairman Robert S. Benjamin.[35][34] That month, Stanley Margulies was appointed Publicity Director for Bryna Productions' new subsidiary, Public Relations Consultants, Incorporated,[36] and the company's first two motion pictures were announced: The Viking Raiders, a swashbuckler about Vikings pillaging the coast of Brittany, adapted by Edison Marshall's novel and to be directed by Richard Fleischer; and Van Gogh, a biopic of Vincent Van Gogh, to be directed by Jean Negulesco.[34][37] Douglas was to star in both.[35] A month later, however, in February 1955, it was announced that The Indian Fighter, a story about a reckless adventurer who tries to foment a war between the Indians and the western settlers after the Civil War, with a screenplay by Ben Hecht and Frank Davis and also starring Douglas, would be the inaugural picture to be filmed.[34][38] That same month, Norman A. Cook was appointed General Manager of Bryna Productions.[39]

The Van Gogh biopic property was subject to some debate as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer also owned the filming rights to a similar story, Lust for Life, based on Irving Stone's novel, with John Houseman secured as producer and Vincente Minelli inked as director.[38] American producer Robert Goldstein was also in a partnership with Italian producer Giuseppe Amato, ready to film a Van Gogh biopic in Rome from an original Harry Brown screenplay.[38] Instead of battling Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer over the property, Douglas chose to approach the company and offered to make the picture together, with his services as an actor.[40][41]

In March 1955, Bryna Productions moved into its first official headquarter office at 9235 West Third Street, Beverly Hills, California.[40][42] That same month, it was announced that the company hoped to film Jacquin Sanders' novel Freak Show, a provocative love story about a wrestler and a freak girl at a carnival.[40] The Indian Fighter secured André de Toth as director in early March 1955,[43] and was originally scheduled to begin filming in early April 1955,[44] but due to Douglas' personal publicity tour promoting Man Without a Star for Universal-International Pictures, the shooting only began on May 23, 1955.[45] The film was shot entirely on location, using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film, during five weeks in and around Bend, Oregon, without any studio retakes,[45][46] for a cost of over $1,000,000.[47] Bryna Productions also brought over Italian actress Elsa Martinelli for the femme lead and featured actors like Walter Matthau, Lon Chaney, Jr., Alan Hale, Jr., and Douglas' former wife Diana Douglas. After the filming was completed, Bryna Productions hired folk singer Terry Gilkyson to sing a couple of songs written by Irving Gordon and Franz Waxman to compose the score.[48][49] Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to Robert Wright Campbell's original screenplay The Allison Brothers for $25,000, a story written especially for the author's brother, William Campbell.[50][51]

Immediately after completing The Indian Fighter, Douglas began filming Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Lust for Life in France, Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands, following which he planned to produce and star in The Viking Raiders; the Norse film would, however, be pushed back by three years.[52][53] While in Europe, Bryna Productions optioned German author Klaus Schuitz's story The Runaway Heart, which deals with an Italian girl who falls in love with an SS Nazi officer during World War II.[54] The male lead was to be played by Douglas, while the Italian role was offered to Sophia Loren.[54]

In October 1955, after returning from Europe for the filming of Lust for Life, Douglas named three new executives for Bryna Productions: Jerry Bresler was appointed Producer and General Manager; Myer P. Beck was appointed Producer's Representative; and David E. Weshner was appointed Sales and Distribution Representative.[55][56][57] The company then announced plans to film Robert Alan Aurthur's original story Shadow of the Champ.[56] The plot revolved around a has-been boxing champion's romance with a lonely woman, and had already been adapted for television on The Philco Television Playhouse earlier that year.[56] The story's filming rights were advanced by United Artists for $100,000; the highest fee ever paid at the time for a television package-play.[56] The film was to be co-produced with Jonathan Productions, a company founded by Aurthur, David Susskind and Alfred Levy, with Douglas to play only a secondary character in the film.[56][47] Although Aurthur wrote the screenplay, Shadow of the Champ was ultimately never made, but the writer collaborated on four future projects with Bryna Productions: A Very Special Baby, Spring Reunion, Tales of the Vikings and Grand Prix.

One-picture deals with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1955–1956) edit

By December 1955, Bryna Productions had negotiated a secondary financing and distribution deal (separate from the six-picture United Artists deal) with Arthur Loew, president of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, for a single picture.[58] Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was rarely dealing with independent film production companies at that time so the one-picture deal was somewhat of an achievement in the film industry.[58][59] Even more so surprising was that Bryna Productions was negotiating a second one-picture pact with the same studio.[58] The first film for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was to be The Syndicate, set to star Douglas and Jeanne Crain and to be co-produced with Frank and Maurice King's King Brothers Productions.[58][59] The second film was to be King Kelly, based on Robert Wright Campbell's novel about an ambitious soldier who attempts to set up his own empire in the Southwest after the Civil War, with Douglas starring and Daniel Mainwaring writing the screenplay.[60] By the end of 1955, Bryna Productions' plans were to produce two films in 1956 (Shadow of the Champ for United Artists and King Kelly for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), and to be able to produce three to four pictures a year by 1957.[47][58] The Indian Fighter simultaneously premiered on December 21, 1955, at the Mayfair Theatre in New York City and at the Liberty Theatre in Portland, Oregon; it was an immediate success.[47][61]

In January 1956, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Samuel Grafton's novel A Most Contagious Game, the story of a magazine reporter who goes undercover as a gangster to research the underworld but ends up becoming a mob leader himself; the filming rights to the story had previously been owned by Victor Saville's Parklane Pictures, which produced a television movie for Studio One.[62][63][64] Bresler was to produce the film while Grafton was hired to write the screenplay.[65] Douglas immediately offered the lead role to Lancaster,[66] but plans were ultimately made for Douglas to star in A Most Contagious Game, financed by United Artists, with filming to begin in March 1956 on location in New York City.[67][68] It was also announced that, in addition to Shadow of the Champ, Aurthur would be adapting two more of his stories for Bryna Productions: A Very Special Baby and Spring Reunion.[67] A Very Special Baby was to be the second film co-produced by Bryna Productions in partnership with Jonathan Productions, and the company put up a $100,000 security on the property, which was to be filmed without major studio financing; the completed film would instead be put up for auction to the highest bidder for distribution.[69] Bryna Productions was also to finance the Broadway play version.[70] Spring Reunion, a drama story about a high school reunion, quickly took center stage as the next film to go before cameras, with a scheduled starting date of May 15, 1956,[60] when Robert Pirosh was signed as writer-director, and stars Dana Andrews and Betty Hutton were tied to the production.[68]

By late January 1956, Bryna Productions' previously planned two-pictures-in-1956 schedule had been expanded to five pictures over the next eighteen months, for a total budget of $8,000,000.[68][60] The Viking (previously announced as The Viking Raiders) was budgeted at $4,000,000 alone for United Artists, while King Kelly was to cost around $1,500,000 for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[68] The remaining $2,500,000 budget from United Artists was to be divided between three other properties already in pre-production stages: Spring Reunion, Shadow of the Champ and A Most Contagious Game.[60] Only a month later, in February 1956, Bryna Productions acquired a sixth property for development in their 1956 schedule: The Silent Gun, for a reported $25,000 (which was factually $22,000).[68] The Silent Gun, a dramatic story about a cowardly man who poses as a famous outlaw, was written by Carson A. Wiley, who was also hired by to write the screenplay.[60] The lead in The Silent Gun was immediately offered to Gary Cooper and Montgomery Clift.[71] That same month, Bryna Productions also signed Italian actress Elsa Martinelli to a four-picture, two-year contract (two pictures a year for two years).[72] In late February 1956, Barney Briskin was appointed Production Manager of Bryna Productions.[62]

Bryna Productions' plans began to delay in March 1956 when Douglas started filming Gunfight at the O.K. Corral on location in Arizona.[69] Each new film in which he accepted to star pushed back Bryna Productions' schedule. In early April 1956, Bryna Productions announced that Lewis Milestone would direct King Kelly on location in Texas,[60][73] and later that month appointed Charles Levy as Eastern Publicity Representative of the company.[60][59] That same month, Bryna Productions also optioned the filming rights of the novel Deliver Us from Evil: The Story of Vietnam's Flight to Freedom, the autobiography of Lieutenant Thomas Anthony Dooley III, a navy doctor who served behind the Communist Bamboo Curtain in Vietnam.[74][75] Douglas was hoping to play the lead and the movie was to begin filming in the late autumn of 1956.[74][76]

In late May 1956, Bryna Productions' plans changed again when another new property was acquired.[77] A third one-picture deal was set with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for the financing and distribution of a film based on Shirley Jackson's novel The Bird's Nest, which Bryna Productions purchased from theater producer Ray Stark.[77][78] Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's contracted-actress Eleanor Parker was immediately signed for the lead role in the film which was to be titled Lizzie, with plans to start filming on August 1, 1956, at Kling Studios, though it was delayed to September 10, 1956, with director-actor Hugo Haas.[77][79] Bette Davis was originally cast in the role of Aunt Morgan, but it was ultimately played by Joan Blondell.[80] Meanwhile, Spring Reunion was also pushed back to start filming on June 4, 1956, at Republic Studios, while King Kelly was scheduled to film on location in East Flat Rock, North Carolina starting July 23, 1956 with Douglas, Elsa Martinelli and Lance Fuller as co-stars.[77][81][82][83] Mala Powers was eventually announced as Martinelli's replacement in King Kelly.[84] Although Douglas was free to start filming, his next picture, Top Secret Affair, only starting to shoot on December 4, 1956, the production team was unhappy with the script of King Kelly and put off the shoot.[85] Screenwriter Edna Anhalt was brought in to work on King Kelly's script.[86]

Formation of Michael Productions and Joel Productions (1956–1957) edit

Bryna Productions announced in May 1956 that it had loaned-out Leslie Nielsen from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to star in A Most Contagious Game, replacing Douglas who had originally planned to take the lead.[87] In June 1956, Douglas and Bryna Productions began what would be a ten-year partnership with writer-producer Edward Lewis.[88] That month, Bryna Productions acquired Lewis' original story and screenplay, Mavourneen, a comedy about three girls in an Irish town who conspire to trick the town's most eligible bachelor into marrying one of them.[88] Lewis was appointed Associate Producer for both Mavourneen and Lizzie and would become a key member for the organization.[80][88]

On August 6, 1956, Douglas registered the Bryna Productions subsidiaries Michael Productions, Incorporated, and Joel Productions, Incorporated, named after his first two sons Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas.[89][90] Although the original plan was to alternate between production companies for each film for tax purposes (as Hecht and Lancaster had done with their film production companies), Michael Productions would only be used for a single film, while Joel Productions remained dormant for the next six years. In September 1956, Bryna Productions announced that the teenage drama The Young Lovers (later released as The Careless Years) had been added to its United Artists-financed schedule of productions and assigned Lewis as Producer.[91][92][93] The company initially attempted to loan-out Dennis Hopper for the male lead, but Warner Brothers Pictures' price was too high.[94]

By October 1956, The Viking had again become Douglas' top starring-producing project at Bryna Productions, with a re-written script by Noel Langley; the latter had been hired for the job in June 1956.[95] Its budget had been reduced to $3,000,000 (though it would go over-budget during filming) and it was revealed that it would be filmed authentically in Scandinavian locations during three-and-a-half months in the spring of 1957.[95] In November 1956, Bryna Productions announced interest in acquiring Stephen Longstreet's novel The Beach House, as well as Dale Wasserman and Jack Balch's teleplay Elisha and the Long Knives, as properties for Douglas to star.[96] Also in November 1956, Bryna Productions announced that its new trademark logo had been designed and would first appear in the opening screen credit of Lizzie, due out in early 1957.[97] In December 1956, The Careless Years' lead actors, Dean Stockwell and Natalie Trundy, were both simultaneously signed for the film and to five-year contracts with Bryna Productions.[98] Bryna Productions' second film, Spring Reunion, premiered at the Astoria Theatre in London, England in late December 1956.[99][93]

The Careless Years began filming on January 7, 1957, with director Arthur Hiller.[93] That month, Bryna Productions re-optioned Ben Hecht's story The Shadow, assigning screenwriter Allan Scott to re-develop it, while Sydney Boehm finished writing the screenplay for A Most Contagious Game, set to co-star Nelson (who also asked Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to let him play a role in The Viking but was turned down) and Martinelli.[93][100] The company also announced a three-picture co-production deal with Harris-Kubrick Pictures.[101][102] Writer-director Stanley Kubrick and his film producer partner James B. Harris had been developing, through their own film production company, a script for Paths of Glory, a World War I drama authored by Humphrey Cobb.[93][103] Douglas made an exceptional deal with Harris-Kubrick Pictures in which, although he was co-executive producer, he would only be paid a straight salary of $350,000 as an actor and not take in any share of the film's profits (as his deal with United Artists permitted).[104] The addition of Paths of Glory to Bryna Productions' schedule forced The Viking, and also King Kelly which had been re-scripted by Allan Scott, to be pushed back by several months.[103]

Another pre-developed deal tied to Bryna Productions was Burt Arthur's novel Ride Out for Revenge, a western about Indians and the United States Army battling it out.[105] Ride Out for Revenge had already been adapted and scripted by Norman Retchin, who was signed by Bryna Productions as producer for the film in mid-January 1957; Retchin quickly secured Rory Calhoun to play the lead, with co-stars Lloyd Bridges and Gloria Grahame.[105][104][106] Myer P. Beck was appointed Sales, Advertisement and Publicity Representative for Bryna Productions in February 1957, just in time for Lizzie's publicity campaign, which rolled out to limited theater screenings that month.[103][107] After the completion of Spring Reunion, Betty Hutton hoped to star in Three Rings for Julie, a comedy about a switchboard operator who overhears a plot for murder, as her second-contracted picture for Bryna Productions.[108] But after Spring Reunion proved unpopular, Hutton opted not to resume her film-career.

Formation of Brynaprod and Peter Vincent Music (1957–1958) edit

Paths of Glory started filming on March 18, 1957, at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany, while Ride Out for Revenge began shooting on March 28, 1957, with director Bernard Girard on location in Sonora, California.[104] By the end of March 1957, The Viking had officially been retitled The Vikings and big-name stars like Tony Curtis and his wife Janet Leigh (who wound up co-producing the film through their film production company Curtleigh Productions), Ernest Borgnine and Michael Rennie were signed.[109][110] Leigh was also signed to an additional picture deal with Bryna Productions.[111] The Vikings began shooting using Technirama cameras and Technicolor film on June 20, 1957, on location near the Finnafjorden fjords in Norway, then in Copenhagen, Denmark, followed by Brittany, France, and finally interior scenes at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany.[112][113] While in Europe, Bryna Productions looked into the possibility of filming The Shadow in Madrid, Spain,[114][112] and as so many of the company's projects were set to be done on the continent, Douglas formed a Swiss subsidiary of Bryna Productions, Brynaprod S.A. (a Swiss limited liability Société anonyme).[115] The idea of a European-based company was another influence from Hecht and Lancaster, who had formed the Liechtenstein-based Norma Productions subsidiary Joanna Productions A.G. in 1955 to produce Trapeze in France.[116]

Lewis, running Bryna Productions operations in Hollywood while Douglas was in Europe, negotiated the development of a television series based on The Vikings. In May 1957, a deal was made with Morris Helprin and Alfred W. Crown's film production company, Barbizon Productions, to co-produce a pilot film for a television series to be titled King of the Vikings for Columbia Broadcasting System.[117] Robert Alan Aurthur was contracted to write the teleplay for the pilot, in addition to additional episodes in case the series was picked up.[117] The pilot was filmed in London from August to September 1957 with Crown overseeing the production, but Columbia Broadcasting System did not pickup the series.[118][119][120] Bryna Productions then planned to make the television program through a financing and distribution deal with United Artists Television and attempted to sign Sterling Hayden for the lead role.[121][122] Lewis was later appointed head of Bryna Productions' television department in November 1957.[123]

In September 1957, Bryna Productions moved into a luxurious new building at 250 North Canon Drive in Beverly Hills, California, on the same block as Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions' office, which was located at 202 North Canon Drive.[124] The three-story building was designed by architect Herman Charles Light and was shared with producer Martin Melcher and singer-actress Doris Day's film production company Arwin Productions, public relations agency Rogers & Cowan (who would later represent Douglas and Bryna Productions), and law firm Rosenthal & Norton.[124] That same month, The Careless Years was released to theaters.[125]

In October 1957, after Paths of Glory had been privately screened for select members of the press, Bryna Productions optioned American-Canadian church minister-turned-master-safecracker Herbert Emerson Wilsons's autobiography, I Stole $16,000,000, especially for Stanley Kubrick and James B. Harris[126][127] The picture was to be the second in the co-production deal between Bryna Productions and Harris-Kubrick Pictures, which Kubrick was to write and direct, Harris to co-produce and Douglas to co-produce and star.[126] In November 1957, Gavin Lambert was signed as story editor for I Stole $16,000,000.[128] Ride Out for Revenge was released to theaters in October 1957.[127] Following the success of The Indian Fighter, Ride Out for Revenge marked the fourth film in a row (after Spring Reunion, Lizzie and The Careless Years) to lose money on its investment; nevertheless Douglas had faith in Bryna Productions' future and luckily, so did the financing and distribution companies.[129]

Paths of Glory had its world premiere on October 25, 1957, in Munich, Germany,[130] followed by its American premiere two months later, on December 20, 1957, at the Fine Arts Theater in Beverly Hills, California.[131] It was Bryna Productions biggest success yet and the film went on to win and have nominations for several awards, including the Grand Prix de l'UCC, the Cantaclaro Award for Best American Motion Picture, the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon for Best Foreign Director, and the Jussi Award for Best Foreign Director. It was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source, Adolphe Menjou was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama. In 1992, the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Paths of Glory "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

In January 1958, Douglas signed on to star and co-produce the film Last Train from Harper's Station with Hal B. Wallis' Wallis-Hazen Productions, through Wallis' existing Paramount Pictures financing and distribution deal.[132] Last Train from Harper's Station was quickly renamed Showdown at Gun Hill when the script was completed.[133] Meanwhile, script meetings were scheduled in Tijuana, Mexico with Herbert Emerson Wilsons, as he had been expelled from the United States and deported to Canada, for the development of his novel I Stole $16,000,000.[134] Stewart Granger was then announced to play the lead in the film, set to start shooting later in 1958.[135] Kubrick eventually finished a script titled God Fearing Man, but the picture was never filmed.

In January 1958, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Edward Abbey's novel The Brave Cowboy.[136] In February 1958, Douglas became attached to The Devil's Disciple, a George Bernard Shaw play which had been optioned by Harold Hecht and Burt Lancaster in August 1955, with plans to film it through their production company Hecht-Lancaster Productions.[137] The picture went through considerable delays and changes, but was originally announced to star Laurence Olivier, Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor in the leads, with Olivier directing; the picture was to be filmed at a proposed ranch-studio that Hecht-Lancaster Productions was to build in the woodlands of Santa Cruz, California.[138] Douglas came in to replace Clift as one of the leads and agreed to co-star in the film if he could also co-produce it through Bryna Productions.[139] To please Olivier, the film was instead shot in England, and therefore, Brynaprod co-produced the film.[140] Hecht-Lancaster Productions had by this time been renamed Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions, and the company also formed a British subsidiary to co-produce the film: Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Films. On February 28, 1958, Douglas registered another subsidiary, Bryna Corporation, though its use has not been established.[141]

In late March 1958, Lewis was appointed Vice-President of Bryna Productions, Margulies was appointed Vice-President of Public Relations Consultants, and the company welcomed three new executives: Seymour Poe as World-Wide Sales Representative, Joseph A. Barry as Eastern Story Editor and Allan Balter as Unit Publicist.[142][143][144][145] German-American film director Robert Siodmak, who had returned to Germany, was appointed European Representative of Bryna Productions, charged as adviser and consultant on the production, distribution and exhibition of all of the company's films in the European market.[146][147] The addition of the new personnel coincided with Bryna Productions' expansion program and the new representation of the company by talent agency Music Corporation of America.[148] Douglas additionally formed the Bryna Productions subsidiary Peter Vincent Music Corporation, a music publishing company named after his third son, Peter Vincent Douglas.[1] Douglas appointed Martin Melcher as President of Peter Vincent Music, who in turn affiliated the company with performance rights organization Broadcast Music, Inc. in the United States and BUMA in Europe.[149] The purpose of Peter Vincent Music was to publish and copyright the music (theme songs, soundtracks, scores and cues) from Bryna Productions' films and administer royalties to the songwriters and composers; this too was influenced by Hecht and Lancaster's own successful music publishing venture, Hecht-Lancaster & Buzzell Music. Peter Vincent Music's first published and copyrighted music were three songs composed by Mario Nascimbene for The Vikings, which were co-published with United Artist's music publishing imprint, Unart Music.[150][151] The songs were "March of the Vikings", "Love Has Gone to Wander" and "Commento Musicale Per I Vichinghi", which featured lyrics by Joseph Lubin and arrangements by Jerome Howard.[150][151]

Bryna Productions also announced in March, 1958 their biggest project yet: a $15,000,000 film production of Jules Verne's adventure novel Michael Strogoff.[152][153] Verne properties had become viable material in the mid-1950s, Douglas having already co-starred in Walt Disney Productions' 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Michael Todd having recently released Around the World in 80 Days, Benedict Bogeaus filming From the Earth to the Moon and Charles Brackett preparing Journey to the Center of the Earth.[154] Michael Strogoff, which takes place in Russia, was to be the subject of the first American-Soviet film co-production, setup jointly through the two nations' cultural exchange program.[155] Douglas was to star in the film, along with as many American actors as the Russians would allow, with the rest of the stars, including the female lead, and cast to be played by Russian actors.[155]

Bryna Productions was adamant about Michael Strogoff's production being fully supported by both governments and a meeting was set up for April 14, 1958 with diplomats and high-ranking country officials.[156] As Douglas was by then busy filming Showdown at Gun Hill, Lewis and Margulies traveled to New York City on behalf of Bryna Productions and met with Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, Kenneth Clark, vice-president of the Motion Picture Association of America, Turner Blair Shelton, film division chief of the United States Information Agency, Aleksandr A. Slavnov, head of the Soviet delegation, Aleksandr N. Davydov, head of Sovexportfilm, and Tamara Mamedov, cultural attaché for the Soviet Embassy in Washington D.C.[157][156] The project was met positively and the Soviet officials were given a detailed treatment of the script and a story outline to take back to the U.S.S.R., where it was presented for ratification by top film and government officials in Moscow upon their return in early May 1958. If approved by the second committee, another meeting would be set up in Moscow, likely at the end of May 1958, where the deal would be concluded.[156] Bryna Productions waited for the green-light on the project but it was continuously delayed.[146]

Showdown at Gun Hill started filming on March 31, 1958, using VistaVision cameras and Technicolor film, on location in Arizona with director John Sturges and co-starring Douglas and Anthony Quinn.[158][159] Regal Films filed an objection with Motion Pictures Association of America's Title Registration Bureau, claiming that Showdown at Gun Hill's title was too similar to their own film Showdown at Boot Hill, which was being released just as the Bryna Productions picture was being filmed.[146] This led to the retitling of the film to Last Train from Gun Hill. In April 1958, Bryna Productions co-purchased William Gibson's stage play Two For the Seesaw with Ray Stark's film production company Seven Arts Productions.[160] The picture was to be co-produced by the two companies with Douglas to play the lead.[161] In mid-April 1958, Melcher secured the releasing and distribution of Peter Vincent Music's The Vikings soundtrack through Dot Records, but less than a month later, it was announced that it would instead be released through United Artists Records.[162][163]

Two-picture deal with Universal-International Pictures (1958–1959) edit

The forthcoming release of The Vikings was to conclude Bryna Productions' six-picture agreement with United Artists; The Devil's Disciple acting as a supplementary picture, already packed under Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions' existing United Artists contract.[164] In early May 1958, Bryna Productions signed a one-picture deal with Universal-International Pictures for the financing and distribution of the adventure film Viva, Gringo!.[158] The original story and screenplay by Borden Chase revolved around an American gunslinger who gets caught up in Pancho Villa's revolution in Mexico. With the script already completed, the picture was to have a $2,500,000 budget for authentic location shooting in Mexico, using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film. The film was to be co-produced between Lewis and Universal-International Pictures vice-president Edward Muhl and co-star Douglas and Rock Hudson.[165]

Although the original Universal-International Pictures deal only called for a single film, Bryna Productions was already negotiating with the company's president, Milton Rackmil, for the financing and distribution of additional films, as it had done with Loew at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[164] By mid-May 1958, Bryna Productions had secured a second picture deal which was amended to the existing contract.[166] The second Bryna Productions film to be financed and distributed by Universal-International Pictures was to be Spartacus, a historical epic about the Thracian gladiator adapted from Howard Fast's 1951 novel.[158] Bryna Productions had hoped to make the film through United Artists, but the company had turned the project down.[144] When pitched to Universal-International Pictures executives, Spartacus was to be directed by Laurence Olivier, with whom Douglas had become acquainted during the preparation for The Devil's Disciple (co-starring Olivier), with an assemble cast of big names, including Douglas, Olivier, Charles Laughton and Peter Ustinov.[167] Because of the remarkable star-power, Bryna Productions was able to secure a $4,000,000 budget for the production of Spartacus, which was scheduled to start filming in October 1958, also using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film, immediately following the completion of The Devil's Disciple in the fall of 1958.[158] Another project which Bryna Productions was developing in 1958 was Nikolai Narokov's newly translated Russian novel The Chains of Fear, a story that takes place behind the Iron Curtain and was to star Ernest Borgnine.[168][169] In late May 1958, Bryna Productions announced that Tony Curtis had been cast for A Most Contagious Game, and that the film would be co-produced by the actor's film production company, Curtleigh Productions for Universal-International Pictures.[170] A Most Contagious Game was to be filmed in late 1958.[170]

The Vikings premiered in New York on June 12, 1958, at dual cinema houses in New York City: the Victoria Theatre and the Astor Theatre, which were side by side and took up a full block on Broadway between West 45th Street and West 46th Street.[171][172] To promote the event, Bryna Productions commissioned the largest and costliest theater marquee-billboard advertisement ever manufactured at the time; a 261-foot long (22,825 square feet), three-dimensional, electrically articulated spectacular that extended across the entire block, hanging across the façade of both theaters.[171][173] The billboard, which included 6,000 light bulbs, a 52-foot sail and eleven moving oars, alone cost $105,000 to make, which was included in United Artists' $2,000,000 advertising and publicity campaign budget allocated for the picture during the summer of 1958.[156][171] The film then premiered in Los Angeles on June 19, 1958, at the Fox-Wilshire Theater; this movie house, too, was decorated with Norse-theme articles for a cost of $4,000, followed by an after-party for over 200 guests, Hollywood celebrities and members of the press.[172][174] The film premiered in London on July 8, 1958, at the Leicester Square Theatre and was attended by Prince Philip,[171] and the movie was also screened at a handful of European film festivals, including the San Sebastián International Film Festival in Spain and the Brussels World Film Festival in Belgium.[158][175]

The Vikings became one of the most successful films of 1958;[176] it was one of the biggest money-makers of the year and was bestowed several awards.[172] It received a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Drama, the San Sebastián International Film Festival awarded it the Zulueta Prize, and the Directors Guild of America nominated it for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures. United Artists Records also released a soundtrack LP of Mario Nascimbene's original score performed by Hal Schaefer's Orchestra.[158][175]

The amount of Douglas-focused publicity surrounding The Vikings, in which the actor was given credit for practically making the film on his own, lead to Bresler's departure as Producer and General Manager of Bryna Productions after three years with the company.[172] Bresler explained that there was no enmity between him and Douglas, but that he felt more like his stooge than his partner.[172] Bresler noted that the issue lay more in the way filmmaking was written about by members of the press and perceived by the public once an actor became an executive producer and owner of an independent film production company, which in turn led to important personnel in the film projects being left uncredited.[172] Bresler noted that posters and advertisements for The Vikings read "A Kirk Douglas Production", while Bresler had in fact produced the film through Bryna Productions.[176] Bresler immediately formed his own film production company, Jerry Bresler Productions, and offered Douglas the lead in either one of his first two planned productions: Peer Gynt and The Old Man's Place.[172] United Artists president Krim additionally revealed, a year later, that Douglas had deliberately exaggerated the film's cost as a publicity stunt (as Hecht-Lancaster Productions had done two years prior to publicize Trapeze).[177] Douglas and Margulies, through their press relations firm Public Relations Consultants, had told the press that The Vikings had gone overbudget by more than a million dollars, bringing the total cost of production, publicity and releasing the film to over $6,000,000; Krim corrected the figure to a final cost of $3,400,000, based on an agreed budget of $3,250,000.[177]

In June 1958, Lewis announced that Bryna Productions had secured a financing and distribution deal with United Artists Television for the production of 39 episodes for the company's first television program, The Vikings (the title King of the Vikings had been dropped).[172] Instead of filming another pilot (which had failed to garner interest in 1957), the company instead screened The Vikings feature film to entice sponsors and explained that the television show would be shot in the same film studio in Germany and make use of the same sets, costumes and props (in which Bryna Productions had invested $300,000).[156][178]

Douglas remained in England after the London opening of The Vikings to work on The Devil's Disciple, which began filming on July 28, 1958, with director Alexander Mackendrick at Associated British Elstree Studios and on location at Dyrham Park, Hertfordshire in England.[159][172][177] Lead producer Hecht was however unhappy about Mackendrick's direction and replaced him with Guy Hamilton in August 1958.[175] In July 1958, Bryna Productions announced that it had acquired Ray Bradbury's services as a teleplay writer for a new television series titled Report from Space (or Report from Outer Space) for National Broadcasting Company.[179] The half-hour episode program was to center around science fiction stories developed by Bradbury, adapted mainly from stories published in his two novels, The Illustrated Man and The Martian Chronicles.[180][181] Bradbury was appointed Story Editor of the series and was to write teleplays for a quarter of each season's episodes, with John Fulton producing the show.[182] MCA tried to sell the show but there were no takers.[175]

In September 1958, while Douglas was still in England shooting The Devil's Disciple, Bryna Productions' vice-president Lewis announced that the company would be filming a biopic of Simón Bolívar, to be titled The Adventures of Simon Bolivar, or Simon Bolivar the Liberator, with Douglas likely to play the lead.[183] Veteran film director-producer Cecil B. DeMille objected to Bryna Productions making a picture on the subject, claiming it had "reserved" the rights to a similar story back in 1938, though DeMille had no current plans to develop the story.[183] DeMille passed away only five months later, and although Bryna Productions had hoped to film Simón Bolívar's story by the end of 1959, the project never came to fruition. Lewis also appointed George M. Cahan as producer-director and Elmo Williams (who had been second unit director on The Vikings) as director and supervising editor of The Vikings television show.[184][175][185] Cahan, in turn, hired Talbot Jennings, Robert Blees, George W. George, Lorraine Williams, Bob Mitchell, Fred Freiberger, DeWitt Bodeen, William Edmund Barrett and Sidney Morse to write the teleplays.[186]

In early November 1958, Bryna Productions announced its forthcoming production plans, which included eleven films and three television series to be made for a total budget of $30,000,000 over the next three-to-four years.[187] In addition to the previously-announced Spartacus, Viva, Gringo!, The Adventures of Simon Bolivar, Michael Strogoff, The Brave Cowboy, The Silent Gun, A Most Contagious Game and The Shadow, Bryna Productions added And the Rock Cried Out, The Indian Wars and The Sun at Midnight to its film production schedule, together budgeted at $25,000,000.[187] And the Rock Cried Out, an original science fiction novel by Ray Bradbury, had been in circulation for some time. British director Carol Reed had optioned the property in the mid-1950s and brought it over to Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions in May 1957 as his second directorial task for the company (following Trapeze).[188] Reed and Bradbury developed a screenplay together, which was ultimately acquired by Bryna Productions in 1958 with plans to film on location in Mexico.[189][190] The Sun at Midnight, an original story and screenplay developed by Lewis, was set in the far north amongst the Eskimos, while The Indian Wars was a western.[187] A Most Contagious Game was still under development with Curtis, but was pushed back as his third picture for Bryna Productions following The Vikings and Spartacus, while Verne's Michael Strogoff picture budget had been reduced from $15,000,000 to $7,500,000.[187] The remaining $5,000,000 budget was to be divided between three television series: the previously announced The Vikings and Report from Space, and the newly announced The Indian Fighter, adapted from Bryna Productions' 1955 feature film, set to star John Ireland.[187][191] In January 1959, Bryna Productions' three-year option on A Most Contagious Game expired and the filming rights were scooped up by Dick Clark.[192] Curtis would later option the property for development through his own film production company, Curtis Enterprises; that version of the film would also never be made.[193]

Spartacus began filming on January 5, 1959, using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film, in California with director Anthony Mann, while Bryna Productions' inaugural television show, Tales of the Vikings, setup production in black and white at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany with Jerome Courtland in the lead; both productions would film for fourteen months.[187][194][195] On February 16, 1959, after a full month of location shooting in Death Valley, California, followed by four days at Universal Studios, Mann quit the production due to artistic differences; Douglas quickly called Kubrick (who had just been fired as director of One-Eyed Jacks)[196] to step in as Spartacus' new director.[197][36] In February 1959, Bryna Productions reported that Spartacus had gone $1,000,000 over its planned $5,000,000 budget;[198] a figure that doubled to $2,000,000 by mid-April 1957.[199] The amount overspent had increased to $4,000,000 by mid-July,[200] and in August, Douglas and Margulies, through Public Relations Consultants, reported that the company had spent twice its intended budget, bringing the picture up to a cost of $10,000,000 and naming it the most expensive picture ever filmed in Hollywood.[201][202] The press was however skeptical of these financial claims, since Bryna Productions had already been exposed for exaggerating its production costs as a publicity stunt for The Vikings the year prior.[177][200][201] During the filming of Spartacus at Universal Studios, the production company invested in a 60-foot wide, double-tube neon sign, which was logically installed on top of a Roman temple set that overlooked the Hollywood Freeway in San Fernando Valley, in such a way that nearby drivers would have no choice but be informed of the upcoming film.[203]

Last Train from Gun Hill premiered in early July 1959 at the Capitol Theatre in New York City.[199][200] The film did fairly well at the box office and Anthony Quinn was later nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance.[204] Later that month, Margulies was named executive producer of Tales of the Vikings and traveled to Germany to oversee the production with directors Cahan, Williams, Steve Previn and Michael Braun.[204] Also in July 1959, Bryna Productions showed interest in filming Milton Berle and John Roeburt's novel Earthquake, a drama about a group of individuals who get stranded in Mexico when an earthquake hits.[205] The Devil's Disciple premiered on August 20, 1959, at dual theaters (like The Vikings) the Normandie Theatre and the Astor Theatre in New York City, by which time the film's co-production company, Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions had called it quits.[201][204] The film later earned Olivier a BAFTA nomination for Best British Actor. Tales of the Vikings did not premiere on a network but instead went straight to syndication, with broadcasts starting in early September 1959, while additional shows continued to be filmed until February 1960.[206][195]

In April 1959, Bryna Productions announced that it had acquired Vechel Howard's novel Sundown at Crazy Hose, scheduled to be filmed under the title Day of the Gun as part of a third one-picture financing and distribution deal with Universal-International Pictures.[203] The film was given the same production qualities as the planned Viva, Gringo!, also set to star Douglas and be filmed in widescreen and color.[207] By December 1959, Viva, Gringo! had been abandoned in favor of Day of the Gun, and Rock Hudson was assigned to the new picture, with Robert Aldrich tied as director, and Eugene Frenke and Lewis co-producing.[208][209]

Negotiations with Columbia Pictures and additional deals with Universal-International Pictures (1959–1961) edit

Bryna Productions had earlier in 1958 negotiated with Columbia Pictures for a financing and distribution deal of a film titled Two-Headed Spy, based on a development of an earlier project titled The Syndicate.[1] In September 1959, Douglas signed on to star and co-produce in Richard Quine's drama Strangers When We Meet, financed and to be distributed by Columbia Pictures.[208] The film co-starred Kim Novak and Ernie Kovacs and was the first movie produced through Quine's new film production company, Quine Productions (co-producing with Bryna Productions).[204] The Beach Boys, a Hawaii-based story scripted by Blake Edwards to co-start Tony Curtis, in early 1958, was announced as the second Columbia Pictures-financed Bryna Productions film, which would be co-produced by Curtis' Curtleigh Productions.[1][210][211] Strangers When We Meet began filming in October 1959, using CinemaScope cameras and Eastman Color film, in various locations of California.[208] Douglas' real-life sons Peter and Eric had small parts in the film.[212] In December 1959, Bryna Productions registered the titles War Between the Gods, War of the Gods and War of Two Gods for upcoming projects.[213]

In mid-February 1960, Bryna Productions announced that it would make the film Montezuma as part of a new Universal-International Pictures one-picture financing and distribution deal.[214][215] The plot was to be a semi-fictional story, based partly on Bernal Díaz del Castillo's memoire The True History of the Conquest of New Spain, revolving around Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés taking Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II prisoner and using the latter to conquest Mexico.[215][216] Following Spartacus, Viva, Gringo! and The Hot Eye of Heaven, Montezuma was the company's fourth film to secure a deal with Universal-International Pictures.[215] Philip Yordan was originally announced as the screenwriter for the project, though it was later revealed that he was fronting for Dalton Trumbo, who had been working on several Bryna Productions projects.[214][217]

In early March 1960, John Huston was approached to direct Trumbo's Montezuma script,[218] and the film was to be co-produced by Lewis and Frenke.[219][220] Douglas was to co-star as Cortés with Rock Hudson playing the role of Moctezuma II, following the pair's chemistry during the filming of The Hot Eye of Heaven.[220][221] Montezuma was planned to be filmed through Brynaprod,[217][218] entirely on location in Mexico during the first half of 1961, with a budget comparable to Spartacus', which foresaw the cost of fully rebuilding a replica of Moctezuma's Tenochtitlan city.[222][223] The film was already being advertised to the press as a superpic, targeted for roadshow screenings.[224]

In early April 1960, Linn Unkefer was appointed Publicity Director of Public Relations Consultants by Margulies, set to begin the promotion of the forthcoming film Day of the Gun, while Margulies was tied-up promoting Spartacus.[222] Day of the Gun started three months of filming, using Eastman Color film, on location in Mexico on May 11, 1960.[225][226] As the film was being produced outside the United States, Bryna Productions produced the movie through its Swiss subsidiary, Brynaprod.[222] By May 1960, the film's title had been changed to The Hot Eye of Heaven.[227]

Strangers When We Meet premiered on June 29, 1960, at dual theater houses: the Criterion Theatre in New York City and the Trans-Lux Theatre in Washington D.C.[222][228] At screenings, the movie was preceded by a half-hour promotional film of the actual building of the house featured prominently in the picture.[222]

Spartacus had its world premiere on October 6, 1960, at the DeMille Theatre in New York City, using a special "roadshow print"; Super Technirama 70 film and cameras projected on spherical (curved) screens with a magnetic six-track stereophonic soundtrack.[229][230][231] The film premiere was advertised by a 90-foot high, 88-foot wide billboard-marquee erected above the DeMille Theatre, which utilized over 10,000 light bulbs.[232] By this time, Public Relations Consultants were reporting the film as having cost $12,000,000.[229][233] The roadshow print then had local premiere screenings in Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, with an additional fifteen premieres in foreign countries.[229] Subsequent screenings, once the film opened to general public theaters, would be shown on 35 mm film prints with a monaural soundtrack.

Spartacus was one of the biggest box office success of 1960, 1961 and 1962 and went on to win several accolades. The film won four Academy Awards and was nominated for an additional two: Peter Ustinov won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Russell Metty won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Color, Alexander Golitzen, Eric Orbom, Russell A. Gausman and Julia Heron shared an Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color, Arlington Valles and Bill Thomas shared an Academy Award for Best Costume Design, Robert Lawrence was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Film Editing and Alex North was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture. The film won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for an addition five: the film itself won a Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama, Kubrick was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Director, Olivier was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama, Ustinov and Woody Strode were each nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, and Alex North was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score. Kubrick was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source, Douglas was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic Performance and Ustinov was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance. The Motion Picture Sound Editors awarded the film a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing - Feature Film, while the Writers Guild of America nominated Dalton Trumbo for an Award for Best Written American Drama. In 2017, the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Spartacus "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

Although Douglas hinted in interviews that he had no desire to produce a television series based on Spartacus, a pilot episode titled "The Wooden Sword" was scripted by Cyril Hume, dated April 1959.[1][234] In November 1960, Bryna Production announced it would next be filming Edward Abbey's novel The Brave Cowboy in mid-1961, under the title The Last Hero, for a modest budget of under $1,000,000.[235] The picture was to star Douglas and be produced and directed by Lewis;[236] at the time, no financing or distribution deal had been set but Bryna Productions hoped to secure a deal with Universal-International Pictures.[235]

Six-picture deal with Universal-International Pictures (1961–1963) edit

In January 1961, after six years as Publicity Director of Bryna Productions and Vice-President of Public Relations Consultants, Margulies left the company to join Curtleigh Productions as its new vice-president.[237] Later that month, it was reported that Douglas and Lewis were in negotiations with 20th Century-Fox Film,[238] but the pair instead secured a six-picture financing and distribution deal between Universal-International Pictures and the newly activated Bryna Productions subsidiary Joel Productions, which had been registered in August 1956 and was named after Douglas' second son Joel Douglas.[239][240] The six-picture deal retroactively included Montezuma and The Last Hero, which had both been discussed with the major studio in 1960.[239][241]

In February 1961, Bryna Productions announced that it would be filming Montezuma in Hollywood instead of Mexico.[242] While early announcements had given talk to opposition from the Mexican government and competition from Mexican film producers,[243] the reason for switching to an American-made film was motivated by President John F. Kennedy's speech to buy American to combat the country's gold deficit.[242] Director John Huston was then re-writing the screenplay and the company was attempting to secure Marlon Brando for the role of Moctezuma II, with a budget of $10,000,000.[216][239][244] The company also announced that month that it had acquired Philip MacDonald's mystery novel The List of Adrian Messenger, planned for an early 1962 shooting with Alec Coppel writing the screenplay.[144][244] Lewis would produce the film as part of Universal-International Pictures' six-picture financing and distribution deal.[244]

The Last Hero began filming with director David Miller on May 1, 1961, using Panavision cameras with black and white film, on location at Paradise Hills, New Mexico, followed by additional photography in the Sandia Mountains, east of Albuquerque.[144][241][245][246] Douglas' eldest, sixteen year old Michael, who aspired to be an actor, spent the summer working on the film doing various jobs to learn the business.[247] The Hot Eye of Heaven was again retitled, this time to The Last Sunset, and premiered on June 8, 1961, at dual theaters in New York City: the Palace Theatre and the Trans-Lux 85th Street Theatre.[144][248][249] Although it received mixed reviews, the film did well at the box office and Douglas was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance. After the completion of The Last Hero, which was retitled Lonely Are the Brave, Miller directed a new trailer for Spartacus, the purpose of which was to promote a relaunch of the film, a year after its inaugural release, to smaller film houses.[250]

In mid-August 1961, Lewis traveled to Mexico for two weeks of location scouting for Montezuma, which had been retitled Savages.[251] Upon his return, Brynaprod announced that Savages would be filmed entirely in Mexico, on location in Cuernavaca and at Churubusco Studios, starting October 1961.[252][253] Mexican producer Olallo Rubio was to be tied to the production and help in securing the crew necessary on the forthcoming multi-million dollar epic picture.[252] Rubio revealed that although the Mexican film production staff was eager to give Douglas and Lewis the red carpet treatment and push for the making of the film, the Mexican Film Bureau still needed to approve of the script.[250]

In January 1962, Charles Schnee was recruited to rewrite The List of Adrian Messenger.[254][255] A month later, in early February 1962, it was announced that Joel Productions had purchased the stage and filming rights to Ken Kesey's novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, less than a week after it had been published.[256] The property was one of Douglas' most treasured acquisition and, on par with The Shadow, would be the project which he attempted to bring to the screen for the longest period of time. Douglas immediately planned to star in both the stage and screen versions of the novel and first hired William Peter Blatty, then Dale Wasserman, to adapt the stage play and screenplay.[256] George Roy Hill was also to direct both the stage play and the filmed version, with Joel Productions planning to enter the legitimate theater by producing the stage version prior to the motion picture.[257][258] Also in February 1962, Bryna Productions and Rod Serling's film production company, Cayuga Productions, began looking into co-producing a film together.[259]

The addition of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest to the company's schedule brought the total number of active productions to six, which were planned to be filmed between 1962 and 1963.[255] The company hoped to make The List of Adrian Messenger, set to start in the spring of 1962 through Joel Productions, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, as a play in late 1962, followed by the film in early 1963, also through Joel Productions, Montezuma, scheduled to be filmed in late 1963 through Brynaprod (indicating it would likely be filmed outside the United States, and in Mexico, once again), and two additional films to be produced through Joel Productions without Douglas starring, for release in 1962 and 1963.[255][260]

Lonely Are the Brave premiered at the Majestic Theatre in Huston, Texas on May 24, 1962.[261] The film was a success and the Motion Picture Sound Editors awarded it a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing - Feature Film. Douglas was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor and a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance. In early August 1962, Brynaprod announced that Nick Adams had been cast as Douglas' co-star in Montezuma.[262] The List of Adrian Messenger began shooting with director John Huston at Elstree Studios in England, in early September 1962, followed by select location filming in Europe.[263] It was also announced in September 1962 that Douglas, Lewis, writer Rod Serling and director John Frankenheimer had formed a new partnership, under Joel Productions' flagship, and together purchased the filming rights to Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II's novel Seven Days in May, days before it was published.[264] Seven Days in May, to be co-produced through Joel Productions, Cayuga Productions and the newly-formed John Frankenheimer Productions, marked the first of eight pictures directed by Frankenheimer and produced by Lewis. On December 24, 1962, Peter Vincent Music was dissolved and merged into Bryna Productions.[265] In February 1963, Joel Productions announced that Douglas, Lancaster and Spencer Tracy would co-star in Seven Days in May.[266] A month later, however, the company revealed that Fredric March had replaced Tracy, who exited the project after arguments over receiving sole top-billing.[267]

Four-picture and one-play deal with Seven Arts Productions and formation of Eric Productions (1963) edit

In mid-April 1963, it was announced that Joel Productions had secured a four motion picture and one theatrical play financing deal with Seven Arts Productions, the latter of which would also be responsible for securing the distribution of the films.[268] While Seven Arts Productions had originally started as an independent film production company in the 1950s, it had grown considerably and was then a non-distributing financing unit, funding outside pictures. The pact started with Seven Days in May, which was to be co-produced by Joel Productions and Frankenheimer's new film production company, John Frankenheimer Productions, and be distributed by Paramount Pictures.[269] The two companies would next stage the theatrical production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in late 1963, followed by the film version, planned to be directed by Sidney Lumet in early 1964.[269] While the remaining two film property options in the agreement were not selected at the time of the announcement, one was later revealed to be Seconds, to be filmed in mid-1964.[269][270]

In early May 1963, Brynaprod announced that Montezuma would begin filming on location in Mexico, with a budget of $11,000,000, in January 1964.[271] Set to co-star in the film were Douglas as Hernán Cortés, Yul Brynner (who was to co-produce the picture) as Moctezuma II and Sophia Loren as La Malinche; the role of Cuauhtémoc was to be given to a noted Mexican actor.[271] The film was to be the most expensive motion picture ever filmed in Mexico and its production had been approved by the Mexican government.[271]

Seven Days in May began shooting at Paramount Studios on May 15, 1963, followed by several key locations in Washington D.C., San Diego, California, Arizona and Virginia.[269][272] The List of Adrian Messenger premiered on May 29, 1963, at dual theaters in New York City: the Warner Theatre and the Trans-Lux 52nd Street Theatre, followed by a Memorial Day weekend nationwide opening.[269] The film was highly publicized and did well at the box office; it was also nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture.[269]

In July 1963, Joel Productions announced that it had acquired David Ely's novel Seconds for $175,000, in cooperation with John Frankenheimer Productions.[273][270][274] The production team immediately hired Lewis John Carlino to write the screenplay, with Douglas set to play the lead, and planned for a March 1964 shooting.[270] In mid-October 1963, it was reported that Lewis and Frankenheimer would team up for a one-off picture deal for The Mirisch Corporation.[275] The Confessor was to star Anthony Perkins (later replaced by Tony Curtis) and Henry Fonda, from a screenplay by Carlino based on Jackson Donahue's novel of the same name.[275] It was to be Lewis' first project outside of the Bryna Productions umbrella since 1956; the project would however never make it to film.[275]

Although the stage version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was originally to be produced directly through Joel Productions, Douglas and Lewis formed a new Bryna Productions subsidiary, Eric Productions, Incorporated, named after Douglas' fourth and youngest son, Eric Douglas.[276][277] The play was co-produced by Seven Arts Productions, which put up the $175,000 bankroll, and Broadway theatrical producer David Merrick, and was directed by Alex Segal.[277][278][279] One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest opened off-Broadway at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut on October 24, 1963, running for three performances until October 26, 1963.[280] It then opened at the Shubert Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts on October 28, 1963, running for thirteen performances until November 9, 1963.[281] The troupe was originally planning to perform for a week at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, but the engagement was cancelled.[282] The play finally opened on Broadway at the Cort Theatre on November 13, 1963, where it ran for 82 performances until January 25, 1964.[276] Douglas had anticipated the play to do well and rented a luxurious apartment in Manhattan for his family during its run, but the reviewers were divided; Douglas universally received favorable praise for his performance, but the play itself was generally disliked, which in turn soured the major studios from wanting to invest in a film version.[275][283] The remaining three pictures as part of the Seven Arts Productions deal would never be made.

Three-picture deal with Paramount Pictures and formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions (1963–1965) edit

In December 1963, Douglas' company was restructured, which resulted with the formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions.[284][285] Lewis was welcomed as a full partner in the corporation as part of a seven-year agreement with Douglas.[286] The new film production unit was filed as a subsidiary of the newly established umbrella corporation Kirk Douglas Enterprises, which oversaw the former assets of Bryna Productions, Brynaprod, Michael Productions, Joel Productions, Eric Productions, Peter Vincent Music and Public Relations Consultants.[287] Milton Shapiro, formerly an executive for Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Secretary of Bryna Productions, was appointed Treasurer of Kirk Douglas Enterprises.[288]

The new company announced a $15,000,000 1964–1965 program for the production of motion pictures, stage plays, television series and other commercial interests, all to be made directly through Douglas and Lewis Productions.[286] The films announced on the production schedule included Seconds, to begin filming in June 1964 with director-co-producer Frankenheimer and starring Douglas, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, to start filming in late 1964 with Douglas in the lead, and Montezuma, which would cost between $10–12,000,000 and would be filmed in 1965.[284][287][289] Ken Kesey was additionally commissioned to write an original story for screen adaptation.[287] Douglas and Lewis Productions also planned to prolong the stage production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest with engagements on the West Coast and in England, but with another actor replacing Douglas in the lead.[287]

Following exhibitor screenings during the first week of December 1963, Seven Days in May premiered on February 12, 1964.[270][275] The film had a special cameo appearance by Douglas and Lewis Productions secretary Maggie Smith, whose picture appears on Frederic March's desk as the president's wife.[290] Seven Days in May was the company's biggest success since Spartacus four years prior, and the picture went on to win several accolades. It was nominated for two Academy Awards: one for Edmond O'Brien for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, another for Cary Odell and Edward G. Boyle for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black and White. Edmond O'Brien won a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, while Frederic March was nominated for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama, Frankenheimer was nominated for Best Director and Jerry Goldsmith was nominated for Best Original Score. The Writers Guild of America nominated Serling for Best Written American Drama, while the Golden Laurel Awards nominated Lancaster for Top Male Dramatic Performance and the film itself for Top Drama. Frankenheimer received a Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award for Best Picture of the Month and a Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film, and March won a David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor.

In late February 1964, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that a three-picture financing and distribution deal had been signed with Paramount Pictures. Douglas was to star in two of the three properties, the first of which was to be Seconds, set to go into pre-production in March 1964, once Douglas returned from a European trip promoting Seven Days in May.[291][292] While the two other properties as part of the Paramount Pictures deal were not immediately set, Montezuma was quickly added as the sophomore project, while the third picture was to be determined at a later time.[293][294] Plans to film Seconds were first delayed when Douglas accepted to appear in In Harm's Way for director-producer Otto Preminger, and again when he began filming The Heroes of Telemark for director Anthony Mann on location in Rjukan, Norway.[295][296] Meanwhile, Lewis continued to develop film properties with Frankenheimer.

In November 1964, after months of development, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it would be co-producing Grand Prix with John Frankenheimer Productions.[297] Grand Prix, a drama about the turbulent lives of racecar drivers, was to be directed by Frankenheimer, using the new Cinerama single-lens process, and based on an original screenplay by Carlino.[297] Due to further outside commitments, Douglas' participation with Douglas and Lewis Productions was reduced considerably. He spent most of 1965 filming in Europe, first in France for producer Paul Graetz's Transcontinental Films production Is Paris Burning?, then in Italy and Israel for writer-director-producer Melville Shavelson's Cast a Giant Shadow, which was co-produced through Shavelson's Llenroc Productions, John Wayne's Batjac Productions and the Mirisch brothers' The Mirisch Corporation.

One-picture deals with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Warner Brothers Pictures (1965–1966) edit

By February 1965, Rock Hudson had been signed for the lead in Seconds as a co-production between Douglas and Lewis Productions, John Frankenheimer Productions and Hudson's Gibraltar Productions,[298][299] while Grand Prix was to star Douglas, Lancaster and Shirley MacLaine as a co-production between Douglas and Lewis Productions, John Frankenheimer Productions and Lancaster's Norlan Productions.[300] In March 1965, Lewis and Frankenheimer began the negotiation for a one-picture financing and distribution deal for Grand Prix with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[301] It would take until September 1965 for the contracts to be signed.[302]

It was also announced in March 1965 that Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions had together purchased the filming rights to Robert Daley's photo-documentary book The Cruel Sport.[303] The property was planned to be made into a television pictures series to parallel Grand Prix; both were to be filmed at the same time, in the same manner as The Vikings and Tales of the Vikings had been produced.[303] The television series, however, became questionable when John Sturges' Alpha Productions and Steve McQueen's Solar Productions threatened a lawsuit, claiming they had already purchased the rights to the novel and planned to make their own picture about auto racing.[303] In May 1965, the production team signed an exclusive two-year contract with all of the official European Grand Prix racing circuits and European Endurance racing circuits.[304] The deal gave Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions the exclusive filming rights of the races and the use of the tracks during the off-season.[304]

Seconds began filming on June 14, 1965, at Paramount Studios, followed by location shooting in Malibu and the Pacific Coast Highway in California and in New York City and Scarsdale in New York.[305][306] By September 1965, when the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract for Grand Prix was finally concluded, Robert Alan Aurthur had replaced Carlino as screenwriter and Hudson was approached to play one of the leads in the $9,000,000-budgeted film.[302][307] Douglas had pulled out from co-starring in Grand Prix in favor of appearing in The Way West for Harold Hecht, a western project which Hecht-Lancaster Productions had been developing since late 1953, and The War Wagon for John Wayne's Batjac Productions.[308]

In October 1965, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it had secured a one-picture financing and distribution deal with Warner Brothers Pictures for The Hoods.[309] The Hoods (later released as The Brotherhood), was an original screenplay by Carlino about the mafia and was to star Douglas.[310] Lewis was to produce the film while Martin Ritt would direct and co-produce through his film production company, Martin Ritt Productions.[310] In November 1965, Albert Maltz's original screenplay Bar Silver, loosely based on Robert Lewis Stevenson's Treasure Island, was completed and delivered to Bryna Productions.[311][1] Bar Silver would go through several rewrites by Douglas, Sid Fleischman and Richard Freed, and titles, including The Rascals and Scalawag, before it was filmed. Another property acquired around this time was Yukio Mishima's The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea, with Carlino assigned to write the screenplay.[1] Ten years later, Carlino would direct the film, with no ties to Bryna Productions.

Seconds premiered on May 16, 1966, at the Cannes International Film Festival, where it competed as the United States' film entry and was nominated for a Palme D'Or.[312] The film later opened to American theaters in September 1966 and was well received by the press and public. Hudson was nominated for a Bambi Award for Best Actor - International while James Wong Howe was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black and White. In 2015, the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Seconds "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

In February 1966, James Garner was signed as the American lead in Grand Prix, through a deal where his independent film production company, Cherokee Productions, would co-produce the film.[313] The rest of the cast boasted international stars, including Toshiro Mifune, Yves Montand, Eva Marie Saint and Brian Bedford.[314] In April 1966, Douglas and Lewis Productions acquired James William Drought's novel The Gypsy Moths and hired David Heilweil to write the screenplay, planning for Douglas to star in the picture.[1][315] Grand Prix began filming on May 22, 1966, using Cinerama single-lens process cameras and Metrocolor film, entirely on location in Europe.[314] The authentic locations included the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo, the Italian Grand Prix in Monza, the Belgian Grand Prix in Spa, the Dutch Grand Prix in Zandvoort, the British Grand Prix in Kent, the French Grand Prix in Reims, the 24 Hours of Le Mans in Le Mans, France, the Targa Florio in Sicily and the Nürburgring 24 Hours in Nürburgring, Germany.[314][316][317] Meanwhile, in the United States, Douglas arranged a co-production deal between Joel Productions and Malcolm Stuart's film production company, Coldwater Productions, to film Scalawag on location in Texas during the autumn of 1966 after wrapping up The Way West.[318][319] Stuart also planned to move Coldwater Productions' offices to Paramount Studios' lot in order to facilitate work on the picture and be near Douglas and Lewis Productions.[319]

Departure of Edward Lewis and continuation of Bryna Productions (1966–1970) edit

Once the shooting on Grand Prix was completed, Douglas and Lewis cancelled their seven-year pact and dissolved Douglas and Lewis Productions.[320][321] The film would still be released with the pair's former company credited and, as planned, Joel Productions filed the copyrights for the picture. Douglas continued to produce through Bryna Productions and Joel Productions while Lewis formed his own independent film production company, Edward Lewis Productions. Both teams retained offices in Paramount Studios' lot.[322] In mid-December 1966, Douglas restructured the company and announced Lewis' successor; he appointed Eleanor Wolquitt as Administrative Head and Story Editor of Bryna Productions.[323] Wolquitt, who had previously worked for Four Star International, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and 20th Century-Fox Film, was charged with finding and acquiring new story properties for development and assumed her new position on January 15, 1967.[324][322]

Grand Prix had its gala world premiere simultaneously in New York City and Tokyo, Japan on December 21, 1966.[307] The New York premiere was held at the Warner Cinerama Theatre, while the West Coast premiere was held at the Pacific Cinerama Dome Theatre in Los Angeles the next day, on December 22, 1966.[313] The film was presented in a special "roadshow print", projected using 70mm film on curved Cinerama screens with a six-track stereophonic soundtrack.[313] The film then opened to other Cinerama theaters in the world during late 1966 and early 1967.[307] Grand Prix was a huge success and won three Academy Awards: Franklin Milton won one for Best Sound, Gordon Daniel won one for Best Effects, Sound Effects, and Fredric Steinkamp, Henry Berman, Stu Linder and Frank Santillo shared one for Best Film Editing. Frankenheimer was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures, Steinkamp, Berman, Linder and Santillo were nominated for an American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film, and Antonio Sabato and Jessica Walter were each nominated for Golden Globe Awards for Most Promising Newcomer.

In January 1967, Douglas and Lewis each announced their separate plans. Edward Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions together signed a four-picture financing and distribution deal with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, for the production of several films which had been developed earlier, during the Douglas and Lewis Productions era.[325] Lewis and Frankenheimer went on to co-produce five films together, including The Fixer, The Extraordinary Seaman and The Gypsy Moths, as part of their Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer pact, followed by I Walk the Line and The Horsemen, as part of a subsequent pact with Columbia Pictures.[325][326]

Douglas held a press conference at his Beverly Hills home announcing that Bryna Productions' immediate development schedule included three films: the outdoor adventure-swashbuckler Bar Silver, to be filmed on location in Texas and Mexico, the mafia story The Hoods, to be filmed on location in New York and Sicily, and the long-anticipated adventure-spectacle Montezuma, to be filmed partly on location in Mexico and partly in studio in Hollywood.[308][324] By this time, Warner Brothers Pictures' option on The Hoods had expired and Montezuma was no longer backed by Universal Pictures; Bryna Productions still owed Paramount Pictures three films and Douglas hinted that at least one of the three films may go towards it.[323] Douglas also announced that, contrary to the past when Lewis would function in a production capacity on all Bryna Productions pictures, each future project would involve the casting of a producer, much in the same manner as choosing a director, screenwriter or actor.[323]

In February 1967, Douglas traveled to Mexico in an attempt to finalize the production of Montezuma but was unsuccessful.[323] In early May 1967, Bryna Productions and Martin Ritt Productions secured a $3,500,000 financing and distribution deal for The Brotherhood with Paramount Pictures.[327][328][329] The picture started filming immediately following Douglas' commitment with A Lovely Way to Die,[328] on location in Sicily on September 14, 1967, followed by New York City locations in October 1967.[330][331][332] Typical of Ritt-produced films, the producer formed a single-purpose film production subsidiary named after the film, The Brotherhood Company, to act as copyright holder.[333]

In the summer of 1967, Universal Pictures re-released Spartacus, accompanied by a massive promotional campaign.[334][327] Unbeknownst to Douglas or past Bryna Productions executives who worked on the film, Universal Pictures cut 23 minutes from the picture for its re-release, a move which Douglas expressed unfavorably of in interviews.[327] Douglas was so displeased with Universal Pictures' decision to cut the film without his knowledge, learning of it only through friends and reading a Variety article, that he refused to the see the edited cut.[327] Douglas explained that had he been consulted, certain logical scenes and sequences would have been removed, rather than chopping bits and pieces at random and shortening scenes.[327]

In March 1968, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Ron Cowen's drama play Summertree and hired the author to adapt it into a screenplay.[335][336] At the same time, Bryna Productions became affiliated with The Bronc Rider, which screenwriters Ronald M. Cohen and Dennis R. Shryack had adapted from William Crawford's novel of the same name, and were producing through their own film production company, Ronden Productions.[337] Douglas agreed to star in and co-produce the film, which then secured financing and distribution through Paramount Pictures.[337] The project, however, fell out of favor when Cohen and Shryack began putting their attention towards The Good Guys and the Bad Guys, which they had also written and were producing, with Robert Mitchum starring.

In mid-June 1968, Bryna Productions announced that it was planning an animated television film based on Jonathan Swift's classic novel Gulliver's Travels.[338] The hour-long film was to be a co-production with animation studio Filmation and Douglas would narrate the picture.[338] The film would also have original songs and be broadcast on television annually.[338] In early July 1968, Norman Kurland was appointed Executive Assistant of Bryna Productions, with the job of developing new film projects for the company.[339][340] Later that month, Bryna Productions secured a financing and distribution deal for Summertree with Columbia Pictures, and scheduled to film the story in early 1969.[341] In mid-December 1968, Douglas signed a starring and co-production, financing and distribution deal for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest between Bryna Productions and film producer Joseph E. Levine's Avco-Embassy Pictures, also set to shoot in 1969.[342]

The Brotherhood opened in December 1968 and was generally well-received during previews.[343] Carlino was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Original Screenplay. Douglas delayed the filming of Bryna Productions projects due to the immediate filming schedule on his next two starring pictures: Elia Kazan's The Arrangement and Joseph L. Mankiewicz's There Was a Crooked Man..., which were filmed between October 1968 and July 1969.[344][345] In May 1969, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Pierre Boulle's novel The Photographer, a thriller about a photographer that becomes involved with a plot to assassinate the president, which had been translated by Xan Fielding the year prior and published for the English market.[346] That year, Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to Jules Verne's novel The Lighthouse at the End of the World, a survivalist adventure story that takes place on an isolated island.[347][1] The project was assigned to screenwriter Tom Rowe, with plans for filming on location in Spain in 1970 with Douglas in the lead.[347][348]

In 1969, Douglas began donating Bryna Productions' archival paperwork, as well as his personal film-related memorabilia, to the Wisconsin Historical Society's Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, located on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison in Madison, Wisconsin.[1][349] The donations continued yearly, until 1981, and included such material as working and final scripts, casting notes, actor, crew and studio contracts, salaries, correspondence, advertisements and financial records.[1]

Merger into The Bryna Company (1970–1971) edit

Over the years, Bryna Productions had occasionally been referred to by the press as "the Bryna company", but in January 1970, it started to regularly appear under the name The Bryna Company, with an official announcement rolling out to the press in late May 1970.[350][351] Douglas opted to update the company's name when he envisioned welcoming his family into the corporate structure and made his wife Anne Douglas Vice-President and Treasurer of The Bryna Company and Joan Eisleben Secretary of The Bryna Company.[352][353]

By this time, 26 year old Michael Douglas had worked on Joel Productions' Lonely Are the Brave, appeared in some uncredited walk-on parts in Eric Productions' stage play One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and worked behind the scenes on non-produced Kirk Douglas starrers like Cast a Giant Shadow and The Heroes of Telemark.[354] Michael, who was set to star in Summertree, and had already formed his own independent film production company on November 24, 1969, Bigstick Productions, Limited.[355][344][356] 23 year old Joel Douglas had not participated in his father's film career, but would later take part in several projects as production manager and producer. 15 year old Peter Douglas had already made cameo appearances in Brynaprod's The Vikings and Bryna Productions' Strangers When We Meet, and would go on to head The Bryna Company in the 1980s. 12 year old Eric Douglas had also made a cameo appearance in Strangers When We Meet, and would appear in Bryna Productions' upcoming film A Gunfight, but ultimately took little interest in the family's film production company. Buydens had done several jobs for the company, including heading the casting department, publicity and editing.[357][358]

Though the name The Bryna Company was used for many months prior, it was only officially registered on October 29, 1970, while Kirk Douglas was in Spain filming The Light at the Edge of the World.[265][90] The new company was formed by merging Bryna Productions and Joel Productions together into a single entity, by way of renaming Joel Productions to The Bryna Company, and then merging Bryna Productions into The Bryna Company.[265][90] As such, the Douglases and the press continued to use and refer to the companies alternatively as Bryna Productions, Joel Productions and The Bryna Company for most of 1970 and into 1971 as pre-merger films were released.

In January 1970, Bryna Productions announced that it had three active productions which would be filmed before the end of the year: Summertree, The Light at the Edge of the World and A Gunfight.[359] Summertree was set to start filming on March 16, 1970, on location in California, co-starring Michael Douglas, Brenda Vaccaro and Jack Warden, and with Anthony Newly directing;[359][360] The Light at the Edge of the World was set to start filming on location in Spain in March 1970, co-starring Kirk Douglas, James Mason, Virna Lisi and Alan Bates, and with director Kevin Billington;[348][361] while A Gunfight, a western in which Kirk Douglas agreed to co-produce and co-star with country singer Johnny Cash for producers Harold Jack Bloom and Ronald Lubin, would be filmed with director Lamont Johnson on location in Spain in June 1970, immediately following the wrap-up of The Light at the Edge of the World.[362][363] A Gunfight was to be a co-production of Bryna Productions (which Douglas ultimately filed through Joel Productions), Blooms' Thoroughbred Productions and Lubin's Harvest Productions.[364][365][366]

Summertree began filming as scheduled, using new Synctrol wireless cameras, on location in Pasadena, California.[367][368] When the film wrapped up ahead of schedule, Newly was asked to direct three more films for Bryna Productions.[369] The Light at the Edge of the World and A Gunfight were, however, both delayed due to financing and the filming order was switched; neither film had yet secured a distribution deal. A Gunfight was originally to be filmed entirely in Spain, but when the New Mexico-based Jicarilla Apache Indian tribe put up $2,000,000 to finance the picture, superseding the $175,000 investment the film had garnered from European investors, and outbidding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, United Artists and Harry Saltzman's Lowndes Productions, the location was moved to Mexico.[370][371] The Mexican Film Bureau quickly objected to shooting in their country due to the film's duel scene, which, they felt, presented a false image of Mexico in the 1800s, a time when duels were outlawed.[372] The local was then changed from Mexico to a Texas border town.[364] The Jicarilla Apache then imposed that the film be shot entirely in New Mexico and a full western town and sets were built outside of Santa Fe, where filming began in May 1970.[366][371] Through further negotiations, the financier eventually allowed the production company to film for a week at the Ocaña bullfighting ring in Spain.[366][370][373] The picture was still filming when Paramount Pictures secured the film's distribution for the United States and Canada in mid-July 1970.[366][374]

The $4,000,000 The Light at the Edge of the World went through several investors and co-producing companies before securing a Spanish financier and the picture finally made it into production.[375] Bryna Productions and Joel Productions were each listed by the press during the making of the film, although Brynaprod, which had been formed to produce films outside the United States, was never attached. In early February 1970, Alexander Salkind signed on as co-producer through his Swiss independent film production company, Vulcano Film Handels.[376] Salkind and his son Ilya Salkind would ultimately co-produce The Light at the Edge of the World through two of their many imprints and subsidiaries; first through Spanish company Barcarola, then through Leicthenstein company Triumfilm Anstalt.[181][377] Salkind also recycled several of the originally-cast actors for his other film productions, like James Mason in Kill! and Virna Lisi in Bluebeard, when Yul Brynner and Samantha Eggar were re-cast as co-stars.[378][379] In late May 1970, Angelo Rizzoli's Italian independent film production company, Rizzoli Films, became attached to the project and in September 1970, Bryna Productions was negotiating a European distribution deal with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[361][379][375] Alfredo Matas' Spanish company Jet Films also participated on the project.[181][380][381]

In late October 1970, Bryna Productions secured an American distribution deal for The Light at the Edge of the World with National General Pictures and filming began, using Panavision cameras and Eastmancolor film, on location in Spain.[181][382] The locals extended through Colmenar Viejo in Madrid, Cap de Creus in Cadaqués, Girona, Catalonia, La Manga del Mar Menor in Murcia, Jávea in Alicante, Valencia and at the Club Meditérranée.[181][383] In mid-December 1970, Joel Productions bought out Wasserman's remaining interests in his screenplay of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, hoping to film it in the coming year with further development; Wasserman retained the rights to the play and any potential television version.[384]

By February 1971, Bryna Productions had negotiated a co-producing and co-starring deal for Douglas to appear in a Euro-spy comedy film adaptation of George Marton and Tibor Meray's novel Catch Me a Spy.[385][386] The screenplay was written by Ian La Frenais and Dick Clement and featured French actress Marlene Jobert and British actors Trevor Howard and Tom Courtenay.[386] The film's title was first changed to Fabienne, then to Keep Your Fingers Crossed, and finally To Catch a Spy,[387] and was co-produced by Nat Wachsberger's two film production companies, England-based Ludgate Films and France-based Capitole Films, as well as Pierre Braunberger's French film production company Les Films de la Pléiade.[388][389][390] To Cath a Spy began filming, using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film, on March 22, 1971, on location in London, England and Oban, Scotland with director Dick Clement.[390][391][392] In May 1971, Rank Film Distributors picked up the option to distribute To Catch a Spy in the United Kingdom, while Films Around the World would do the same for the American market.[393] Once filming was completed on To Catch a Spy, Douglas and Wachsberger made plans to co-produce at least two more films together, through The Bryna Company, Ludgate Films and Capitole Films; both were to be made in Europe.[394]

Bryna Productions had planned to produce One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest after Douglas returned to the United States in May 1971, which was to be shot entirely in Hollywood before the end of the year.[392][395] Douglas was debating the idea of starring in the film and strongly considered directing it instead, looking to cast Lee Grant or Colleen Dewhurst in the role of Nurse Mildred Ratched.[396] The film was delayed yet again and by October 1971, Kirk had passed the project on to his son Michael, who, in turn, dedicated several more years developing the film through The Bryna Company.[397][398]

Bryna Productions had a record-setting four pictures released within a six-month period in mid-1971, and with the added re-release promotion of Walt Disney Productions' 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, brought Douglas' name up to five films on the screen.[375] A Gunfight, which featured Eric Douglas,[399] had its world premiere on May 27, 1971, at Leows Theater in Albuquerque, New Mexico,[400] while Summertree opened later that month.[401] The Light at the Edge of the World held its world premiere on June 16, 1971, at six different theaters in the Washington D.C.-Baltimore, Maryland area.[375][402] The film earned Fernando Rey a Fotogramas de Plata nomination for Best Spanish Movie Performer. To Catch a Spy opened in London in October 1971.[403]

Two-picture deal with Paramount Pictures (1972–1975) edit

By 1972, The Bryna Company had set up its office at 141 El Camino Drive in Beverly Hills, California;[404] formerly the headquarters of Four Star Productions and the Producers Guild of America.[405][406] Douglas had anticipated filming four The Bryna Company projects in the United States between mid-1971 and through 1972, but was unable to secure American financing for the projects.[381] Instead, he spent fourteen months shooting in Europe and the United Kingdom.[395][407] In March 1972, The Bryna Company announced that Douglas would make his directorial debut with the $1,250,000 adventure film Scalawag, due to be filmed on location in Yugoslavia during the summer of 1972.[408][409] Douglas planned to make the film as a family unit, securing his wife Anne Douglas as producer, his son Peter Douglas as still photographer, his son Eric Douglas as producer's assistant and their Labrador Retriever, Shaft Douglas, cast as Beau in the picture; Kirk Douglas himself acted, directed, co-produced and co-wrote the picture.[410][411] Michael Douglas, who was working on One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest,[412] had hoped to join the family on location but remained in California after being cast as co-star of American Broadcasting Company's new crime television series The Streets of San Francisco, which began shooting in late March 1972 and went on through most of the year.[413][414]

Filming on Scalawag started on June 19, 1972 in Starigrad-Paklenica, Yugoslavia (modern day Paklenica, Croatia), an obscure town located between the Adriatic coast and the Velebit mountains.[415][416][417] When The Bryna Company cast and crew arrived, the area was so remote that it was not listed on any map, but within weeks of their arrival, the town had been inundated by tourists who wanted to be near Hollywood stars.[416] Scalawag was the first film produced after the official renaming of The Bryna Company, and was made in cooperation with Yugoslavia's Inex Film and Italy's Oceania Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografiche film production companies.[418] The film starred Kirk Douglas, Mark Lester, Lesley-Anne Down, Neville Brand and Danny DeVito, one of Michael Douglas' old friends.[419] The film also featured noted comic actor Mel Blanc, who voiced the drunken parrot.[420] Blanc would shortly after hire Joel Douglas as an executive for his media company, Blanc Communications Corporation, developing and producing commercials.[421][422] Joel Douglas would later head The Douglas Company, another Kirk Douglas subsidiary[423]

Immediately after filming wrapped on Scalawag, the Douglas family travelled to London, England for The Bryna Company's co-production of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.[424] The musical adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel had been announced in late April 1972, when producers Douglas, Burt Rosen and David Winters hired Lionel Bart to compose new numbers for the production.[425][424] The picture was filmed at Shepperton Studios in London with Joel Douglas as production coordinator, and featured Kirk Douglas, Michael Redgrave, Susan Hampshire, Susan George, Donald Pleasence and Stanley Holloway.[407]

In January 1973, Michael Douglas announced that One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest would be financed by Fantasy Films in a co-production deal with The Bryna Company.[398][426] Kirk Douglas was to act as executive producer, while Michael Douglas and Fantasy Films' Saul Zaentz would act as producers.[427][428] Kirk Douglas was hoping to play one of the featured roles in the film, while Michael Douglas scoured to find a lead.[429][430] Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde premiered on National Broadcasting Company on March 7, 1973, sponsored by Timex, and was scheduled to be released theatrically in Europe and the United Kingdom afterwards.[431][407] The television film was a success and it was nominated for three Primetime Emmy Awards: Irwin Kostal was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction of a Variety, Musical or Dramatic Program, Emma Porteous was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design and Neville Smallwood was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Makeup.

In late March 1973, Michael Douglas traveled to Olympia, Washington to scout locations for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, aiming for the picture to be filmed at the Northern State Hospital in Sedro-Woolley, Washington.[432] In May 1973, Kirk Douglas and Frank Yablans inked a two-picture contract between The Bryna Company and Paramount Pictures.[433] The deal called for the worldwide distribution of Scalawag as well as a promissory financing of $2,000,000 and the worldwide distribution of The Bryna Company's next motion picture, Posse.[434][435] The financing of the secondary film by Paramount Pictures was conditional to The Bryna Company raising half of the budget on their own; Paramount Pictures was only guaranteeing their $1,000,000 investment if The Bryna Company could also put up $1,000,000.[435] Posse, a psychological western, was to be another The Bryna Company family-made picture with Kirk Douglas directing, Anne Douglas producing, Joel Douglas assistant producer and Peter Douglas post-production supervisor.[434][436] The screenplay was written by Christopher Knopf and William Roberts from Larry Cohen's short story The Train.[437] When announced, the film was to start shooting in January 1974 in the United States with Kirk Douglas and Bruce Dern co-starring.[438][439][358]

In early June 1973, Michael Douglas announced that The Bryna Company would be filming its $2,000,000 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest on location at Oregon State Hospital in Salem, Oregon during the late summer and early fall of 1973.[440] Ken Kesey was hired to re-write the screenplay from his own novel, while Hal Ashby was secured to direct the film;[441][437] it was Ashby's idea to cast Jack Nicholson in the lead, after working with the actor on The Last Detail, though the producers were also considering Stacy Keach, James Caan and Bruce Dern for the part.[442][443] By September 1973, screenplay disputes and the author's refusal to submit his final script and sign the contract forced the filming to be pushed back to January 1974; screenwriter Lawrence Hauben was hired to rewrite the script and Miloš Forman came on as director.[444][445][446] Scalawag premiered on October 16, 1973, in six key cities: Chicago, Illinois; Louisville, Kentucky; Albany, New York; Worcester, Massachusetts; Waterloo, Iowa; and Miami, Florida.[447]

In March 1974, Peter Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna International, a photographic service company.[448] The Bryna Company's two 1974 productions, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Posse, were both pushed back from their planned early 1974 filming dates. Michael Douglas' production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was first pushed back to mid-March 1974, then to May 1974, and then again to September 1974.[442][449][450] The reason was stated to be due to scheduling conflicts.[443][451] By September 1974, the film had again been pushed back to January 1975.[452] In July 1974, Phil Feldman was appointed executive producer of Posse and Howie Pine was hired as production manager for the shooting.[453] Posse was filmed between September 23 and November 9, 1974,[454] using Panavision cameras with Technicolor film, on location at Old Tucson Studios, as well as in Florence and Sabino Canyon, Arizona.[455] The film also featured Bo Hopkins, James Stacy and Luke Askew.[456][457]

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was finally filmed from January to March 1975 at Oregon State Hospital, with Joel Douglas serving as unit production manager.[458][459] While the film was still shooting, Michael Douglas secured a one-picture distribution deal with United Artists.[460] Posse opened to theaters in mid-May 1975, accompanied by Kirk Douglas doing a promotional tour to publicize the film.[461] The picture's opening credit sequence announced that the film was a The Bryna Company production, but its copyrights were filled through Zeeuwse Maatschappij Naamloze Vennootschap, one of Paramount Pictures' many Curaçao-based subsidiaries under executive production manager Lindsley Parsons Jr.[462] Kirk Douglas was nominated for a Golden Berlin Bear award at Berlin International Film Festival for his performance in Posse.

In mid-September 1975, Paramount Pictures re-released Scalawag under the title Jamie's Treasure Hunt.[463] The film was screened in theaters as part of weekend matinee events for families and children, and the studio's new promotional campaign shifted the focus of the picture from Douglas's Peg Leg character to Mark Lester's Jamie character.[463][464] In mid-October 1975, The Bryna Company announced that it would make a two-hour television special depicting the life and career of actor John Barrymore.[465] Barrymore was to be financed and presented by National Broadcasting Company and Sidney Michaels was hired to write the teleplay.[465] Kirk Douglas planned to play the lead and it was to be Peter Douglas' inaugural project as a producer.[465] Filming was scheduled to start in March 1976 and was to be followed by five other video projects later that year, as part of the company's new television division.[465]

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest premiered on November 19, 1975, at the Regent Theatre in Westwood, Los Angeles, California and the next day headlined the Chicago International Film Festival, where it was nominated for a Gold Hugo Award for Best Feature.[466][467] Once released, neither the film's credits nor its publicity featured any mention of The Bryna Company, nor of Bigstick Productions, though the film had been developed and co-produced by both entities (in partnership with Fantasy Films).[468] Michael Douglas had been striving to detach himself from the "Kirk Douglas' son" tag which had been affixed to him in the 1960s, and wanted to establish his own identity.[469][401] He had achieved considerable success with The Streets of San Francisco, and was planning to continue producing films outside of The Bryna Company organization.[469] Afraid of nepotism,[470][471] and wanting to establish himself as a producer outside of his father's company,[472] the film's copyrights were instead filed through Curaçao-based imprint Naamloze Vennootschap Zwaluw, a corporation registered by Michael Douglas on December 6, 1974.[473]

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was a huge critical and box office success, earning a slew of awards and nominations across the globe. The film won an Academy Award for Best Picture, Jack Nicholson won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, Louise Fletcher won an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, Milos Forman won an Academy Award for Best Director, Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Academy Awards for Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material, Brad Dourif was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Haskell Wexler and Bill Butler were nominated for Academy Awards for Best Cinematography, Richard Chew, Lynzee Klingman and Sheldon Kahn were nominated for Academy Awards for Best Editing, and Jack Nitzsche was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music, Original Dramatic Score. The film won a Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama, Jack Nicholson won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama, Louise Fletcher won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama, Brad Dourif won a Golden Globe Award for Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture - Male, Milos Forman won a Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture and Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Golden Globe Awards for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture. The film won a BAFTA Award for Best Film, Jack Nicholson won a BAFTA Award for Best Actor, Louise Fletcher won a BAFTA Award for Best Actress, Brad Dourif won a BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor, Milos Forman won a BAFTA Award for Best Direction, Richard Chew, Lynzee Klingman and Sheldon Kahn won BAFTA Awards for Best Film Editing, Haskell Wexler, Bill Butler and William A. Fraker were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Cinematography, Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Screenplay, Mary McGlone, Robert R. Rutledge, Veronica Selver, Larry Jost and Mark Berger were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Sound Track and Jack Nitzsche was nominated for BAFTA's Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music. Jack Nitzsche was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special.

Milos Forman won a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures, while assistant directors Irby Smith and William Saint John and unit production manager Joel Douglas were given plaques by the same organization. Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Writers Guild of America Awards for Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium. The film won a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Picture, a People's Choice Award for Favorite Motion Picture, and a National Board of Review: Top Ten Films. Jack Nicholson won a National Board of Review Award for Best Actor, a National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor and a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor, while Louise Fletcher was nominated for a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress; Milos Forman won a Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director; Richard Chew, Sheldon Kahn and Lynzee Klingman were nominated for Eddie Awards for Best Edited Feature Film.

The film won a Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film and a Golden Screen Award, and was nominated for a César Award for Best Foreign Film and a Turkish Film Critics Association Award for Best Foreign Film. Milos Forman won a Reader's Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film Director, a David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Director, and a Silver Ribbon Award for Best Foreign Director. Jack Nicholson won a Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actor and David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor. In 1993, the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

Michael and Peter Douglas take over (1976–1982) edit

On January 9, 1976, Brynaprod was surrendered and on June 24, 1976, Michael Productions was surrendered; their remaining interests were merged into The Bryna Company.[474][475] In late July 1976, The Bryna Company announced that it would make Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, a fantasy story about two boys in a small town who encounter strange happenings at a travelling carnival.[476][477] The project was headed by Peter Douglas, who hired Bradbury to adapt his novel into a screenplay and secured a $6,000,000 financing and distribution deal with Paramount Pictures.[478][479] Something Wicked This Way Comes was to be co-produced by Hank Moonjean and filming was to start on October 1, 1976, on location in Northern California and the Midwest under the direction of Jack Clayton.[480][481] Kirk Douglas was hoping to play the role of Charles Halloway, the father in the story.[482] The project, like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, would stall for several years before being filmed.[483] Filming was pushed back to January 1, 1977, then to March 1, 1977.[484]

In mid-September 1976, Kirk Douglas revealed plans to return to the stage and star in Howard Fast's Thomas Paine biographical one-man show Citizen Tom Paine.[485] The play was to be a co-production between The Bryna Company and producers Don Gregory and Mike Merrick's Dome Productions.[486] Charles Nelson Reilly was originally hired to direct the show but he was replaced by Arvin Brown.[485] The play was to begin rehearsals on December 6, 1976, and was booked to open on January 11, 1977, at The Playhouse in Wilmington, Delaware, followed by engagements in Memphis, Tennessee, Cleveland, Ohio, Boston, Massachusetts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, New York City and Los Angeles.[486] The production was delayed when Kirk Douglas suffered throat problems in early December 1976; personal differences between the producers later lead to the cancellation of the play.[487][488]

In early November 1976, The Bryna Company announced that Peter Douglas would produce The Yellow Jersey, a film about the French Tour de France bicycle race.[489][490] Peter Douglas offered the lead parts to Bruce Dern and Charlotte Rampling.[491] A month later, Kirk Douglas held a press conference to announce that he would retire from producing and directing in order to focus solely on acting.[492] Kirk Douglas was to remain President of The Bryna Company, but all of the day-to-day activities, including the development and production of new pictures, was passed on to his sons Michael and Peter, who would co-head the company.[482] In mid-January 1977, Paramount Pictures announced that it had dropped its plans to finance and distribute Something Wicked This Way Comes, after having pushed back the filming date twice.[484] It was later revealed that the project had been collateral damage from Paramount Pictures President David V. Picker's feud with Board Chairman Barry Diller.[181][484]

Michael Douglas began working on the production of The China Syndrome in 1977, a thriller about the threat of a nuclear plant meltdown, while Peter Douglas began working on the production of The Final Countdown, a science fiction-war picture about a nuclear ship that enters a time-warp and is thrown back to World War II in 1941.[493][429] The China Syndrome was to co-star Michael Douglas, Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon, and was to be co-produced by Douglas in cooperation with Fonda's film production company, IPC Films.[493][494] In June 1977, The Bryna Company announced that Something Wicked This Way Comes would be filmed at Bavaria Studios in Munich, Germany, as a co-production between Geria Film Productions and Bavaria Film.[495] The $4,000,000-budgeted film was to start shooting in the fall of 1977 and distribution had already been secured with 20th Century-Fox Film for the United States and Canada and CS Filmverleih in Germany.[495]

By 1978, Michael Douglas had departed from The Bryna Company and took with him The China Syndrome project to develop exclusively through his own imprint, Bigstick Productions.[494][496] Michael opted to leave his father's company in order to further his independence and individual identity;[358] nevertheless, like his father, he would go on to head a series of successful independent film production companies, including El Corazon Producciones (1983–1986),[497] The Stone Group (1984–1986),[497] Mercury/Douglas Films (1986–1988),[497] Stonebridge Entertainment (1988–1994),[498] Douglas/Reuther Productions (1994–1997),[499] and Further Films (1997–present);[500] as well as the magazine L.A. Style,[501] the music publishing company, Third Stone Music (1989–1994),[502] and the record label Third Stone Records (1990–1994).[502] On August 8, 1978, Peter Douglas formed his own independent film production company, Vincent Pictures, hoping to further his independence and individual identity.[503][504][505] On December 14, 1978, Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Cameron Productions, Incorporated, named after his first grandson, Cameron Douglas; the company was registered the day after his birth.[506]

The Final Countdown went through a team of writers, including Thomas Hunter, Peter Powell, David Ambrose and Gerry Davis and was turned down by every major Hollywood film studio.[507][508] In early May 1979, The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a $7,000,000 financing deal for The Final Countdown with Arthur Guinness Son and Company Limited's film-financing subsidiary, Film Finance Group.[509] The picture was to be co-produced by Film Finance Group's president, Richard Rogers St. Johns, through its film production division, Aspen Productions.[510] Filming began, using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film with Dolby Stereophonic sound, on May 23, 1979, on location aboard the U.S.S. Nimitz in Norfolk, Virginia, followed by Miami, Florida and Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.[511][512] The film co-starred Kirk Douglas, Martin Sheen, James Farentino and Katharine Ross and was directed by Don Taylor.[512]

Peter Douglas originally objected to the casting of his father in The Final Countdown, his first picture as a producer, fearing that it would impart the idea of nepotism.[505] It was only once he felt that Kirk Douglas was truly right for the part that he consented to working with his father.[505] The Final Countdown ultimately cost $12,000,000 to produce and United Artists agreed to distribute it after seeing only several minutes of early footage.[507] The film's copyrights were filed through Polyc International Besloten Vennootschap a Dutch subsidiary of Film Finance Group.[510] The Final Countdown was released to theaters on August 1, 1980, and was a huge financial success, earning more than $3,000,000 during its opening weekend.[505][513] The film won a Golden Screen Award and was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film; Kirk Douglas was also nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Actor. On December 13, 1980, Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna Industries, Incorporated, a holding corporation based in Texas, naming Anne Douglas as Secretary.[514]

In July 1981, The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a $13,500,000 financing, co-producing and distribution deal for Something Wicked This Way Comes with Walt Disney Productions and Buena Vista.[515] The Disney company had originally approach Peter Douglas with offers to buy out the property but The Bryna Company was so interested in producing the picture that it held out until a co-production deal could be set.[181] Other financing and co-producing deals with Avco-Embassy Pictures and director John Carpenter were avoided for similar reasons.[181] Filming on Something Wicked This Way Comes began on September 28, 1981, using Panavision's Panaflex cameras and Technicolor film with Dolby Stereophonic sound, on location at Walt Disney Productions' Golden Oak Ranch in Santa Clarita, California and Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California; a second unit also filmed landscapes in Vermont.[515][516] The film starred Jason Robards, Diane Ladd and Jonathan Pryce and was directed by Jack Clayton.[515]

Anne Douglas presidency (1982–1985) edit

In 1982, Peter Douglas took a hiatus from working at The Bryna Company to properly launch his independent film production company, Vincent Pictures, securing a financing and distribution deal for the comedy film Fletch with Universal Pictures.[517][518] Part of the lengthy development of the Vincent Pictures-Universal Pictures deal included securing the principal cast and crew to produce any potential sequels, which later developed as Fletch Lives.[517]

In early August 1982, Kirk Douglas announced that he had appointed his wife Anne Douglas as President of The Bryna Company.[519] Buydens revealed that The Bryna Company would increase its film production schedule and had acquired the filming rights to two new novels: Frank Rooney's Shadow of God, a religious thriller about a nun being stalked by a fanatic priest; and Mary Higgins Clark's A Cry in the Night, a suspense mystery about a single mother who falls in love and marries an unstable man.[519][352] In November 1982, Kirk Douglas expressed a desire to produce a motion picture that included himself and his four sons; Kirk, Michael and Eric were to act in the picture, with Joel as production manager and Peter producing.[520] 20 years later, Michael Douglas wound up producing It Runs in the Family through his company Further Films; the movie co-starred Kirk, Michael, Cameron (Michael's son) and Diana Douglas (Kirk's first wife and Michael's mother), and was co-produced by Michael and Joel.

Something Wicked This Way Comes opened on April 29, 1983.[521] While it was generally well received by critics, the film failed to recoup its increased $20,000,000 budget at the box office; it has since become a cult film.[516][423] The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films awarded the film a Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film and Bradbury a Saturn Award for Best Writing. Jonathan Pryce was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor, James Horner was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Music, Ruth Myers was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Costumes, Lee Dyer was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects, and Gary Liddiard and James R. Scribner were nominated for Saturn Awards for Best Make-Up. Jack Clayton was nominated for the Grand Prize at the Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival and Clayton and Bradbury were together nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.

In mid-June 1983, The Bryna Company announced that it would be filming Draw!, a comedy western about an aging outlaw and a drunken ex-sheriff, co-starring Kirk Douglas, James Coburn and Alexandra Bastedo.[522] At the Banff Television Festival, held at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity on August 15, 1983, Canadian producer Harold Greenberg announced that he would be co-producing the $4,200,000 picture through his film production company Astral Film Productions.[523] The Stanley Mann script had been in development for seven years and was co-financed by HBO Premiere Films and the Alberta Motion Picture Development Corporation.[524][525][526] Filming began on August 16, 1983, with six weeks on location at Fort Edmonton, Alberta, followed by another week in Drumheller, Alberta, with director Steven Hilliard Stern.[523][525] Upon returning to the United States in late 1983, Kirk Douglas announced that The Bryna Company would next produce Stanley West's novel Amos, a suspense-drama about a former baseball coach who uncovers a conspiracy in the nursing home in which he resides, as a television film for Columbia Broadcasting System.[527][528]

The producers originally announced Draw! as a theatrical film, with plans for Home Box Office to host the United States television premiere afterwards.[523][525] Draw! had its world premiere at the Banff Television Festival in Alberta, Canada on May 20, 1984, followed by its United States premiere on July 15, 1984, broadcast on Home Box Office.[526][529][530] The film earned several nominations at the Canadian Genie Awards ceremony in 1985: Linda Sorensen won a Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, Laszlo George was nominated for Genie Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography, Bill Brodie was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Achievement in Art Direction, Jim Hopkins was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Achievement in Sound Editing, and Joe Grimaldi, Dino Pigat, Richard Lightstone and Austin Grimaldi were nominated for Genie Awards for Best Achievement in Overall Sound. Ron Wisman was also nominated for a CableACE Award for Film Editing.

Following the success of Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas' action-adventure film production Romancing the Stone in the spring of 1984, the Douglases attempted to find an action-packed violence film to co-star Kirk Douglas and Michael Douglas.[531] The film was to be a co-production between Kirk Douglas, Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas, with plans for filming in 1985, but the right vehicle never came up.[531] Meanwhile, Amos was to be co-produced by Kirk Douglas and Peter Douglas, starring Kirk Douglas, and with Eric Douglas portraying the character's younger self in flashback scenes (Kirk Douglas ended up portraying his own flashback sequences).[531] The filming of Amos was delayed while Peter Douglas wrapped up Fletch.

In July 1984, The Bryna Company announced that it would remake Seven Days in May as a television film for Columbia Broadcasting System, with a slightly modernized plot involving the threat of nuclear warfare.[518] The project remained in development for ten years until Peter Douglas managed to produce it through Vincent Pictures, in partnership with HBO Pictures, under the title The Enemy Within. In August 1984, The Bryna Company acquired the filming rights to Charles Dickinson's novel Waltz in Marathon, a drama about a loan shark from Marathon, Michigan whose life is altered when he is reunited with his ex-romantic partner and grown-up children.[532] Kirk Douglas planned to play the lead in the film.[532] Amos began filming in early December 1984, using Panavision cameras, on location in Ojay, California and at the Los Padres National Forest, with director Michael Tuchner.[533][534] The film co-starred Kirk Douglas, Elizabeth Montgomery, Dorothy McGuire, Pat Morita and Ray Walston and was co-produced by Bill Finnegan and Sheldon Pinchuk.[535]

Lawsuits and mergers (1985–1989) edit

In mid-June 1985, The Bryna Company was involved in a lawsuit filled by the federal government and the United States Navy, seeking $1,300,000 of unpaid military flying time during the filming of The Final Countdown.[536] The suit claimed that The Bryna Company and Aspen Productions had only been charged for 32.5 hours of aircraft flying time, while the Navy had in fact provided 167 hours of flying time.[536] The suit also revealed that Navy Commander Emory Worth Brown, Jr., a decorated Navy fighter pilot assigned to keep track of the flying hours during shooting, had accepted a bribe of $5,563.48 during the filming.[537][536] Brown had since been convicted and dishonorably discharged from the Navy, but was named in the lawsuit for punitive damages.[536] The scandal was also the subject of a CBS 60 Minutes episode, which had aired on March 18, 1984.[537] More than a year after the suit was filled, on September 10, 1986, the Justice Department ruled that The Bryna Company would have to pay $400,000 to the Federal Government and United States Navy to cover unpaid costs.[538]

Amos premiered on September 29, 1985, broadcast on Columbia Broadcasting System and was a success.[4] The film was nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards. The film itself was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama/Comedy Special, Kirk Douglas was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special, Pat Morita was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Special, and Dorothy McGuire was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special.

While promoting Amos, The Bryna Company announced that it was in negotiations with Walt Disney Productions for a film teaming Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster.[4] The pair had worked together a number of times over the years, including I Walk Alone, released theatrically in 1947; Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, released theatrically in 1956; the 30th Academy Awards ceremony in 1958 and the 31st Academy Awards ceremony in 1959, at which they performed comedic song and dance numbers before presenting awards; The Devil's Disciple, released theatrically in 1959; The List of Adrian Messenger, released theatrically in 1963 and in which they did not share any scenes together, but as Douglas was executive producer, they interacted; Seven Days in May, released theatrically in 1964; Victory at Entebbe, broadcast on television in 1976, and although they both appear in the film, the two actors filmed their separate scenes at different times and did not interact during the production; The Boys in Autumn, which was staged in early 1981; and the 57th Academy Awards ceremony in 1985, at which they appeared on stage together with Michael Douglas.

On December 23, 1985, the California-based The Bryna Company was merged into the Texas-based Bryna Industries; the Texas-based company was simultaneously renamed The Bryna Company.[514] The Bryna Company would remain under Texas' jurisdiction for the next three years.[514]

Filming of Tough Guys began in late February 1986, using Panavision's Panaflex cameras and DeLuxe film with Dolby Stereophonic sound, on location in Los Angeles, California, Portland, Oregon, and at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, with director Jeff Kanew.[539] The film was co-produced by Joe Wizan, Richard Hashimoto and Jana Sue Memel through The Bryna Company and Touchstone Pictures.[540] In addition to co-stars Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster, the film also featured Adolph Cesar, Charles Durning, Alexis Smith, Dana Carvey and Darlanne Fluegel.[541] On March 6, 1986, Cesar suffered a fatal heart attack on the set, before any of his scenes were shot; he was replaced by Eli Wallach.[542]

Tough Guys had its premiere at ShowEast, a movie theater owners' convention held in Atlantic City, New Jersey, between September 9–11, 1986.[543] It then had local premieres at the Miami Film Festival on September 22, 1986, and the Boston Film and Video Festival on September 24, 1986,[544] before opening nationwide to theaters on October 3, 1986.[545] Composer Burt Bacharach, lyricist Carole Bayer Sager and performer Kenny Rogers were nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song - Motion Picture for the film's opening theme song "They Don't Make Them Like They Used to"; Rogers titled his 1986 album after the song. In late December 1986, Kirk Douglas announced that he wished to retire from producing films.[546]

On May 19, 1987, Columbia Broadcasting System executives announced that their 1987–88 season programming would include Conquistador, an eight-hour mini-series about Hernán Cortés' 1519 conquest of Moctezuma II's Aztec Empire, currently in pre-production by Michael Douglas and Michael Phillips' Mercury/Douglas Films.[547][548][501] In late August 1987, The Bryna Company announced that it was again developing its feature film Montezuma, based on Dalton Trumbo's completed screenplay from 1960.[549] Neither the television series, nor the feature film, were ever produced. By 1987, Peter Douglas was exclusively working through his own company, Vincent Pictures, and hired Kirk Douglas to co-star with Jason Robards in a remake of Inherit the Wind.[550][551]

In late August 1987, The Bryna Company filled a $17,800,000 breach of contract lawsuit against the Unisys Corporation and the Sperry Corporation, which had employed Kirk Douglas' services as corporate spokesman two years prior.[552] The Sperry Corporation had secured the services of Kirk Douglas, through The Bryna Company, for a two-year exclusive contract, beginning on October 14, 1985; the contract had a renewable three-year extension option.[553] The contract also stipulated that Kirk Douglas could only be let go of his position in the event of a merger in which the Sperry line of products would be discontinued.[553] In promotion of the company, Kirk Douglas appeared in television commercials, researched the company's history, studied biographies of executives for personal appearances, attended executive meetings and employee conventions, and visited public exhibits such as Walt Disney World (to film commercials).[554] He also produced and appeared in the short film Sperry Goes Hollywood, filmed during the making of Tough Guys and co-produced by The Bryna Company.[555][556] The short film included behind the scenes footage of Tough Guys as well as film footage of Romancing the Stone, during which Douglas hinted that he and his son would appear in a biopic about Elmer Ambrose Sperry and his son Lawrence Sperry.[555][556] On September 16, 1986, Burroughs Corporation acquired the Sperry Corporation and renamed the new entity the Unisys Corporation, but failed to discontinue the Sperry line of computer products.[553] Nevertheless, The Bryna Company was informed via letter on October 23, 1986, that Kirk Douglas' services were terminated.[556] The Bryna Company sought $5,900,000 for breach of contract, $5,900,000 for breach of an implied obligation of good faith, and $6,000,000 for lost profits.[556]

On August 23, 1988, Anne Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary TBC Merger, Incorporated, a California-based corporation.[557] On September 8, 1988, the Texas-based The Bryna Company was merged into the California-based TBC Merger; the California company was simultaneously renamed The Bryna Company, resuming the company's operations in California after three years.[557]

From October 13–15, 1989, the American Cinematheque held a three-day celebratory festival to honor The Bryna Company and Kirk Douglas' executive producer accomplishments.[6] The festival was held at the Directors Guild of America Theatre in Hollywood, where eight films were screened: The Indian Fighter, The Vikings, Paths of Glory, an uncut version of Spartacus, Lonely Are the Brave, Seven Days in May, Posse and Amos.[558] The event was attended by Motion Picture Association of America President Jack Valenti, director John Frankenheimer, actor Bo Hopkins, actress Dorothy McGuire and Kirk Douglas himself, all of whom participated in question-and-answer sessions between screenings.[6]

In late August 1999, Kirk Douglas announced plans to make a boxing film through The Bryna Company. Douglas wanted to play the role of a trainer and hoped to cast Don King as a promoter.[559]

Contracted actors edit

The following is a list of actors that were signed to long-term, multi-picture contracts with Bryna Productions.

  • Kirk Douglas[552] Bryna Productions and The Bryna Company was used as an intermediary to secure the services of Kirk Douglas as an actor; companies would employ Kirk Douglas through Bryna Productions, and later through The Bryna Company.
  • Elsa Martinelli (1956–1958)[62] signed to a two pictures a year for two years non-exclusive contract in February 1956, following her appearance in The Indian Fighter. She was loaned out from Bryna Productions to Universal-International Pictures in March 1956 for the film Four Girls in Town.[70]
  • Dean Stockwell (1956–1961)[98] signed to a five-year contract in December 1956, before the start of filming The Careless Years.
  • Natalie Trundy (1956–1961)[560] signed to a two pictures a year for five years contract in December 1956, before the start of filming The Careless Years.
  • Betty Hutton (1957)[108] signed to a retroactive two-picture contract in early 1957 after the completion of Spring Reunion.
  • Janet Leigh (1957)[111] signed to an additional one-picture deal in 1957 during the filming of The Vikings.
  • Nina Foch (1959–1960)[561] signed to an additional one-picture deal in April 1959 during the filming of Spartacus.

Film productions edit

Completed theatrical films edit

Premiere Date Film Production Company Distribution Company Awards
December 21, 1955[47] The Indian Fighter Bryna Productions United Artists
December 1956[99] Spring Reunion Bryna Productions United Artists
February 1957[107] Lizzie Bryna Productions Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
September 1957[125] The Careless Years Bryna Productions / Michael Productions United Artists
October 1957[127] Ride Out for Revenge Bryna Productions United Artists
October 25, 1957[130] Paths of Glory Bryna Productions / Harris-Kubrick Pictures United Artists Grand Prix de l'UCC

Cantaclaro Award for Best American Motion Picture

Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon for Best Foreign Director

Jussi Award for Best Foreign Director

National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance

Nominated—Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama

June 12, 1958[158] The Vikings Brynaprod / Curtleigh Productions United Artists Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Drama

San Sebastián International Film Festival Zulueta Prize

Nominated—Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures

July 1959[200] Last Train from Gun Hill Bryna Productions / Wallis-Hazen Productions Paramount Pictures Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance
August 20, 1959[201] The Devil's Disciple Brynaprod / Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Films United Artists Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best British Actor
June 29, 1960[222] Strangers When We Meet Bryna Productions / Quine Productions Columbia Pictures
October 6, 1960[229] Spartacus Bryna Productions Universal-International Pictures Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role

Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Color

Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color

Academy Award for Best Costume Design

Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama

Huabiao Film Award — Outstanding Translated Foreign Film

International Film Music Critics Award for Best Archival Release of an Existing Score

Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing - Feature Film

National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Film Editing

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Director

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic Performance

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance

Nominated—Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama

June 8, 1961[248] The Last Sunset Brynaprod Universal-International Pictures Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance
May 24, 1962[261] Lonely Are the Brave Joel Productions Universal-International Pictures Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing - Feature Film

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance

May 29, 1963[269] The List of Adrian Messenger Joel Productions Universal-International Pictures Nominated—Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture
February 12, 1964[562] Seven Days in May Joel Productions / John Frankenheimer Productions / Cayuga Productions / Seven Arts Productions Paramount Pictures Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor

Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film

Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award for Best Picture of the Month

David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black and White

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Director

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Drama

Nominated—Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic Performance

Nominated—Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama

May 16, 1966[312] Seconds Douglas and Lewis Productions / Joel Productions / John Frankenheimer Productions / Gibraltar Productions Paramount Pictures National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black and White

Nominated—Bambi Award for Best Actor - International

Nominated—Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or

December 21, 1966[313] Grand Prix Douglas and Lewis Productions / Joel Productions / John Frankenheimer Productions / Cherokee Productions Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Academy Award for Best Sound

Academy Award for Best Film Editing

Academy Award for Best Effects, Sound Effects

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer - Male

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer - Female

Nominated—American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film

Nominated—Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures

December 1968[343] The Brotherhood Bryna Productions / Martin Ritt Productions / The Brotherhood Company Paramount Pictures Nominated—Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Original Screenplay
May 27, 1971[400] A Gunfight The Bryna Company / Joel Productions / Harvest Productions / Thoroughbred Productions Paramount Pictures
May 1971[401] Summertree The Bryna Company / Bryna Productions Columbia Pictures
June 16, 1971[402] The Light at the Edge of the World The Bryna Company / Bryna Productions / Vulcano Film / Barcarola / Jet Films / Triumfilm / Rizzoli Film National General Pictures / Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Nominated—Fotogramas de Plata for Best Spanish Movie Performer
October 1971[403] To Catch a Spy The Bryna Company / Bryna Productions / Ludgate Films / Les Films de la Pléiade / Capitole Films Films Around the World / Rank Film Distributors
October 16, 1973[447] Scalawag The Bryna Company / Inex Film / Oceania Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografiche Paramount Pictures
May 1975[461] Posse The Bryna Company / Zeeuwse Maatschappij Paramount Pictures Nominated—Berlin International Film Festival Golden Berlin Bear
November 19, 1975[466] One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest The Bryna Company / Bigstick Productions / Fantasy Films / Zwaluw United Artists Academy Award for Best Picture

Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role

Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role

Academy Award for Best Director

Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material

Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama

Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama

Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama

Golden Globe Award for Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture - Male

Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture

Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture

BAFTA Award for Best Film

BAFTA Award for Best Actor

BAFTA Award for Best Actress

BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor

BAFTA Award for Best Direction

BAFTA Award for Best Film Editing

Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film

David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Director

David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor

Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures

Reader's Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film Director

Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Picture

National Board of Review: Top Ten Films

National Board of Review Award for Best Actor

National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry

National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor

New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor

People's Choice Award for Favorite Motion Picture

Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actor

Writers Guild of America Award for Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium

Golden Screen Award

Silver Ribbon Award for Best Foreign Director

Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director

Online Film & Television Association Motion Picture Hall of Fame

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Cinematography

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Editing

Nominated—Academy Award for Best Music, Original Dramatic Score

Nominated—Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay

Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Sound Track

Nominated—Eddie Award for Best Edited Feature Film

Nominated—Gold Hugo Award for Best Feature

Nominated—César Award for Best Foreign Film

Nominated—Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special

Nominated—New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress

Nominated—Turkish Film Critics Association Award for Best Foreign Film

August 1, 1980[513] The Final Countdown The Bryna Company / Aspen Productions / Polyc International / Film Finance Group United Artists Golden Screen Award

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Actor

April 29, 1983[521] Something Wicked This Way Comes The Bryna Company / Walt Disney Productions Buena Vista Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film

Saturn Award for Best Writing

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Music

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Costumes

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Make-Up

Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Special Effects

Nominated—Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival Grand Prize

Nominated—Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation

September 9, 1986[543] Tough Guys The Bryna Company / Touchstone Pictures / Silver Screen Partners II Buena Vista Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song - Motion Picture

Unrealized film projects edit

Television productions edit

Completed television series and films edit

Premiere Date Film Production Company Distribution Company Awards
November 1957[123] King of the Vikings Brynaprod / Barbizon Productions Columbia Broadcasting System
September 1959[206] Tales of the Vikings Brynaprod United Artists Television
March 7, 1973[407] Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde The Bryna Company / Winters/Rosen Productions National Broadcasting Company Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction of a Variety, Musical or Dramatic Program

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Makeup

May 20, 1984[526] Draw! The Bryna Company / Astral Film Productions / HBO Premiere Films Home Box Office Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role

Nominated—CableACE Award for Film Editing

Nominated—Genie Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography

Nominated—Genie Award for Best Achievement in Art Direction

Nominated—Genie Award for Best Achievement in Sound Editing

Nominated—Genie Award for Best Achievement in Overall Sound

September 29, 1985[4] Amos The Bryna Company / Vincent Pictures Columbia Broadcasting System Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television

Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama/Comedy Special

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Special

Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special

April 23, 1986[555] Sperry Goes Hollywood The Bryna Company / Sperry Corporation Sperry Corporation

Unrealized television projects edit

  • Report from Space / Report from Outer Space (1958–1959)[179]
  • The Indian Fighter (1958–1959)[187]
  • Spartacus (1959)[1]
  • The Cruel Sport / Grand Prix (1965–1967)[303]
  • Gulliver's Travels (1968)[338]
  • Barrymore (1975–1976)[465]
  • Seven Days in May (1984–1989)[518]

Stage productions edit

Completed stage productions edit

Opening Date Closing Date Play Production Company Theater
October 24, 1963[280] October 26, 1963[280] One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Eric Productions / Seven Arts Productions Shubert Theatre, New Haven, Connecticut
October 28, 1963[275] November 9, 1963[275] One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Eric Productions / Seven Arts Productions Shubert Theatre, Boston, Massachusetts
November 13, 1963[563] January 25, 1964[563] One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Eric Productions / Seven Arts Productions Cort Theatre, New York City, New York

Unrealized stage projects edit

  • A Very Special Baby (1956)[70]
  • Citizen Tom Paine (1976)[486]

References edit

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bryna, productions, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, conta. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2023 This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body September 2023 This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Bryna Productions later renamed The Bryna Company is an American independent film and television production company established by actor Kirk Douglas in 1949 The company also produced a handful of films through its subsidiaries Michael Productions Joel Productions and Douglas and Lewis Productions and outside the United States through Brynaprod Other subsidiaries included Eric Productions which produced stage plays Peter Vincent Music a music publishing company Bryna International a photographic service company and Public Relations Consultants which supervised the publicity of its early films 1 Douglas named the main company after his mother Bryna Demsky Bryna Danielovitch while its primary subsidiaries were named after his sons Michael Douglas Joel Douglas Peter Douglas and Eric Douglas 2 3 In 1970 Bryna Productions was renamed The Bryna Company when Douglas welcomed his children and second wife into the firm Nevertheless Michael Joel and Peter wanting to establish individual identities went on to form their own independent film production companies 4 Bryna ProductionsBryna Productions logo designed in November 1956 as it appears in the opening screen credits of Ride Out for Revenge Trade nameBryna Productions IncorporatedCompany typePrivately held companyIndustryEntertainment industryFilm industryTelevision industryMusic industryTheatreFoundedSeptember 28 1949 74 years ago 1949 09 28 in Hollywood California United StatesFounderKirk DouglasSuccessorsThe Bryna CompanyBryna IndustriesTBC MergerHeadquarters141 El Camino Drive Suite 209 Beverly Hills California United StatesKey peopleJerry BreslerAnne DouglasJoel DouglasMichael DouglasPeter DouglasEdward LewisMartin MelcherProductsMotion picturesSubsidiariesBryna CorporationBryna InternationalBrynaprodCameron ProductionsDouglas and Lewis ProductionsEric ProductionsJoel ProductionsMichael ProductionsPeter Vincent MusicPublic Relations Consultants The company had some major film successes including Paths of Glory The Vikings Spartacus Seven Days in May Seconds Grand Prix One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest The Final Countdown and Something Wicked This Way Comes Four of the films Bryna Productions made have been deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant by the United States National Film Preservation Board and have been selected for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry Paths of Glory in 1992 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest in 1993 Seconds in 2015 and Spartacus in 2017 5 The company was also recognized by the American Cinematheque in 1989 when it held a three day festival with the screening of eight Bryna Productions films 6 Twenty one of Bryna Productions films have won and been nominated for awards and prizes at various ceremonies and film festivals including the Academy Awards the Golden Globe Awards the British Academy Film Awards the Grammy Awards the Saturn Awards the Primetime Emmy Awards the Genie Awards the Bodil Awards the Directors Guild of America Award the Writers Guild of America Awards the Laurel Awards the David di Donatello Awards the Bambi Award the Belgian Film Critics Association Award the New York Film Critics Circle Awards the National Society of Film Critics Awards the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards the Turkish Film Critics Association Awards the National Board of Review Awards the People s Choice Awards the Kinema Junpo Awards the Sant Jordi Awards the Cesar Awards the Nastro d Argento Award the Jussi Awards the Huabiao Awards the Golden Screen Award the CableACE Awards the Golden Reel Awards the International Film Music Critics Award the Edgar Allan Poe Award the Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award the American Cinema Editors Award the Fotogramas de Plata Award the Hugo Awards and at the Cannes Film Festival the Berlin International Film Festival the San Sebastian International Film Festival the Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival and the Chicago International Film Festival Bryna Productions often co produced films with other notable independent film production companies including Burt Lancaster Harold Hecht and James Hill s Hecht Hill Lancaster Films Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh s Curtleigh Productions Rock Hudson s Gibraltar Productions James Garner s Cherokee Productions Stanley Kubrick and James B Harris Harris Kubrick Pictures Saul Zaentz s Fantasy Films John Frankenheimner s John Frankenheimer Productions Richard Quine s Quine Productions Hal B Wallis Wallis Hazen Productions Martin Ritt s Martin Ritt Productions Ray Stark s Seven Arts Productions Harold Jack Bloom s Thoroughbred Productions Harold Greenberg s Astral Film Productions Roland W Betts Silver Screen Partners II and Walt Disney s Walt Disney Productions and Touchstone Pictures It also had financing and distribution deals with major Hollywood studios like United Artists Metro Goldwyn Mayer Paramount Pictures Columbia Pictures Universal International Pictures Rank Film Distributors National General Pictures and Buena Vista for motion pictures as well as United Artists Television NBC CBS and HBO for television Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation of Bryna Productions and early projects 1949 1954 1 2 Six picture deal with United Artists 1955 1 3 One picture deals with Metro Goldwyn Mayer 1955 1956 1 4 Formation of Michael Productions and Joel Productions 1956 1957 1 5 Formation of Brynaprod and Peter Vincent Music 1957 1958 1 6 Two picture deal with Universal International Pictures 1958 1959 1 7 Negotiations with Columbia Pictures and additional deals with Universal International Pictures 1959 1961 1 8 Six picture deal with Universal International Pictures 1961 1963 1 9 Four picture and one play deal with Seven Arts Productions and formation of Eric Productions 1963 1 10 Three picture deal with Paramount Pictures and formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions 1963 1965 1 11 One picture deals with Metro Goldwyn Mayer and Warner Brothers Pictures 1965 1966 1 12 Departure of Edward Lewis and continuation of Bryna Productions 1966 1970 1 13 Merger into The Bryna Company 1970 1971 1 14 Two picture deal with Paramount Pictures 1972 1975 1 15 Michael and Peter Douglas take over 1976 1982 1 16 Anne Douglas presidency 1982 1985 1 17 Lawsuits and mergers 1985 1989 2 Contracted actors 3 Film productions 3 1 Completed theatrical films 3 2 Unrealized film projects 4 Television productions 4 1 Completed television series and films 4 2 Unrealized television projects 5 Stage productions 5 1 Completed stage productions 5 2 Unrealized stage projects 6 ReferencesHistory editFormation of Bryna Productions and early projects 1949 1954 edit Kirk Douglas formed an independent film production company at the suggestion of his friend and I Walk Alone co star Burt Lancaster who was already having success with his own film production company Norma Productions Lancaster and his agent Harold Hecht formed Norma Productions in 1947 at a time when many actors directors and producers were forming their independent units which quickly became the largest and most successful independent film production unit in Hollywood during the 1950s 7 8 9 Douglas registered his new company Bryna Productions Incorporated on September 28 1949 and immediately began optioning properties and securing writers and directors though it would take more than five years for a project to make it before the cameras 10 Douglas mother Bryna Demsky after whom the company was named was a stockholder in the firm 11 The first property acquired by Bryna Productions was Ben Hecht s short story The Shadow about a magician who seeks vengeance against his twin brother for the alienation of his blind wife Douglas made a deal with lawyer turned agent turned producer Charles K Feldman who ironically had tried to sue Lancaster and Norma Productions in 1948 to head Bryna Productions and produce The Shadow at Republic Pictures 12 13 Feldman hired screenwriter Charles O Neal to write the screenplay O Neal retitled the film Mr Shadow which was to star Douglas in dual roles of the twin brothers 12 In the role of the estranged wife Douglas first wanted to cast Jane Greer then Jane Wyman 14 15 By early 1952 Bryna Productions was attempting to film The Shadow in England 15 In June 1950 Bryna Productions optioned Irwin Gielgud s story The Life of David Garrick a story about the life and career of English actor David Garrick The property was to be filmed under the title Garrick s Gayeties for which Douglas hoped to co star with Judy Garland in the role of Peg Woffington 16 17 In September 1950 Bryna Productions procured Ivan Thors screenplay Nowhere to Go a story about a displaced person fighting for a new home in the United States 18 Bryna Productions also owned the filming rights to Darwin Teihet s novel The Fear Makers which Douglas hoped to direct himself 17 19 20 In March 1952 Douglas revealed plans for Bryna Productions to make three films a year with him to star in only one of the three yearly films 21 Producer William Schorr who had previously been attached to Billy Wilder and produced the Douglas starring film Ace in the Hole became an executive partner at Bryna Productions 22 Schorr was to oversee the production of films as associate producer while Douglas would star in the pictures Schorr would remain instrumental to Bryna Productions for the next four years 22 19 That year Bryna Productions became tied to Strange Harvest a yarn about a World War II G I who returns to visit Italy with his new American wife only to discover that he has a young son from a war time fling with an Italian women 23 Strange Harvest was written by Sy Bartlett and Harold Conrad Bartlett co wrote the screenplay with Schorr and the film was to be directed by David Miller on location in Italy 24 19 Douglas hoped to film most of his early productions in Europe 25 In 1953 he and Schorr attempted to secure a two picture deal with Italian producers Carlo Ponti and Dino De Laurentiis 26 The plan was for Douglas to star in the Italian producers film Ulysses in exchange for a co production deal to film The Shadow which Douglas hoped to finally get underway with Anatole Litvak secured as director 27 26 28 Ulysses came through but The Shadow was never made In June 1953 Bryna Productions discussed a co production deal with Sidney Sheldon to film Alice in Arms in Italy adapted from a play in which Douglas had appeared on Broadway in 1945 25 By January 1954 the local for Strange Harvest had been changed from Italy to Japan when a financing deal was secured there and Bryna Productions wanted Marlon Brando to star in the picture 29 Later in 1954 Bryna Productions acquired Robert Carson s story The Quality of Mercy though its filming rights were up to challenge 30 Bryna Productions had been given permission by the author via a verbal agreement whereas John Wayne and his business partner Robert Fellows had received a written agreement from Carson s agent through their film production company Batjac Productions 30 A partnership was then formed between Batjac Productions and Bryna Productions to co produce the film together with Douglas starring and Ben Hecht writing the screenplay 30 31 Batjac Productions existing Warner Brothers Pictures financing and distribution deal would back the picture though it was ultimately never made 30 In April 1954 it was reported that Douglas was interested in producing and starring in a television series through Bryna Productions 32 In September 1954 Bryna Productions showed interest in filming Robert Wright Campbell s already written film script The Dangerous Game 33 Six picture deal with United Artists 1955 edit In early January 1955 Douglas formally activated Bryna Productions by signing a six picture three year financing and distribution deal with United Artists 34 After signing the deal Douglas and his second wife Anne Douglas were invited out to celebrate with cocktails at 21 Club in New York City by United Artists executives president Arthur B Krim and board chairman Robert S Benjamin 35 34 That month Stanley Margulies was appointed Publicity Director for Bryna Productions new subsidiary Public Relations Consultants Incorporated 36 and the company s first two motion pictures were announced The Viking Raiders a swashbuckler about Vikings pillaging the coast of Brittany adapted by Edison Marshall s novel and to be directed by Richard Fleischer and Van Gogh a biopic of Vincent Van Gogh to be directed by Jean Negulesco 34 37 Douglas was to star in both 35 A month later however in February 1955 it was announced that The Indian Fighter a story about a reckless adventurer who tries to foment a war between the Indians and the western settlers after the Civil War with a screenplay by Ben Hecht and Frank Davis and also starring Douglas would be the inaugural picture to be filmed 34 38 That same month Norman A Cook was appointed General Manager of Bryna Productions 39 The Van Gogh biopic property was subject to some debate as Metro Goldwyn Mayer also owned the filming rights to a similar story Lust for Life based on Irving Stone s novel with John Houseman secured as producer and Vincente Minelli inked as director 38 American producer Robert Goldstein was also in a partnership with Italian producer Giuseppe Amato ready to film a Van Gogh biopic in Rome from an original Harry Brown screenplay 38 Instead of battling Metro Goldwyn Mayer over the property Douglas chose to approach the company and offered to make the picture together with his services as an actor 40 41 In March 1955 Bryna Productions moved into its first official headquarter office at 9235 West Third Street Beverly Hills California 40 42 That same month it was announced that the company hoped to film Jacquin Sanders novel Freak Show a provocative love story about a wrestler and a freak girl at a carnival 40 The Indian Fighter secured Andre de Toth as director in early March 1955 43 and was originally scheduled to begin filming in early April 1955 44 but due to Douglas personal publicity tour promoting Man Without a Star for Universal International Pictures the shooting only began on May 23 1955 45 The film was shot entirely on location using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film during five weeks in and around Bend Oregon without any studio retakes 45 46 for a cost of over 1 000 000 47 Bryna Productions also brought over Italian actress Elsa Martinelli for the femme lead and featured actors like Walter Matthau Lon Chaney Jr Alan Hale Jr and Douglas former wife Diana Douglas After the filming was completed Bryna Productions hired folk singer Terry Gilkyson to sing a couple of songs written by Irving Gordon and Franz Waxman to compose the score 48 49 Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to Robert Wright Campbell s original screenplay The Allison Brothers for 25 000 a story written especially for the author s brother William Campbell 50 51 Immediately after completing The Indian Fighter Douglas began filming Metro Goldwyn Mayer s Lust for Life in France Belgium Italy and the Netherlands following which he planned to produce and star in The Viking Raiders the Norse film would however be pushed back by three years 52 53 While in Europe Bryna Productions optioned German author Klaus Schuitz s story The Runaway Heart which deals with an Italian girl who falls in love with an SS Nazi officer during World War II 54 The male lead was to be played by Douglas while the Italian role was offered to Sophia Loren 54 In October 1955 after returning from Europe for the filming of Lust for Life Douglas named three new executives for Bryna Productions Jerry Bresler was appointed Producer and General Manager Myer P Beck was appointed Producer s Representative and David E Weshner was appointed Sales and Distribution Representative 55 56 57 The company then announced plans to film Robert Alan Aurthur s original story Shadow of the Champ 56 The plot revolved around a has been boxing champion s romance with a lonely woman and had already been adapted for television on The Philco Television Playhouse earlier that year 56 The story s filming rights were advanced by United Artists for 100 000 the highest fee ever paid at the time for a television package play 56 The film was to be co produced with Jonathan Productions a company founded by Aurthur David Susskind and Alfred Levy with Douglas to play only a secondary character in the film 56 47 Although Aurthur wrote the screenplay Shadow of the Champ was ultimately never made but the writer collaborated on four future projects with Bryna Productions A Very Special Baby Spring Reunion Tales of the Vikings and Grand Prix One picture deals with Metro Goldwyn Mayer 1955 1956 edit By December 1955 Bryna Productions had negotiated a secondary financing and distribution deal separate from the six picture United Artists deal with Arthur Loew president of Metro Goldwyn Mayer for a single picture 58 Metro Goldwyn Mayer was rarely dealing with independent film production companies at that time so the one picture deal was somewhat of an achievement in the film industry 58 59 Even more so surprising was that Bryna Productions was negotiating a second one picture pact with the same studio 58 The first film for Metro Goldwyn Mayer was to be The Syndicate set to star Douglas and Jeanne Crain and to be co produced with Frank and Maurice King s King Brothers Productions 58 59 The second film was to be King Kelly based on Robert Wright Campbell s novel about an ambitious soldier who attempts to set up his own empire in the Southwest after the Civil War with Douglas starring and Daniel Mainwaring writing the screenplay 60 By the end of 1955 Bryna Productions plans were to produce two films in 1956 Shadow of the Champ for United Artists and King Kelly for Metro Goldwyn Mayer and to be able to produce three to four pictures a year by 1957 47 58 The Indian Fighter simultaneously premiered on December 21 1955 at the Mayfair Theatre in New York City and at the Liberty Theatre in Portland Oregon it was an immediate success 47 61 In January 1956 Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Samuel Grafton s novel A Most Contagious Game the story of a magazine reporter who goes undercover as a gangster to research the underworld but ends up becoming a mob leader himself the filming rights to the story had previously been owned by Victor Saville s Parklane Pictures which produced a television movie for Studio One 62 63 64 Bresler was to produce the film while Grafton was hired to write the screenplay 65 Douglas immediately offered the lead role to Lancaster 66 but plans were ultimately made for Douglas to star in A Most Contagious Game financed by United Artists with filming to begin in March 1956 on location in New York City 67 68 It was also announced that in addition to Shadow of the Champ Aurthur would be adapting two more of his stories for Bryna Productions A Very Special Baby and Spring Reunion 67 A Very Special Baby was to be the second film co produced by Bryna Productions in partnership with Jonathan Productions and the company put up a 100 000 security on the property which was to be filmed without major studio financing the completed film would instead be put up for auction to the highest bidder for distribution 69 Bryna Productions was also to finance the Broadway play version 70 Spring Reunion a drama story about a high school reunion quickly took center stage as the next film to go before cameras with a scheduled starting date of May 15 1956 60 when Robert Pirosh was signed as writer director and stars Dana Andrews and Betty Hutton were tied to the production 68 By late January 1956 Bryna Productions previously planned two pictures in 1956 schedule had been expanded to five pictures over the next eighteen months for a total budget of 8 000 000 68 60 The Viking previously announced as The Viking Raiders was budgeted at 4 000 000 alone for United Artists while King Kelly was to cost around 1 500 000 for Metro Goldwyn Mayer 68 The remaining 2 500 000 budget from United Artists was to be divided between three other properties already in pre production stages Spring Reunion Shadow of the Champ and A Most Contagious Game 60 Only a month later in February 1956 Bryna Productions acquired a sixth property for development in their 1956 schedule The Silent Gun for a reported 25 000 which was factually 22 000 68 The Silent Gun a dramatic story about a cowardly man who poses as a famous outlaw was written by Carson A Wiley who was also hired by to write the screenplay 60 The lead in The Silent Gun was immediately offered to Gary Cooper and Montgomery Clift 71 That same month Bryna Productions also signed Italian actress Elsa Martinelli to a four picture two year contract two pictures a year for two years 72 In late February 1956 Barney Briskin was appointed Production Manager of Bryna Productions 62 Bryna Productions plans began to delay in March 1956 when Douglas started filming Gunfight at the O K Corral on location in Arizona 69 Each new film in which he accepted to star pushed back Bryna Productions schedule In early April 1956 Bryna Productions announced that Lewis Milestone would direct King Kelly on location in Texas 60 73 and later that month appointed Charles Levy as Eastern Publicity Representative of the company 60 59 That same month Bryna Productions also optioned the filming rights of the novel Deliver Us from Evil The Story of Vietnam s Flight to Freedom the autobiography of Lieutenant Thomas Anthony Dooley III a navy doctor who served behind the Communist Bamboo Curtain in Vietnam 74 75 Douglas was hoping to play the lead and the movie was to begin filming in the late autumn of 1956 74 76 In late May 1956 Bryna Productions plans changed again when another new property was acquired 77 A third one picture deal was set with Metro Goldwyn Mayer for the financing and distribution of a film based on Shirley Jackson s novel The Bird s Nest which Bryna Productions purchased from theater producer Ray Stark 77 78 Metro Goldwyn Mayer s contracted actress Eleanor Parker was immediately signed for the lead role in the film which was to be titled Lizzie with plans to start filming on August 1 1956 at Kling Studios though it was delayed to September 10 1956 with director actor Hugo Haas 77 79 Bette Davis was originally cast in the role of Aunt Morgan but it was ultimately played by Joan Blondell 80 Meanwhile Spring Reunion was also pushed back to start filming on June 4 1956 at Republic Studios while King Kelly was scheduled to film on location in East Flat Rock North Carolina starting July 23 1956 with Douglas Elsa Martinelli and Lance Fuller as co stars 77 81 82 83 Mala Powers was eventually announced as Martinelli s replacement in King Kelly 84 Although Douglas was free to start filming his next picture Top Secret Affair only starting to shoot on December 4 1956 the production team was unhappy with the script of King Kelly and put off the shoot 85 Screenwriter Edna Anhalt was brought in to work on King Kelly s script 86 Formation of Michael Productions and Joel Productions 1956 1957 edit Bryna Productions announced in May 1956 that it had loaned out Leslie Nielsen from Metro Goldwyn Mayer to star in A Most Contagious Game replacing Douglas who had originally planned to take the lead 87 In June 1956 Douglas and Bryna Productions began what would be a ten year partnership with writer producer Edward Lewis 88 That month Bryna Productions acquired Lewis original story and screenplay Mavourneen a comedy about three girls in an Irish town who conspire to trick the town s most eligible bachelor into marrying one of them 88 Lewis was appointed Associate Producer for both Mavourneen and Lizzie and would become a key member for the organization 80 88 On August 6 1956 Douglas registered the Bryna Productions subsidiaries Michael Productions Incorporated and Joel Productions Incorporated named after his first two sons Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas 89 90 Although the original plan was to alternate between production companies for each film for tax purposes as Hecht and Lancaster had done with their film production companies Michael Productions would only be used for a single film while Joel Productions remained dormant for the next six years In September 1956 Bryna Productions announced that the teenage drama The Young Lovers later released as The Careless Years had been added to its United Artists financed schedule of productions and assigned Lewis as Producer 91 92 93 The company initially attempted to loan out Dennis Hopper for the male lead but Warner Brothers Pictures price was too high 94 By October 1956 The Viking had again become Douglas top starring producing project at Bryna Productions with a re written script by Noel Langley the latter had been hired for the job in June 1956 95 Its budget had been reduced to 3 000 000 though it would go over budget during filming and it was revealed that it would be filmed authentically in Scandinavian locations during three and a half months in the spring of 1957 95 In November 1956 Bryna Productions announced interest in acquiring Stephen Longstreet s novel The Beach House as well as Dale Wasserman and Jack Balch s teleplay Elisha and the Long Knives as properties for Douglas to star 96 Also in November 1956 Bryna Productions announced that its new trademark logo had been designed and would first appear in the opening screen credit of Lizzie due out in early 1957 97 In December 1956 The Careless Years lead actors Dean Stockwell and Natalie Trundy were both simultaneously signed for the film and to five year contracts with Bryna Productions 98 Bryna Productions second film Spring Reunion premiered at the Astoria Theatre in London England in late December 1956 99 93 The Careless Years began filming on January 7 1957 with director Arthur Hiller 93 That month Bryna Productions re optioned Ben Hecht s story The Shadow assigning screenwriter Allan Scott to re develop it while Sydney Boehm finished writing the screenplay for A Most Contagious Game set to co star Nelson who also asked Metro Goldwyn Mayer to let him play a role in The Viking but was turned down and Martinelli 93 100 The company also announced a three picture co production deal with Harris Kubrick Pictures 101 102 Writer director Stanley Kubrick and his film producer partner James B Harris had been developing through their own film production company a script for Paths of Glory a World War I drama authored by Humphrey Cobb 93 103 Douglas made an exceptional deal with Harris Kubrick Pictures in which although he was co executive producer he would only be paid a straight salary of 350 000 as an actor and not take in any share of the film s profits as his deal with United Artists permitted 104 The addition of Paths of Glory to Bryna Productions schedule forced The Viking and also King Kelly which had been re scripted by Allan Scott to be pushed back by several months 103 Another pre developed deal tied to Bryna Productions was Burt Arthur s novel Ride Out for Revenge a western about Indians and the United States Army battling it out 105 Ride Out for Revenge had already been adapted and scripted by Norman Retchin who was signed by Bryna Productions as producer for the film in mid January 1957 Retchin quickly secured Rory Calhoun to play the lead with co stars Lloyd Bridges and Gloria Grahame 105 104 106 Myer P Beck was appointed Sales Advertisement and Publicity Representative for Bryna Productions in February 1957 just in time for Lizzie s publicity campaign which rolled out to limited theater screenings that month 103 107 After the completion of Spring Reunion Betty Hutton hoped to star in Three Rings for Julie a comedy about a switchboard operator who overhears a plot for murder as her second contracted picture for Bryna Productions 108 But after Spring Reunion proved unpopular Hutton opted not to resume her film career Formation of Brynaprod and Peter Vincent Music 1957 1958 edit Paths of Glory started filming on March 18 1957 at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig Germany while Ride Out for Revenge began shooting on March 28 1957 with director Bernard Girard on location in Sonora California 104 By the end of March 1957 The Viking had officially been retitled The Vikings and big name stars like Tony Curtis and his wife Janet Leigh who wound up co producing the film through their film production company Curtleigh Productions Ernest Borgnine and Michael Rennie were signed 109 110 Leigh was also signed to an additional picture deal with Bryna Productions 111 The Vikings began shooting using Technirama cameras and Technicolor film on June 20 1957 on location near the Finnafjorden fjords in Norway then in Copenhagen Denmark followed by Brittany France and finally interior scenes at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig Germany 112 113 While in Europe Bryna Productions looked into the possibility of filming The Shadow in Madrid Spain 114 112 and as so many of the company s projects were set to be done on the continent Douglas formed a Swiss subsidiary of Bryna Productions Brynaprod S A a Swiss limited liability Societe anonyme 115 The idea of a European based company was another influence from Hecht and Lancaster who had formed the Liechtenstein based Norma Productions subsidiary Joanna Productions A G in 1955 to produce Trapeze in France 116 Lewis running Bryna Productions operations in Hollywood while Douglas was in Europe negotiated the development of a television series based on The Vikings In May 1957 a deal was made with Morris Helprin and Alfred W Crown s film production company Barbizon Productions to co produce a pilot film for a television series to be titled King of the Vikings for Columbia Broadcasting System 117 Robert Alan Aurthur was contracted to write the teleplay for the pilot in addition to additional episodes in case the series was picked up 117 The pilot was filmed in London from August to September 1957 with Crown overseeing the production but Columbia Broadcasting System did not pickup the series 118 119 120 Bryna Productions then planned to make the television program through a financing and distribution deal with United Artists Television and attempted to sign Sterling Hayden for the lead role 121 122 Lewis was later appointed head of Bryna Productions television department in November 1957 123 In September 1957 Bryna Productions moved into a luxurious new building at 250 North Canon Drive in Beverly Hills California on the same block as Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions office which was located at 202 North Canon Drive 124 The three story building was designed by architect Herman Charles Light and was shared with producer Martin Melcher and singer actress Doris Day s film production company Arwin Productions public relations agency Rogers amp Cowan who would later represent Douglas and Bryna Productions and law firm Rosenthal amp Norton 124 That same month The Careless Years was released to theaters 125 In October 1957 after Paths of Glory had been privately screened for select members of the press Bryna Productions optioned American Canadian church minister turned master safecracker Herbert Emerson Wilsons s autobiography I Stole 16 000 000 especially for Stanley Kubrick and James B Harris 126 127 The picture was to be the second in the co production deal between Bryna Productions and Harris Kubrick Pictures which Kubrick was to write and direct Harris to co produce and Douglas to co produce and star 126 In November 1957 Gavin Lambert was signed as story editor for I Stole 16 000 000 128 Ride Out for Revenge was released to theaters in October 1957 127 Following the success of The Indian Fighter Ride Out for Revenge marked the fourth film in a row after Spring Reunion Lizzie and The Careless Years to lose money on its investment nevertheless Douglas had faith in Bryna Productions future and luckily so did the financing and distribution companies 129 Paths of Glory had its world premiere on October 25 1957 in Munich Germany 130 followed by its American premiere two months later on December 20 1957 at the Fine Arts Theater in Beverly Hills California 131 It was Bryna Productions biggest success yet and the film went on to win and have nominations for several awards including the Grand Prix de l UCC the Cantaclaro Award for Best American Motion Picture the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon for Best Foreign Director and the Jussi Award for Best Foreign Director It was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source Adolphe Menjou was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama In 1992 the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Paths of Glory culturally historically or aesthetically significant and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry In January 1958 Douglas signed on to star and co produce the film Last Train from Harper s Station with Hal B Wallis Wallis Hazen Productions through Wallis existing Paramount Pictures financing and distribution deal 132 Last Train from Harper s Station was quickly renamed Showdown at Gun Hill when the script was completed 133 Meanwhile script meetings were scheduled in Tijuana Mexico with Herbert Emerson Wilsons as he had been expelled from the United States and deported to Canada for the development of his novel I Stole 16 000 000 134 Stewart Granger was then announced to play the lead in the film set to start shooting later in 1958 135 Kubrick eventually finished a script titled God Fearing Man but the picture was never filmed In January 1958 Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Edward Abbey s novel The Brave Cowboy 136 In February 1958 Douglas became attached to The Devil s Disciple a George Bernard Shaw play which had been optioned by Harold Hecht and Burt Lancaster in August 1955 with plans to film it through their production company Hecht Lancaster Productions 137 The picture went through considerable delays and changes but was originally announced to star Laurence Olivier Burt Lancaster Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor in the leads with Olivier directing the picture was to be filmed at a proposed ranch studio that Hecht Lancaster Productions was to build in the woodlands of Santa Cruz California 138 Douglas came in to replace Clift as one of the leads and agreed to co star in the film if he could also co produce it through Bryna Productions 139 To please Olivier the film was instead shot in England and therefore Brynaprod co produced the film 140 Hecht Lancaster Productions had by this time been renamed Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions and the company also formed a British subsidiary to co produce the film Hecht Hill Lancaster Films On February 28 1958 Douglas registered another subsidiary Bryna Corporation though its use has not been established 141 In late March 1958 Lewis was appointed Vice President of Bryna Productions Margulies was appointed Vice President of Public Relations Consultants and the company welcomed three new executives Seymour Poe as World Wide Sales Representative Joseph A Barry as Eastern Story Editor and Allan Balter as Unit Publicist 142 143 144 145 German American film director Robert Siodmak who had returned to Germany was appointed European Representative of Bryna Productions charged as adviser and consultant on the production distribution and exhibition of all of the company s films in the European market 146 147 The addition of the new personnel coincided with Bryna Productions expansion program and the new representation of the company by talent agency Music Corporation of America 148 Douglas additionally formed the Bryna Productions subsidiary Peter Vincent Music Corporation a music publishing company named after his third son Peter Vincent Douglas 1 Douglas appointed Martin Melcher as President of Peter Vincent Music who in turn affiliated the company with performance rights organization Broadcast Music Inc in the United States and BUMA in Europe 149 The purpose of Peter Vincent Music was to publish and copyright the music theme songs soundtracks scores and cues from Bryna Productions films and administer royalties to the songwriters and composers this too was influenced by Hecht and Lancaster s own successful music publishing venture Hecht Lancaster amp Buzzell Music Peter Vincent Music s first published and copyrighted music were three songs composed by Mario Nascimbene for The Vikings which were co published with United Artist s music publishing imprint Unart Music 150 151 The songs were March of the Vikings Love Has Gone to Wander and Commento Musicale Per I Vichinghi which featured lyrics by Joseph Lubin and arrangements by Jerome Howard 150 151 Bryna Productions also announced in March 1958 their biggest project yet a 15 000 000 film production of Jules Verne s adventure novel Michael Strogoff 152 153 Verne properties had become viable material in the mid 1950s Douglas having already co starred in Walt Disney Productions 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea Michael Todd having recently released Around the World in 80 Days Benedict Bogeaus filming From the Earth to the Moon and Charles Brackett preparing Journey to the Center of the Earth 154 Michael Strogoff which takes place in Russia was to be the subject of the first American Soviet film co production setup jointly through the two nations cultural exchange program 155 Douglas was to star in the film along with as many American actors as the Russians would allow with the rest of the stars including the female lead and cast to be played by Russian actors 155 Bryna Productions was adamant about Michael Strogoff s production being fully supported by both governments and a meeting was set up for April 14 1958 with diplomats and high ranking country officials 156 As Douglas was by then busy filming Showdown at Gun Hill Lewis and Margulies traveled to New York City on behalf of Bryna Productions and met with Eric Johnston president of the Motion Picture Association of America Kenneth Clark vice president of the Motion Picture Association of America Turner Blair Shelton film division chief of the United States Information Agency Aleksandr A Slavnov head of the Soviet delegation Aleksandr N Davydov head of Sovexportfilm and Tamara Mamedov cultural attache for the Soviet Embassy in Washington D C 157 156 The project was met positively and the Soviet officials were given a detailed treatment of the script and a story outline to take back to the U S S R where it was presented for ratification by top film and government officials in Moscow upon their return in early May 1958 If approved by the second committee another meeting would be set up in Moscow likely at the end of May 1958 where the deal would be concluded 156 Bryna Productions waited for the green light on the project but it was continuously delayed 146 Showdown at Gun Hill started filming on March 31 1958 using VistaVision cameras and Technicolor film on location in Arizona with director John Sturges and co starring Douglas and Anthony Quinn 158 159 Regal Films filed an objection with Motion Pictures Association of America s Title Registration Bureau claiming that Showdown at Gun Hill s title was too similar to their own film Showdown at Boot Hill which was being released just as the Bryna Productions picture was being filmed 146 This led to the retitling of the film to Last Train from Gun Hill In April 1958 Bryna Productions co purchased William Gibson s stage play Two For the Seesaw with Ray Stark s film production company Seven Arts Productions 160 The picture was to be co produced by the two companies with Douglas to play the lead 161 In mid April 1958 Melcher secured the releasing and distribution of Peter Vincent Music s The Vikings soundtrack through Dot Records but less than a month later it was announced that it would instead be released through United Artists Records 162 163 Two picture deal with Universal International Pictures 1958 1959 edit The forthcoming release of The Vikings was to conclude Bryna Productions six picture agreement with United Artists The Devil s Disciple acting as a supplementary picture already packed under Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions existing United Artists contract 164 In early May 1958 Bryna Productions signed a one picture deal with Universal International Pictures for the financing and distribution of the adventure film Viva Gringo 158 The original story and screenplay by Borden Chase revolved around an American gunslinger who gets caught up in Pancho Villa s revolution in Mexico With the script already completed the picture was to have a 2 500 000 budget for authentic location shooting in Mexico using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film The film was to be co produced between Lewis and Universal International Pictures vice president Edward Muhl and co star Douglas and Rock Hudson 165 Although the original Universal International Pictures deal only called for a single film Bryna Productions was already negotiating with the company s president Milton Rackmil for the financing and distribution of additional films as it had done with Loew at Metro Goldwyn Mayer 164 By mid May 1958 Bryna Productions had secured a second picture deal which was amended to the existing contract 166 The second Bryna Productions film to be financed and distributed by Universal International Pictures was to be Spartacus a historical epic about the Thracian gladiator adapted from Howard Fast s 1951 novel 158 Bryna Productions had hoped to make the film through United Artists but the company had turned the project down 144 When pitched to Universal International Pictures executives Spartacus was to be directed by Laurence Olivier with whom Douglas had become acquainted during the preparation for The Devil s Disciple co starring Olivier with an assemble cast of big names including Douglas Olivier Charles Laughton and Peter Ustinov 167 Because of the remarkable star power Bryna Productions was able to secure a 4 000 000 budget for the production of Spartacus which was scheduled to start filming in October 1958 also using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film immediately following the completion of The Devil s Disciple in the fall of 1958 158 Another project which Bryna Productions was developing in 1958 was Nikolai Narokov s newly translated Russian novel The Chains of Fear a story that takes place behind the Iron Curtain and was to star Ernest Borgnine 168 169 In late May 1958 Bryna Productions announced that Tony Curtis had been cast for A Most Contagious Game and that the film would be co produced by the actor s film production company Curtleigh Productions for Universal International Pictures 170 A Most Contagious Game was to be filmed in late 1958 170 The Vikings premiered in New York on June 12 1958 at dual cinema houses in New York City the Victoria Theatre and the Astor Theatre which were side by side and took up a full block on Broadway between West 45th Street and West 46th Street 171 172 To promote the event Bryna Productions commissioned the largest and costliest theater marquee billboard advertisement ever manufactured at the time a 261 foot long 22 825 square feet three dimensional electrically articulated spectacular that extended across the entire block hanging across the facade of both theaters 171 173 The billboard which included 6 000 light bulbs a 52 foot sail and eleven moving oars alone cost 105 000 to make which was included in United Artists 2 000 000 advertising and publicity campaign budget allocated for the picture during the summer of 1958 156 171 The film then premiered in Los Angeles on June 19 1958 at the Fox Wilshire Theater this movie house too was decorated with Norse theme articles for a cost of 4 000 followed by an after party for over 200 guests Hollywood celebrities and members of the press 172 174 The film premiered in London on July 8 1958 at the Leicester Square Theatre and was attended by Prince Philip 171 and the movie was also screened at a handful of European film festivals including the San Sebastian International Film Festival in Spain and the Brussels World Film Festival in Belgium 158 175 The Vikings became one of the most successful films of 1958 176 it was one of the biggest money makers of the year and was bestowed several awards 172 It received a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Drama the San Sebastian International Film Festival awarded it the Zulueta Prize and the Directors Guild of America nominated it for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures United Artists Records also released a soundtrack LP of Mario Nascimbene s original score performed by Hal Schaefer s Orchestra 158 175 The amount of Douglas focused publicity surrounding The Vikings in which the actor was given credit for practically making the film on his own lead to Bresler s departure as Producer and General Manager of Bryna Productions after three years with the company 172 Bresler explained that there was no enmity between him and Douglas but that he felt more like his stooge than his partner 172 Bresler noted that the issue lay more in the way filmmaking was written about by members of the press and perceived by the public once an actor became an executive producer and owner of an independent film production company which in turn led to important personnel in the film projects being left uncredited 172 Bresler noted that posters and advertisements for The Vikings read A Kirk Douglas Production while Bresler had in fact produced the film through Bryna Productions 176 Bresler immediately formed his own film production company Jerry Bresler Productions and offered Douglas the lead in either one of his first two planned productions Peer Gynt and The Old Man s Place 172 United Artists president Krim additionally revealed a year later that Douglas had deliberately exaggerated the film s cost as a publicity stunt as Hecht Lancaster Productions had done two years prior to publicize Trapeze 177 Douglas and Margulies through their press relations firm Public Relations Consultants had told the press that The Vikings had gone overbudget by more than a million dollars bringing the total cost of production publicity and releasing the film to over 6 000 000 Krim corrected the figure to a final cost of 3 400 000 based on an agreed budget of 3 250 000 177 In June 1958 Lewis announced that Bryna Productions had secured a financing and distribution deal with United Artists Television for the production of 39 episodes for the company s first television program The Vikings the title King of the Vikings had been dropped 172 Instead of filming another pilot which had failed to garner interest in 1957 the company instead screened The Vikings feature film to entice sponsors and explained that the television show would be shot in the same film studio in Germany and make use of the same sets costumes and props in which Bryna Productions had invested 300 000 156 178 Douglas remained in England after the London opening of The Vikings to work on The Devil s Disciple which began filming on July 28 1958 with director Alexander Mackendrick at Associated British Elstree Studios and on location at Dyrham Park Hertfordshire in England 159 172 177 Lead producer Hecht was however unhappy about Mackendrick s direction and replaced him with Guy Hamilton in August 1958 175 In July 1958 Bryna Productions announced that it had acquired Ray Bradbury s services as a teleplay writer for a new television series titled Report from Space or Report from Outer Space for National Broadcasting Company 179 The half hour episode program was to center around science fiction stories developed by Bradbury adapted mainly from stories published in his two novels The Illustrated Man and The Martian Chronicles 180 181 Bradbury was appointed Story Editor of the series and was to write teleplays for a quarter of each season s episodes with John Fulton producing the show 182 MCA tried to sell the show but there were no takers 175 In September 1958 while Douglas was still in England shooting The Devil s Disciple Bryna Productions vice president Lewis announced that the company would be filming a biopic of Simon Bolivar to be titled The Adventures of Simon Bolivar or Simon Bolivar the Liberator with Douglas likely to play the lead 183 Veteran film director producer Cecil B DeMille objected to Bryna Productions making a picture on the subject claiming it had reserved the rights to a similar story back in 1938 though DeMille had no current plans to develop the story 183 DeMille passed away only five months later and although Bryna Productions had hoped to film Simon Bolivar s story by the end of 1959 the project never came to fruition Lewis also appointed George M Cahan as producer director and Elmo Williams who had been second unit director on The Vikings as director and supervising editor of The Vikings television show 184 175 185 Cahan in turn hired Talbot Jennings Robert Blees George W George Lorraine Williams Bob Mitchell Fred Freiberger DeWitt Bodeen William Edmund Barrett and Sidney Morse to write the teleplays 186 In early November 1958 Bryna Productions announced its forthcoming production plans which included eleven films and three television series to be made for a total budget of 30 000 000 over the next three to four years 187 In addition to the previously announced Spartacus Viva Gringo The Adventures of Simon Bolivar Michael Strogoff The Brave Cowboy The Silent Gun A Most Contagious Game and The Shadow Bryna Productions added And the Rock Cried Out The Indian Wars and The Sun at Midnight to its film production schedule together budgeted at 25 000 000 187 And the Rock Cried Out an original science fiction novel by Ray Bradbury had been in circulation for some time British director Carol Reed had optioned the property in the mid 1950s and brought it over to Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions in May 1957 as his second directorial task for the company following Trapeze 188 Reed and Bradbury developed a screenplay together which was ultimately acquired by Bryna Productions in 1958 with plans to film on location in Mexico 189 190 The Sun at Midnight an original story and screenplay developed by Lewis was set in the far north amongst the Eskimos while The Indian Wars was a western 187 A Most Contagious Game was still under development with Curtis but was pushed back as his third picture for Bryna Productions following The Vikings and Spartacus while Verne s Michael Strogoff picture budget had been reduced from 15 000 000 to 7 500 000 187 The remaining 5 000 000 budget was to be divided between three television series the previously announced The Vikings and Report from Space and the newly announced The Indian Fighter adapted from Bryna Productions 1955 feature film set to star John Ireland 187 191 In January 1959 Bryna Productions three year option on A Most Contagious Game expired and the filming rights were scooped up by Dick Clark 192 Curtis would later option the property for development through his own film production company Curtis Enterprises that version of the film would also never be made 193 Spartacus began filming on January 5 1959 using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film in California with director Anthony Mann while Bryna Productions inaugural television show Tales of the Vikings setup production in black and white at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig Germany with Jerome Courtland in the lead both productions would film for fourteen months 187 194 195 On February 16 1959 after a full month of location shooting in Death Valley California followed by four days at Universal Studios Mann quit the production due to artistic differences Douglas quickly called Kubrick who had just been fired as director of One Eyed Jacks 196 to step in as Spartacus new director 197 36 In February 1959 Bryna Productions reported that Spartacus had gone 1 000 000 over its planned 5 000 000 budget 198 a figure that doubled to 2 000 000 by mid April 1957 199 The amount overspent had increased to 4 000 000 by mid July 200 and in August Douglas and Margulies through Public Relations Consultants reported that the company had spent twice its intended budget bringing the picture up to a cost of 10 000 000 and naming it the most expensive picture ever filmed in Hollywood 201 202 The press was however skeptical of these financial claims since Bryna Productions had already been exposed for exaggerating its production costs as a publicity stunt for The Vikings the year prior 177 200 201 During the filming of Spartacus at Universal Studios the production company invested in a 60 foot wide double tube neon sign which was logically installed on top of a Roman temple set that overlooked the Hollywood Freeway in San Fernando Valley in such a way that nearby drivers would have no choice but be informed of the upcoming film 203 Last Train from Gun Hill premiered in early July 1959 at the Capitol Theatre in New York City 199 200 The film did fairly well at the box office and Anthony Quinn was later nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance 204 Later that month Margulies was named executive producer of Tales of the Vikings and traveled to Germany to oversee the production with directors Cahan Williams Steve Previn and Michael Braun 204 Also in July 1959 Bryna Productions showed interest in filming Milton Berle and John Roeburt s novel Earthquake a drama about a group of individuals who get stranded in Mexico when an earthquake hits 205 The Devil s Disciple premiered on August 20 1959 at dual theaters like The Vikings the Normandie Theatre and the Astor Theatre in New York City by which time the film s co production company Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions had called it quits 201 204 The film later earned Olivier a BAFTA nomination for Best British Actor Tales of the Vikings did not premiere on a network but instead went straight to syndication with broadcasts starting in early September 1959 while additional shows continued to be filmed until February 1960 206 195 In April 1959 Bryna Productions announced that it had acquired Vechel Howard s novel Sundown at Crazy Hose scheduled to be filmed under the title Day of the Gun as part of a third one picture financing and distribution deal with Universal International Pictures 203 The film was given the same production qualities as the planned Viva Gringo also set to star Douglas and be filmed in widescreen and color 207 By December 1959 Viva Gringo had been abandoned in favor of Day of the Gun and Rock Hudson was assigned to the new picture with Robert Aldrich tied as director and Eugene Frenke and Lewis co producing 208 209 Negotiations with Columbia Pictures and additional deals with Universal International Pictures 1959 1961 edit Bryna Productions had earlier in 1958 negotiated with Columbia Pictures for a financing and distribution deal of a film titled Two Headed Spy based on a development of an earlier project titled The Syndicate 1 In September 1959 Douglas signed on to star and co produce in Richard Quine s drama Strangers When We Meet financed and to be distributed by Columbia Pictures 208 The film co starred Kim Novak and Ernie Kovacs and was the first movie produced through Quine s new film production company Quine Productions co producing with Bryna Productions 204 The Beach Boys a Hawaii based story scripted by Blake Edwards to co start Tony Curtis in early 1958 was announced as the second Columbia Pictures financed Bryna Productions film which would be co produced by Curtis Curtleigh Productions 1 210 211 Strangers When We Meet began filming in October 1959 using CinemaScope cameras and Eastman Color film in various locations of California 208 Douglas real life sons Peter and Eric had small parts in the film 212 In December 1959 Bryna Productions registered the titles War Between the Gods War of the Gods and War of Two Gods for upcoming projects 213 In mid February 1960 Bryna Productions announced that it would make the film Montezuma as part of a new Universal International Pictures one picture financing and distribution deal 214 215 The plot was to be a semi fictional story based partly on Bernal Diaz del Castillo s memoire The True History of the Conquest of New Spain revolving around Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes taking Aztec Emperor Moctezuma II prisoner and using the latter to conquest Mexico 215 216 Following Spartacus Viva Gringo and The Hot Eye of Heaven Montezuma was the company s fourth film to secure a deal with Universal International Pictures 215 Philip Yordan was originally announced as the screenwriter for the project though it was later revealed that he was fronting for Dalton Trumbo who had been working on several Bryna Productions projects 214 217 In early March 1960 John Huston was approached to direct Trumbo s Montezuma script 218 and the film was to be co produced by Lewis and Frenke 219 220 Douglas was to co star as Cortes with Rock Hudson playing the role of Moctezuma II following the pair s chemistry during the filming of The Hot Eye of Heaven 220 221 Montezuma was planned to be filmed through Brynaprod 217 218 entirely on location in Mexico during the first half of 1961 with a budget comparable to Spartacus which foresaw the cost of fully rebuilding a replica of Moctezuma s Tenochtitlan city 222 223 The film was already being advertised to the press as a superpic targeted for roadshow screenings 224 In early April 1960 Linn Unkefer was appointed Publicity Director of Public Relations Consultants by Margulies set to begin the promotion of the forthcoming film Day of the Gun while Margulies was tied up promoting Spartacus 222 Day of the Gun started three months of filming using Eastman Color film on location in Mexico on May 11 1960 225 226 As the film was being produced outside the United States Bryna Productions produced the movie through its Swiss subsidiary Brynaprod 222 By May 1960 the film s title had been changed to The Hot Eye of Heaven 227 Strangers When We Meet premiered on June 29 1960 at dual theater houses the Criterion Theatre in New York City and the Trans Lux Theatre in Washington D C 222 228 At screenings the movie was preceded by a half hour promotional film of the actual building of the house featured prominently in the picture 222 Spartacus had its world premiere on October 6 1960 at the DeMille Theatre in New York City using a special roadshow print Super Technirama 70 film and cameras projected on spherical curved screens with a magnetic six track stereophonic soundtrack 229 230 231 The film premiere was advertised by a 90 foot high 88 foot wide billboard marquee erected above the DeMille Theatre which utilized over 10 000 light bulbs 232 By this time Public Relations Consultants were reporting the film as having cost 12 000 000 229 233 The roadshow print then had local premiere screenings in Chicago Los Angeles Boston Detroit Philadelphia Cleveland Pittsburgh and Cincinnati with an additional fifteen premieres in foreign countries 229 Subsequent screenings once the film opened to general public theaters would be shown on 35 mm film prints with a monaural soundtrack Spartacus was one of the biggest box office success of 1960 1961 and 1962 and went on to win several accolades The film won four Academy Awards and was nominated for an additional two Peter Ustinov won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Russell Metty won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography Color Alexander Golitzen Eric Orbom Russell A Gausman and Julia Heron shared an Academy Award for Best Art Direction Set Decoration Color Arlington Valles and Bill Thomas shared an Academy Award for Best Costume Design Robert Lawrence was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Film Editing and Alex North was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture The film won a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for an addition five the film itself won a Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Drama Kubrick was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Director Olivier was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor Motion Picture Drama Ustinov and Woody Strode were each nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor and Alex North was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score Kubrick was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source Douglas was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic Performance and Ustinov was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance The Motion Picture Sound Editors awarded the film a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing Feature Film while the Writers Guild of America nominated Dalton Trumbo for an Award for Best Written American Drama In 2017 the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Spartacus culturally historically or aesthetically significant and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry Although Douglas hinted in interviews that he had no desire to produce a television series based on Spartacus a pilot episode titled The Wooden Sword was scripted by Cyril Hume dated April 1959 1 234 In November 1960 Bryna Production announced it would next be filming Edward Abbey s novel The Brave Cowboy in mid 1961 under the title The Last Hero for a modest budget of under 1 000 000 235 The picture was to star Douglas and be produced and directed by Lewis 236 at the time no financing or distribution deal had been set but Bryna Productions hoped to secure a deal with Universal International Pictures 235 Six picture deal with Universal International Pictures 1961 1963 edit In January 1961 after six years as Publicity Director of Bryna Productions and Vice President of Public Relations Consultants Margulies left the company to join Curtleigh Productions as its new vice president 237 Later that month it was reported that Douglas and Lewis were in negotiations with 20th Century Fox Film 238 but the pair instead secured a six picture financing and distribution deal between Universal International Pictures and the newly activated Bryna Productions subsidiary Joel Productions which had been registered in August 1956 and was named after Douglas second son Joel Douglas 239 240 The six picture deal retroactively included Montezuma and The Last Hero which had both been discussed with the major studio in 1960 239 241 In February 1961 Bryna Productions announced that it would be filming Montezuma in Hollywood instead of Mexico 242 While early announcements had given talk to opposition from the Mexican government and competition from Mexican film producers 243 the reason for switching to an American made film was motivated by President John F Kennedy s speech to buy American to combat the country s gold deficit 242 Director John Huston was then re writing the screenplay and the company was attempting to secure Marlon Brando for the role of Moctezuma II with a budget of 10 000 000 216 239 244 The company also announced that month that it had acquired Philip MacDonald s mystery novel The List of Adrian Messenger planned for an early 1962 shooting with Alec Coppel writing the screenplay 144 244 Lewis would produce the film as part of Universal International Pictures six picture financing and distribution deal 244 The Last Hero began filming with director David Miller on May 1 1961 using Panavision cameras with black and white film on location at Paradise Hills New Mexico followed by additional photography in the Sandia Mountains east of Albuquerque 144 241 245 246 Douglas eldest sixteen year old Michael who aspired to be an actor spent the summer working on the film doing various jobs to learn the business 247 The Hot Eye of Heaven was again retitled this time to The Last Sunset and premiered on June 8 1961 at dual theaters in New York City the Palace Theatre and the Trans Lux 85th Street Theatre 144 248 249 Although it received mixed reviews the film did well at the box office and Douglas was nominated for a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance After the completion of The Last Hero which was retitled Lonely Are the Brave Miller directed a new trailer for Spartacus the purpose of which was to promote a relaunch of the film a year after its inaugural release to smaller film houses 250 In mid August 1961 Lewis traveled to Mexico for two weeks of location scouting for Montezuma which had been retitled Savages 251 Upon his return Brynaprod announced that Savages would be filmed entirely in Mexico on location in Cuernavaca and at Churubusco Studios starting October 1961 252 253 Mexican producer Olallo Rubio was to be tied to the production and help in securing the crew necessary on the forthcoming multi million dollar epic picture 252 Rubio revealed that although the Mexican film production staff was eager to give Douglas and Lewis the red carpet treatment and push for the making of the film the Mexican Film Bureau still needed to approve of the script 250 In January 1962 Charles Schnee was recruited to rewrite The List of Adrian Messenger 254 255 A month later in early February 1962 it was announced that Joel Productions had purchased the stage and filming rights to Ken Kesey s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest less than a week after it had been published 256 The property was one of Douglas most treasured acquisition and on par with The Shadow would be the project which he attempted to bring to the screen for the longest period of time Douglas immediately planned to star in both the stage and screen versions of the novel and first hired William Peter Blatty then Dale Wasserman to adapt the stage play and screenplay 256 George Roy Hill was also to direct both the stage play and the filmed version with Joel Productions planning to enter the legitimate theater by producing the stage version prior to the motion picture 257 258 Also in February 1962 Bryna Productions and Rod Serling s film production company Cayuga Productions began looking into co producing a film together 259 The addition of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest to the company s schedule brought the total number of active productions to six which were planned to be filmed between 1962 and 1963 255 The company hoped to make The List of Adrian Messenger set to start in the spring of 1962 through Joel Productions One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest as a play in late 1962 followed by the film in early 1963 also through Joel Productions Montezuma scheduled to be filmed in late 1963 through Brynaprod indicating it would likely be filmed outside the United States and in Mexico once again and two additional films to be produced through Joel Productions without Douglas starring for release in 1962 and 1963 255 260 Lonely Are the Brave premiered at the Majestic Theatre in Huston Texas on May 24 1962 261 The film was a success and the Motion Picture Sound Editors awarded it a Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing Feature Film Douglas was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor and a Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance In early August 1962 Brynaprod announced that Nick Adams had been cast as Douglas co star in Montezuma 262 The List of Adrian Messenger began shooting with director John Huston at Elstree Studios in England in early September 1962 followed by select location filming in Europe 263 It was also announced in September 1962 that Douglas Lewis writer Rod Serling and director John Frankenheimer had formed a new partnership under Joel Productions flagship and together purchased the filming rights to Fletcher Knebel and Charles W Bailey II s novel Seven Days in May days before it was published 264 Seven Days in May to be co produced through Joel Productions Cayuga Productions and the newly formed John Frankenheimer Productions marked the first of eight pictures directed by Frankenheimer and produced by Lewis On December 24 1962 Peter Vincent Music was dissolved and merged into Bryna Productions 265 In February 1963 Joel Productions announced that Douglas Lancaster and Spencer Tracy would co star in Seven Days in May 266 A month later however the company revealed that Fredric March had replaced Tracy who exited the project after arguments over receiving sole top billing 267 Four picture and one play deal with Seven Arts Productions and formation of Eric Productions 1963 edit In mid April 1963 it was announced that Joel Productions had secured a four motion picture and one theatrical play financing deal with Seven Arts Productions the latter of which would also be responsible for securing the distribution of the films 268 While Seven Arts Productions had originally started as an independent film production company in the 1950s it had grown considerably and was then a non distributing financing unit funding outside pictures The pact started with Seven Days in May which was to be co produced by Joel Productions and Frankenheimer s new film production company John Frankenheimer Productions and be distributed by Paramount Pictures 269 The two companies would next stage the theatrical production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest in late 1963 followed by the film version planned to be directed by Sidney Lumet in early 1964 269 While the remaining two film property options in the agreement were not selected at the time of the announcement one was later revealed to be Seconds to be filmed in mid 1964 269 270 In early May 1963 Brynaprod announced that Montezuma would begin filming on location in Mexico with a budget of 11 000 000 in January 1964 271 Set to co star in the film were Douglas as Hernan Cortes Yul Brynner who was to co produce the picture as Moctezuma II and Sophia Loren as La Malinche the role of Cuauhtemoc was to be given to a noted Mexican actor 271 The film was to be the most expensive motion picture ever filmed in Mexico and its production had been approved by the Mexican government 271 Seven Days in May began shooting at Paramount Studios on May 15 1963 followed by several key locations in Washington D C San Diego California Arizona and Virginia 269 272 The List of Adrian Messenger premiered on May 29 1963 at dual theaters in New York City the Warner Theatre and the Trans Lux 52nd Street Theatre followed by a Memorial Day weekend nationwide opening 269 The film was highly publicized and did well at the box office it was also nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture 269 In July 1963 Joel Productions announced that it had acquired David Ely s novel Seconds for 175 000 in cooperation with John Frankenheimer Productions 273 270 274 The production team immediately hired Lewis John Carlino to write the screenplay with Douglas set to play the lead and planned for a March 1964 shooting 270 In mid October 1963 it was reported that Lewis and Frankenheimer would team up for a one off picture deal for The Mirisch Corporation 275 The Confessor was to star Anthony Perkins later replaced by Tony Curtis and Henry Fonda from a screenplay by Carlino based on Jackson Donahue s novel of the same name 275 It was to be Lewis first project outside of the Bryna Productions umbrella since 1956 the project would however never make it to film 275 Although the stage version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest was originally to be produced directly through Joel Productions Douglas and Lewis formed a new Bryna Productions subsidiary Eric Productions Incorporated named after Douglas fourth and youngest son Eric Douglas 276 277 The play was co produced by Seven Arts Productions which put up the 175 000 bankroll and Broadway theatrical producer David Merrick and was directed by Alex Segal 277 278 279 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest opened off Broadway at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven Connecticut on October 24 1963 running for three performances until October 26 1963 280 It then opened at the Shubert Theatre in Boston Massachusetts on October 28 1963 running for thirteen performances until November 9 1963 281 The troupe was originally planning to perform for a week at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit Michigan but the engagement was cancelled 282 The play finally opened on Broadway at the Cort Theatre on November 13 1963 where it ran for 82 performances until January 25 1964 276 Douglas had anticipated the play to do well and rented a luxurious apartment in Manhattan for his family during its run but the reviewers were divided Douglas universally received favorable praise for his performance but the play itself was generally disliked which in turn soured the major studios from wanting to invest in a film version 275 283 The remaining three pictures as part of the Seven Arts Productions deal would never be made Three picture deal with Paramount Pictures and formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions 1963 1965 edit In December 1963 Douglas company was restructured which resulted with the formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions 284 285 Lewis was welcomed as a full partner in the corporation as part of a seven year agreement with Douglas 286 The new film production unit was filed as a subsidiary of the newly established umbrella corporation Kirk Douglas Enterprises which oversaw the former assets of Bryna Productions Brynaprod Michael Productions Joel Productions Eric Productions Peter Vincent Music and Public Relations Consultants 287 Milton Shapiro formerly an executive for Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions and Secretary of Bryna Productions was appointed Treasurer of Kirk Douglas Enterprises 288 The new company announced a 15 000 000 1964 1965 program for the production of motion pictures stage plays television series and other commercial interests all to be made directly through Douglas and Lewis Productions 286 The films announced on the production schedule included Seconds to begin filming in June 1964 with director co producer Frankenheimer and starring Douglas One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest to start filming in late 1964 with Douglas in the lead and Montezuma which would cost between 10 12 000 000 and would be filmed in 1965 284 287 289 Ken Kesey was additionally commissioned to write an original story for screen adaptation 287 Douglas and Lewis Productions also planned to prolong the stage production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest with engagements on the West Coast and in England but with another actor replacing Douglas in the lead 287 Following exhibitor screenings during the first week of December 1963 Seven Days in May premiered on February 12 1964 270 275 The film had a special cameo appearance by Douglas and Lewis Productions secretary Maggie Smith whose picture appears on Frederic March s desk as the president s wife 290 Seven Days in May was the company s biggest success since Spartacus four years prior and the picture went on to win several accolades It was nominated for two Academy Awards one for Edmond O Brien for Best Actor in a Supporting Role another for Cary Odell and Edward G Boyle for Best Art Direction Set Decoration Black and White Edmond O Brien won a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor while Frederic March was nominated for Best Actor Motion Picture Drama Frankenheimer was nominated for Best Director and Jerry Goldsmith was nominated for Best Original Score The Writers Guild of America nominated Serling for Best Written American Drama while the Golden Laurel Awards nominated Lancaster for Top Male Dramatic Performance and the film itself for Top Drama Frankenheimer received a Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award for Best Picture of the Month and a Bodil Award for Best Non European Film and March won a David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor In late February 1964 Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that a three picture financing and distribution deal had been signed with Paramount Pictures Douglas was to star in two of the three properties the first of which was to be Seconds set to go into pre production in March 1964 once Douglas returned from a European trip promoting Seven Days in May 291 292 While the two other properties as part of the Paramount Pictures deal were not immediately set Montezuma was quickly added as the sophomore project while the third picture was to be determined at a later time 293 294 Plans to film Seconds were first delayed when Douglas accepted to appear in In Harm s Way for director producer Otto Preminger and again when he began filming The Heroes of Telemark for director Anthony Mann on location in Rjukan Norway 295 296 Meanwhile Lewis continued to develop film properties with Frankenheimer In November 1964 after months of development Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it would be co producing Grand Prix with John Frankenheimer Productions 297 Grand Prix a drama about the turbulent lives of racecar drivers was to be directed by Frankenheimer using the new Cinerama single lens process and based on an original screenplay by Carlino 297 Due to further outside commitments Douglas participation with Douglas and Lewis Productions was reduced considerably He spent most of 1965 filming in Europe first in France for producer Paul Graetz s Transcontinental Films production Is Paris Burning then in Italy and Israel for writer director producer Melville Shavelson s Cast a Giant Shadow which was co produced through Shavelson s Llenroc Productions John Wayne s Batjac Productions and the Mirisch brothers The Mirisch Corporation One picture deals with Metro Goldwyn Mayer and Warner Brothers Pictures 1965 1966 edit By February 1965 Rock Hudson had been signed for the lead in Seconds as a co production between Douglas and Lewis Productions John Frankenheimer Productions and Hudson s Gibraltar Productions 298 299 while Grand Prix was to star Douglas Lancaster and Shirley MacLaine as a co production between Douglas and Lewis Productions John Frankenheimer Productions and Lancaster s Norlan Productions 300 In March 1965 Lewis and Frankenheimer began the negotiation for a one picture financing and distribution deal for Grand Prix with Metro Goldwyn Mayer 301 It would take until September 1965 for the contracts to be signed 302 It was also announced in March 1965 that Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions had together purchased the filming rights to Robert Daley s photo documentary book The Cruel Sport 303 The property was planned to be made into a television pictures series to parallel Grand Prix both were to be filmed at the same time in the same manner as The Vikings and Tales of the Vikings had been produced 303 The television series however became questionable when John Sturges Alpha Productions and Steve McQueen s Solar Productions threatened a lawsuit claiming they had already purchased the rights to the novel and planned to make their own picture about auto racing 303 In May 1965 the production team signed an exclusive two year contract with all of the official European Grand Prix racing circuits and European Endurance racing circuits 304 The deal gave Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions the exclusive filming rights of the races and the use of the tracks during the off season 304 Seconds began filming on June 14 1965 at Paramount Studios followed by location shooting in Malibu and the Pacific Coast Highway in California and in New York City and Scarsdale in New York 305 306 By September 1965 when the Metro Goldwyn Mayer contract for Grand Prix was finally concluded Robert Alan Aurthur had replaced Carlino as screenwriter and Hudson was approached to play one of the leads in the 9 000 000 budgeted film 302 307 Douglas had pulled out from co starring in Grand Prix in favor of appearing in The Way West for Harold Hecht a western project which Hecht Lancaster Productions had been developing since late 1953 and The War Wagon for John Wayne s Batjac Productions 308 In October 1965 Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it had secured a one picture financing and distribution deal with Warner Brothers Pictures for The Hoods 309 The Hoods later released as The Brotherhood was an original screenplay by Carlino about the mafia and was to star Douglas 310 Lewis was to produce the film while Martin Ritt would direct and co produce through his film production company Martin Ritt Productions 310 In November 1965 Albert Maltz s original screenplay Bar Silver loosely based on Robert Lewis Stevenson s Treasure Island was completed and delivered to Bryna Productions 311 1 Bar Silver would go through several rewrites by Douglas Sid Fleischman and Richard Freed and titles including The Rascals and Scalawag before it was filmed Another property acquired around this time was Yukio Mishima s The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea with Carlino assigned to write the screenplay 1 Ten years later Carlino would direct the film with no ties to Bryna Productions Seconds premiered on May 16 1966 at the Cannes International Film Festival where it competed as the United States film entry and was nominated for a Palme D Or 312 The film later opened to American theaters in September 1966 and was well received by the press and public Hudson was nominated for a Bambi Award for Best Actor International while James Wong Howe was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Cinematography Black and White In 2015 the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed Seconds culturally historically or aesthetically significant and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry In February 1966 James Garner was signed as the American lead in Grand Prix through a deal where his independent film production company Cherokee Productions would co produce the film 313 The rest of the cast boasted international stars including Toshiro Mifune Yves Montand Eva Marie Saint and Brian Bedford 314 In April 1966 Douglas and Lewis Productions acquired James William Drought s novel The Gypsy Moths and hired David Heilweil to write the screenplay planning for Douglas to star in the picture 1 315 Grand Prix began filming on May 22 1966 using Cinerama single lens process cameras and Metrocolor film entirely on location in Europe 314 The authentic locations included the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo the Italian Grand Prix in Monza the Belgian Grand Prix in Spa the Dutch Grand Prix in Zandvoort the British Grand Prix in Kent the French Grand Prix in Reims the 24 Hours of Le Mans in Le Mans France the Targa Florio in Sicily and the Nurburgring 24 Hours in Nurburgring Germany 314 316 317 Meanwhile in the United States Douglas arranged a co production deal between Joel Productions and Malcolm Stuart s film production company Coldwater Productions to film Scalawag on location in Texas during the autumn of 1966 after wrapping up The Way West 318 319 Stuart also planned to move Coldwater Productions offices to Paramount Studios lot in order to facilitate work on the picture and be near Douglas and Lewis Productions 319 Departure of Edward Lewis and continuation of Bryna Productions 1966 1970 edit Once the shooting on Grand Prix was completed Douglas and Lewis cancelled their seven year pact and dissolved Douglas and Lewis Productions 320 321 The film would still be released with the pair s former company credited and as planned Joel Productions filed the copyrights for the picture Douglas continued to produce through Bryna Productions and Joel Productions while Lewis formed his own independent film production company Edward Lewis Productions Both teams retained offices in Paramount Studios lot 322 In mid December 1966 Douglas restructured the company and announced Lewis successor he appointed Eleanor Wolquitt as Administrative Head and Story Editor of Bryna Productions 323 Wolquitt who had previously worked for Four Star International Metro Goldwyn Mayer and 20th Century Fox Film was charged with finding and acquiring new story properties for development and assumed her new position on January 15 1967 324 322 Grand Prix had its gala world premiere simultaneously in New York City and Tokyo Japan on December 21 1966 307 The New York premiere was held at the Warner Cinerama Theatre while the West Coast premiere was held at the Pacific Cinerama Dome Theatre in Los Angeles the next day on December 22 1966 313 The film was presented in a special roadshow print projected using 70mm film on curved Cinerama screens with a six track stereophonic soundtrack 313 The film then opened to other Cinerama theaters in the world during late 1966 and early 1967 307 Grand Prix was a huge success and won three Academy Awards Franklin Milton won one for Best Sound Gordon Daniel won one for Best Effects Sound Effects and Fredric Steinkamp Henry Berman Stu Linder and Frank Santillo shared one for Best Film Editing Frankenheimer was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Steinkamp Berman Linder and Santillo were nominated for an American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature Film and Antonio Sabato and Jessica Walter were each nominated for Golden Globe Awards for Most Promising Newcomer In January 1967 Douglas and Lewis each announced their separate plans Edward Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions together signed a four picture financing and distribution deal with Metro Goldwyn Mayer for the production of several films which had been developed earlier during the Douglas and Lewis Productions era 325 Lewis and Frankenheimer went on to co produce five films together including The Fixer The Extraordinary Seaman and The Gypsy Moths as part of their Metro Goldwyn Mayer pact followed by I Walk the Line and The Horsemen as part of a subsequent pact with Columbia Pictures 325 326 Douglas held a press conference at his Beverly Hills home announcing that Bryna Productions immediate development schedule included three films the outdoor adventure swashbuckler Bar Silver to be filmed on location in Texas and Mexico the mafia story The Hoods to be filmed on location in New York and Sicily and the long anticipated adventure spectacle Montezuma to be filmed partly on location in Mexico and partly in studio in Hollywood 308 324 By this time Warner Brothers Pictures option on The Hoods had expired and Montezuma was no longer backed by Universal Pictures Bryna Productions still owed Paramount Pictures three films and Douglas hinted that at least one of the three films may go towards it 323 Douglas also announced that contrary to the past when Lewis would function in a production capacity on all Bryna Productions pictures each future project would involve the casting of a producer much in the same manner as choosing a director screenwriter or actor 323 In February 1967 Douglas traveled to Mexico in an attempt to finalize the production of Montezuma but was unsuccessful 323 In early May 1967 Bryna Productions and Martin Ritt Productions secured a 3 500 000 financing and distribution deal for The Brotherhood with Paramount Pictures 327 328 329 The picture started filming immediately following Douglas commitment with A Lovely Way to Die 328 on location in Sicily on September 14 1967 followed by New York City locations in October 1967 330 331 332 Typical of Ritt produced films the producer formed a single purpose film production subsidiary named after the film The Brotherhood Company to act as copyright holder 333 In the summer of 1967 Universal Pictures re released Spartacus accompanied by a massive promotional campaign 334 327 Unbeknownst to Douglas or past Bryna Productions executives who worked on the film Universal Pictures cut 23 minutes from the picture for its re release a move which Douglas expressed unfavorably of in interviews 327 Douglas was so displeased with Universal Pictures decision to cut the film without his knowledge learning of it only through friends and reading a Variety article that he refused to the see the edited cut 327 Douglas explained that had he been consulted certain logical scenes and sequences would have been removed rather than chopping bits and pieces at random and shortening scenes 327 In March 1968 Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Ron Cowen s drama play Summertree and hired the author to adapt it into a screenplay 335 336 At the same time Bryna Productions became affiliated with The Bronc Rider which screenwriters Ronald M Cohen and Dennis R Shryack had adapted from William Crawford s novel of the same name and were producing through their own film production company Ronden Productions 337 Douglas agreed to star in and co produce the film which then secured financing and distribution through Paramount Pictures 337 The project however fell out of favor when Cohen and Shryack began putting their attention towards The Good Guys and the Bad Guys which they had also written and were producing with Robert Mitchum starring In mid June 1968 Bryna Productions announced that it was planning an animated television film based on Jonathan Swift s classic novel Gulliver s Travels 338 The hour long film was to be a co production with animation studio Filmation and Douglas would narrate the picture 338 The film would also have original songs and be broadcast on television annually 338 In early July 1968 Norman Kurland was appointed Executive Assistant of Bryna Productions with the job of developing new film projects for the company 339 340 Later that month Bryna Productions secured a financing and distribution deal for Summertree with Columbia Pictures and scheduled to film the story in early 1969 341 In mid December 1968 Douglas signed a starring and co production financing and distribution deal for One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest between Bryna Productions and film producer Joseph E Levine s Avco Embassy Pictures also set to shoot in 1969 342 The Brotherhood opened in December 1968 and was generally well received during previews 343 Carlino was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Original Screenplay Douglas delayed the filming of Bryna Productions projects due to the immediate filming schedule on his next two starring pictures Elia Kazan s The Arrangement and Joseph L Mankiewicz s There Was a Crooked Man which were filmed between October 1968 and July 1969 344 345 In May 1969 Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Pierre Boulle s novel The Photographer a thriller about a photographer that becomes involved with a plot to assassinate the president which had been translated by Xan Fielding the year prior and published for the English market 346 That year Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to Jules Verne s novel The Lighthouse at the End of the World a survivalist adventure story that takes place on an isolated island 347 1 The project was assigned to screenwriter Tom Rowe with plans for filming on location in Spain in 1970 with Douglas in the lead 347 348 In 1969 Douglas began donating Bryna Productions archival paperwork as well as his personal film related memorabilia to the Wisconsin Historical Society s Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research located on the campus of the University of Wisconsin Madison in Madison Wisconsin 1 349 The donations continued yearly until 1981 and included such material as working and final scripts casting notes actor crew and studio contracts salaries correspondence advertisements and financial records 1 Merger into The Bryna Company 1970 1971 edit Over the years Bryna Productions had occasionally been referred to by the press as the Bryna company but in January 1970 it started to regularly appear under the name The Bryna Company with an official announcement rolling out to the press in late May 1970 350 351 Douglas opted to update the company s name when he envisioned welcoming his family into the corporate structure and made his wife Anne Douglas Vice President and Treasurer of The Bryna Company and Joan Eisleben Secretary of The Bryna Company 352 353 By this time 26 year old Michael Douglas had worked on Joel Productions Lonely Are the Brave appeared in some uncredited walk on parts in Eric Productions stage play One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest and worked behind the scenes on non produced Kirk Douglas starrers like Cast a Giant Shadow and The Heroes of Telemark 354 Michael who was set to star in Summertree and had already formed his own independent film production company on November 24 1969 Bigstick Productions Limited 355 344 356 23 year old Joel Douglas had not participated in his father s film career but would later take part in several projects as production manager and producer 15 year old Peter Douglas had already made cameo appearances in Brynaprod s The Vikings and Bryna Productions Strangers When We Meet and would go on to head The Bryna Company in the 1980s 12 year old Eric Douglas had also made a cameo appearance in Strangers When We Meet and would appear in Bryna Productions upcoming film A Gunfight but ultimately took little interest in the family s film production company Buydens had done several jobs for the company including heading the casting department publicity and editing 357 358 Though the name The Bryna Company was used for many months prior it was only officially registered on October 29 1970 while Kirk Douglas was in Spain filming The Light at the Edge of the World 265 90 The new company was formed by merging Bryna Productions and Joel Productions together into a single entity by way of renaming Joel Productions to The Bryna Company and then merging Bryna Productions into The Bryna Company 265 90 As such the Douglases and the press continued to use and refer to the companies alternatively as Bryna Productions Joel Productions and The Bryna Company for most of 1970 and into 1971 as pre merger films were released In January 1970 Bryna Productions announced that it had three active productions which would be filmed before the end of the year Summertree The Light at the Edge of the World and A Gunfight 359 Summertree was set to start filming on March 16 1970 on location in California co starring Michael Douglas Brenda Vaccaro and Jack Warden and with Anthony Newly directing 359 360 The Light at the Edge of the World was set to start filming on location in Spain in March 1970 co starring Kirk Douglas James Mason Virna Lisi and Alan Bates and with director Kevin Billington 348 361 while A Gunfight a western in which Kirk Douglas agreed to co produce and co star with country singer Johnny Cash for producers Harold Jack Bloom and Ronald Lubin would be filmed with director Lamont Johnson on location in Spain in June 1970 immediately following the wrap up of The Light at the Edge of the World 362 363 A Gunfight was to be a co production of Bryna Productions which Douglas ultimately filed through Joel Productions Blooms Thoroughbred Productions and Lubin s Harvest Productions 364 365 366 Summertree began filming as scheduled using new Synctrol wireless cameras on location in Pasadena California 367 368 When the film wrapped up ahead of schedule Newly was asked to direct three more films for Bryna Productions 369 The Light at the Edge of the World and A Gunfight were however both delayed due to financing and the filming order was switched neither film had yet secured a distribution deal A Gunfight was originally to be filmed entirely in Spain but when the New Mexico based Jicarilla Apache Indian tribe put up 2 000 000 to finance the picture superseding the 175 000 investment the film had garnered from European investors and outbidding Metro Goldwyn Mayer United Artists and Harry Saltzman s Lowndes Productions the location was moved to Mexico 370 371 The Mexican Film Bureau quickly objected to shooting in their country due to the film s duel scene which they felt presented a false image of Mexico in the 1800s a time when duels were outlawed 372 The local was then changed from Mexico to a Texas border town 364 The Jicarilla Apache then imposed that the film be shot entirely in New Mexico and a full western town and sets were built outside of Santa Fe where filming began in May 1970 366 371 Through further negotiations the financier eventually allowed the production company to film for a week at the Ocana bullfighting ring in Spain 366 370 373 The picture was still filming when Paramount Pictures secured the film s distribution for the United States and Canada in mid July 1970 366 374 The 4 000 000 The Light at the Edge of the World went through several investors and co producing companies before securing a Spanish financier and the picture finally made it into production 375 Bryna Productions and Joel Productions were each listed by the press during the making of the film although Brynaprod which had been formed to produce films outside the United States was never attached In early February 1970 Alexander Salkind signed on as co producer through his Swiss independent film production company Vulcano Film Handels 376 Salkind and his son Ilya Salkind would ultimately co produce The Light at the Edge of the World through two of their many imprints and subsidiaries first through Spanish company Barcarola then through Leicthenstein company Triumfilm Anstalt 181 377 Salkind also recycled several of the originally cast actors for his other film productions like James Mason in Kill and Virna Lisi in Bluebeard when Yul Brynner and Samantha Eggar were re cast as co stars 378 379 In late May 1970 Angelo Rizzoli s Italian independent film production company Rizzoli Films became attached to the project and in September 1970 Bryna Productions was negotiating a European distribution deal with Metro Goldwyn Mayer 361 379 375 Alfredo Matas Spanish company Jet Films also participated on the project 181 380 381 In late October 1970 Bryna Productions secured an American distribution deal for The Light at the Edge of the World with National General Pictures and filming began using Panavision cameras and Eastmancolor film on location in Spain 181 382 The locals extended through Colmenar Viejo in Madrid Cap de Creus in Cadaques Girona Catalonia La Manga del Mar Menor in Murcia Javea in Alicante Valencia and at the Club Mediterranee 181 383 In mid December 1970 Joel Productions bought out Wasserman s remaining interests in his screenplay of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest hoping to film it in the coming year with further development Wasserman retained the rights to the play and any potential television version 384 By February 1971 Bryna Productions had negotiated a co producing and co starring deal for Douglas to appear in a Euro spy comedy film adaptation of George Marton and Tibor Meray s novel Catch Me a Spy 385 386 The screenplay was written by Ian La Frenais and Dick Clement and featured French actress Marlene Jobert and British actors Trevor Howard and Tom Courtenay 386 The film s title was first changed to Fabienne then to Keep Your Fingers Crossed and finally To Catch a Spy 387 and was co produced by Nat Wachsberger s two film production companies England based Ludgate Films and France based Capitole Films as well as Pierre Braunberger s French film production company Les Films de la Pleiade 388 389 390 To Cath a Spy began filming using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film on March 22 1971 on location in London England and Oban Scotland with director Dick Clement 390 391 392 In May 1971 Rank Film Distributors picked up the option to distribute To Catch a Spy in the United Kingdom while Films Around the World would do the same for the American market 393 Once filming was completed on To Catch a Spy Douglas and Wachsberger made plans to co produce at least two more films together through The Bryna Company Ludgate Films and Capitole Films both were to be made in Europe 394 Bryna Productions had planned to produce One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest after Douglas returned to the United States in May 1971 which was to be shot entirely in Hollywood before the end of the year 392 395 Douglas was debating the idea of starring in the film and strongly considered directing it instead looking to cast Lee Grant or Colleen Dewhurst in the role of Nurse Mildred Ratched 396 The film was delayed yet again and by October 1971 Kirk had passed the project on to his son Michael who in turn dedicated several more years developing the film through The Bryna Company 397 398 Bryna Productions had a record setting four pictures released within a six month period in mid 1971 and with the added re release promotion of Walt Disney Productions 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea brought Douglas name up to five films on the screen 375 A Gunfight which featured Eric Douglas 399 had its world premiere on May 27 1971 at Leows Theater in Albuquerque New Mexico 400 while Summertree opened later that month 401 The Light at the Edge of the World held its world premiere on June 16 1971 at six different theaters in the Washington D C Baltimore Maryland area 375 402 The film earned Fernando Rey a Fotogramas de Plata nomination for Best Spanish Movie Performer To Catch a Spy opened in London in October 1971 403 Two picture deal with Paramount Pictures 1972 1975 edit By 1972 The Bryna Company had set up its office at 141 El Camino Drive in Beverly Hills California 404 formerly the headquarters of Four Star Productions and the Producers Guild of America 405 406 Douglas had anticipated filming four The Bryna Company projects in the United States between mid 1971 and through 1972 but was unable to secure American financing for the projects 381 Instead he spent fourteen months shooting in Europe and the United Kingdom 395 407 In March 1972 The Bryna Company announced that Douglas would make his directorial debut with the 1 250 000 adventure film Scalawag due to be filmed on location in Yugoslavia during the summer of 1972 408 409 Douglas planned to make the film as a family unit securing his wife Anne Douglas as producer his son Peter Douglas as still photographer his son Eric Douglas as producer s assistant and their Labrador Retriever Shaft Douglas cast as Beau in the picture Kirk Douglas himself acted directed co produced and co wrote the picture 410 411 Michael Douglas who was working on One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest 412 had hoped to join the family on location but remained in California after being cast as co star of American Broadcasting Company s new crime television series The Streets of San Francisco which began shooting in late March 1972 and went on through most of the year 413 414 Filming on Scalawag started on June 19 1972 in Starigrad Paklenica Yugoslavia modern day Paklenica Croatia an obscure town located between the Adriatic coast and the Velebit mountains 415 416 417 When The Bryna Company cast and crew arrived the area was so remote that it was not listed on any map but within weeks of their arrival the town had been inundated by tourists who wanted to be near Hollywood stars 416 Scalawag was the first film produced after the official renaming of The Bryna Company and was made in cooperation with Yugoslavia s Inex Film and Italy s Oceania Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografiche film production companies 418 The film starred Kirk Douglas Mark Lester Lesley Anne Down Neville Brand and Danny DeVito one of Michael Douglas old friends 419 The film also featured noted comic actor Mel Blanc who voiced the drunken parrot 420 Blanc would shortly after hire Joel Douglas as an executive for his media company Blanc Communications Corporation developing and producing commercials 421 422 Joel Douglas would later head The Douglas Company another Kirk Douglas subsidiary 423 Immediately after filming wrapped on Scalawag the Douglas family travelled to London England for The Bryna Company s co production of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 424 The musical adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson s novel had been announced in late April 1972 when producers Douglas Burt Rosen and David Winters hired Lionel Bart to compose new numbers for the production 425 424 The picture was filmed at Shepperton Studios in London with Joel Douglas as production coordinator and featured Kirk Douglas Michael Redgrave Susan Hampshire Susan George Donald Pleasence and Stanley Holloway 407 In January 1973 Michael Douglas announced that One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest would be financed by Fantasy Films in a co production deal with The Bryna Company 398 426 Kirk Douglas was to act as executive producer while Michael Douglas and Fantasy Films Saul Zaentz would act as producers 427 428 Kirk Douglas was hoping to play one of the featured roles in the film while Michael Douglas scoured to find a lead 429 430 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde premiered on National Broadcasting Company on March 7 1973 sponsored by Timex and was scheduled to be released theatrically in Europe and the United Kingdom afterwards 431 407 The television film was a success and it was nominated for three Primetime Emmy Awards Irwin Kostal was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction of a Variety Musical or Dramatic Program Emma Porteous was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design and Neville Smallwood was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Makeup In late March 1973 Michael Douglas traveled to Olympia Washington to scout locations for One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest aiming for the picture to be filmed at the Northern State Hospital in Sedro Woolley Washington 432 In May 1973 Kirk Douglas and Frank Yablans inked a two picture contract between The Bryna Company and Paramount Pictures 433 The deal called for the worldwide distribution of Scalawag as well as a promissory financing of 2 000 000 and the worldwide distribution of The Bryna Company s next motion picture Posse 434 435 The financing of the secondary film by Paramount Pictures was conditional to The Bryna Company raising half of the budget on their own Paramount Pictures was only guaranteeing their 1 000 000 investment if The Bryna Company could also put up 1 000 000 435 Posse a psychological western was to be another The Bryna Company family made picture with Kirk Douglas directing Anne Douglas producing Joel Douglas assistant producer and Peter Douglas post production supervisor 434 436 The screenplay was written by Christopher Knopf and William Roberts from Larry Cohen s short story The Train 437 When announced the film was to start shooting in January 1974 in the United States with Kirk Douglas and Bruce Dern co starring 438 439 358 In early June 1973 Michael Douglas announced that The Bryna Company would be filming its 2 000 000 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest on location at Oregon State Hospital in Salem Oregon during the late summer and early fall of 1973 440 Ken Kesey was hired to re write the screenplay from his own novel while Hal Ashby was secured to direct the film 441 437 it was Ashby s idea to cast Jack Nicholson in the lead after working with the actor on The Last Detail though the producers were also considering Stacy Keach James Caan and Bruce Dern for the part 442 443 By September 1973 screenplay disputes and the author s refusal to submit his final script and sign the contract forced the filming to be pushed back to January 1974 screenwriter Lawrence Hauben was hired to rewrite the script and Milos Forman came on as director 444 445 446 Scalawag premiered on October 16 1973 in six key cities Chicago Illinois Louisville Kentucky Albany New York Worcester Massachusetts Waterloo Iowa and Miami Florida 447 In March 1974 Peter Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna International a photographic service company 448 The Bryna Company s two 1974 productions One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest and Posse were both pushed back from their planned early 1974 filming dates Michael Douglas production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest was first pushed back to mid March 1974 then to May 1974 and then again to September 1974 442 449 450 The reason was stated to be due to scheduling conflicts 443 451 By September 1974 the film had again been pushed back to January 1975 452 In July 1974 Phil Feldman was appointed executive producer of Posse and Howie Pine was hired as production manager for the shooting 453 Posse was filmed between September 23 and November 9 1974 454 using Panavision cameras with Technicolor film on location at Old Tucson Studios as well as in Florence and Sabino Canyon Arizona 455 The film also featured Bo Hopkins James Stacy and Luke Askew 456 457 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest was finally filmed from January to March 1975 at Oregon State Hospital with Joel Douglas serving as unit production manager 458 459 While the film was still shooting Michael Douglas secured a one picture distribution deal with United Artists 460 Posse opened to theaters in mid May 1975 accompanied by Kirk Douglas doing a promotional tour to publicize the film 461 The picture s opening credit sequence announced that the film was a The Bryna Company production but its copyrights were filled through Zeeuwse Maatschappij Naamloze Vennootschap one of Paramount Pictures many Curacao based subsidiaries under executive production manager Lindsley Parsons Jr 462 Kirk Douglas was nominated for a Golden Berlin Bear award at Berlin International Film Festival for his performance in Posse In mid September 1975 Paramount Pictures re released Scalawag under the title Jamie s Treasure Hunt 463 The film was screened in theaters as part of weekend matinee events for families and children and the studio s new promotional campaign shifted the focus of the picture from Douglas s Peg Leg character to Mark Lester s Jamie character 463 464 In mid October 1975 The Bryna Company announced that it would make a two hour television special depicting the life and career of actor John Barrymore 465 Barrymore was to be financed and presented by National Broadcasting Company and Sidney Michaels was hired to write the teleplay 465 Kirk Douglas planned to play the lead and it was to be Peter Douglas inaugural project as a producer 465 Filming was scheduled to start in March 1976 and was to be followed by five other video projects later that year as part of the company s new television division 465 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest premiered on November 19 1975 at the Regent Theatre in Westwood Los Angeles California and the next day headlined the Chicago International Film Festival where it was nominated for a Gold Hugo Award for Best Feature 466 467 Once released neither the film s credits nor its publicity featured any mention of The Bryna Company nor of Bigstick Productions though the film had been developed and co produced by both entities in partnership with Fantasy Films 468 Michael Douglas had been striving to detach himself from the Kirk Douglas son tag which had been affixed to him in the 1960s and wanted to establish his own identity 469 401 He had achieved considerable success with The Streets of San Francisco and was planning to continue producing films outside of The Bryna Company organization 469 Afraid of nepotism 470 471 and wanting to establish himself as a producer outside of his father s company 472 the film s copyrights were instead filed through Curacao based imprint Naamloze Vennootschap Zwaluw a corporation registered by Michael Douglas on December 6 1974 473 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest was a huge critical and box office success earning a slew of awards and nominations across the globe The film won an Academy Award for Best Picture Jack Nicholson won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role Louise Fletcher won an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role Milos Forman won an Academy Award for Best Director Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Academy Awards for Best Writing Screenplay Adapted From Other Material Brad Dourif was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Haskell Wexler and Bill Butler were nominated for Academy Awards for Best Cinematography Richard Chew Lynzee Klingman and Sheldon Kahn were nominated for Academy Awards for Best Editing and Jack Nitzsche was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music Original Dramatic Score The film won a Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Drama Jack Nicholson won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama Louise Fletcher won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama Brad Dourif won a Golden Globe Award for Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture Male Milos Forman won a Golden Globe Award for Best Director Motion Picture and Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Golden Globe Awards for Best Screenplay Motion Picture The film won a BAFTA Award for Best Film Jack Nicholson won a BAFTA Award for Best Actor Louise Fletcher won a BAFTA Award for Best Actress Brad Dourif won a BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor Milos Forman won a BAFTA Award for Best Direction Richard Chew Lynzee Klingman and Sheldon Kahn won BAFTA Awards for Best Film Editing Haskell Wexler Bill Butler and William A Fraker were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Cinematography Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Screenplay Mary McGlone Robert R Rutledge Veronica Selver Larry Jost and Mark Berger were nominated for BAFTA Awards for Best Sound Track and Jack Nitzsche was nominated for BAFTA s Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music Jack Nitzsche was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special Milos Forman won a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures while assistant directors Irby Smith and William Saint John and unit production manager Joel Douglas were given plaques by the same organization Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won Writers Guild of America Awards for Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium The film won a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Picture a People s Choice Award for Favorite Motion Picture and a National Board of Review Top Ten Films Jack Nicholson won a National Board of Review Award for Best Actor a National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor and a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor while Louise Fletcher was nominated for a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress Milos Forman won a Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director Richard Chew Sheldon Kahn and Lynzee Klingman were nominated for Eddie Awards for Best Edited Feature Film The film won a Bodil Award for Best Non European Film and a Golden Screen Award and was nominated for a Cesar Award for Best Foreign Film and a Turkish Film Critics Association Award for Best Foreign Film Milos Forman won a Reader s Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film Director a David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Director and a Silver Ribbon Award for Best Foreign Director Jack Nicholson won a Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actor and David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor In 1993 the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest culturally historically or aesthetically significant and selected it for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry Michael and Peter Douglas take over 1976 1982 edit On January 9 1976 Brynaprod was surrendered and on June 24 1976 Michael Productions was surrendered their remaining interests were merged into The Bryna Company 474 475 In late July 1976 The Bryna Company announced that it would make Ray Bradbury s Something Wicked This Way Comes a fantasy story about two boys in a small town who encounter strange happenings at a travelling carnival 476 477 The project was headed by Peter Douglas who hired Bradbury to adapt his novel into a screenplay and secured a 6 000 000 financing and distribution deal with Paramount Pictures 478 479 Something Wicked This Way Comes was to be co produced by Hank Moonjean and filming was to start on October 1 1976 on location in Northern California and the Midwest under the direction of Jack Clayton 480 481 Kirk Douglas was hoping to play the role of Charles Halloway the father in the story 482 The project like One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest would stall for several years before being filmed 483 Filming was pushed back to January 1 1977 then to March 1 1977 484 In mid September 1976 Kirk Douglas revealed plans to return to the stage and star in Howard Fast s Thomas Paine biographical one man show Citizen Tom Paine 485 The play was to be a co production between The Bryna Company and producers Don Gregory and Mike Merrick s Dome Productions 486 Charles Nelson Reilly was originally hired to direct the show but he was replaced by Arvin Brown 485 The play was to begin rehearsals on December 6 1976 and was booked to open on January 11 1977 at The Playhouse in Wilmington Delaware followed by engagements in Memphis Tennessee Cleveland Ohio Boston Massachusetts Philadelphia Pennsylvania New York City and Los Angeles 486 The production was delayed when Kirk Douglas suffered throat problems in early December 1976 personal differences between the producers later lead to the cancellation of the play 487 488 In early November 1976 The Bryna Company announced that Peter Douglas would produce The Yellow Jersey a film about the French Tour de France bicycle race 489 490 Peter Douglas offered the lead parts to Bruce Dern and Charlotte Rampling 491 A month later Kirk Douglas held a press conference to announce that he would retire from producing and directing in order to focus solely on acting 492 Kirk Douglas was to remain President of The Bryna Company but all of the day to day activities including the development and production of new pictures was passed on to his sons Michael and Peter who would co head the company 482 In mid January 1977 Paramount Pictures announced that it had dropped its plans to finance and distribute Something Wicked This Way Comes after having pushed back the filming date twice 484 It was later revealed that the project had been collateral damage from Paramount Pictures President David V Picker s feud with Board Chairman Barry Diller 181 484 Michael Douglas began working on the production of The China Syndrome in 1977 a thriller about the threat of a nuclear plant meltdown while Peter Douglas began working on the production of The Final Countdown a science fiction war picture about a nuclear ship that enters a time warp and is thrown back to World War II in 1941 493 429 The China Syndrome was to co star Michael Douglas Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon and was to be co produced by Douglas in cooperation with Fonda s film production company IPC Films 493 494 In June 1977 The Bryna Company announced that Something Wicked This Way Comes would be filmed at Bavaria Studios in Munich Germany as a co production between Geria Film Productions and Bavaria Film 495 The 4 000 000 budgeted film was to start shooting in the fall of 1977 and distribution had already been secured with 20th Century Fox Film for the United States and Canada and CS Filmverleih in Germany 495 By 1978 Michael Douglas had departed from The Bryna Company and took with him The China Syndrome project to develop exclusively through his own imprint Bigstick Productions 494 496 Michael opted to leave his father s company in order to further his independence and individual identity 358 nevertheless like his father he would go on to head a series of successful independent film production companies including El Corazon Producciones 1983 1986 497 The Stone Group 1984 1986 497 Mercury Douglas Films 1986 1988 497 Stonebridge Entertainment 1988 1994 498 Douglas Reuther Productions 1994 1997 499 and Further Films 1997 present 500 as well as the magazine L A Style 501 the music publishing company Third Stone Music 1989 1994 502 and the record label Third Stone Records 1990 1994 502 On August 8 1978 Peter Douglas formed his own independent film production company Vincent Pictures hoping to further his independence and individual identity 503 504 505 On December 14 1978 Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Cameron Productions Incorporated named after his first grandson Cameron Douglas the company was registered the day after his birth 506 The Final Countdown went through a team of writers including Thomas Hunter Peter Powell David Ambrose and Gerry Davis and was turned down by every major Hollywood film studio 507 508 In early May 1979 The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a 7 000 000 financing deal for The Final Countdown with Arthur Guinness Son and Company Limited s film financing subsidiary Film Finance Group 509 The picture was to be co produced by Film Finance Group s president Richard Rogers St Johns through its film production division Aspen Productions 510 Filming began using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film with Dolby Stereophonic sound on May 23 1979 on location aboard the U S S Nimitz in Norfolk Virginia followed by Miami Florida and Pearl Harbor Hawaii 511 512 The film co starred Kirk Douglas Martin Sheen James Farentino and Katharine Ross and was directed by Don Taylor 512 Peter Douglas originally objected to the casting of his father in The Final Countdown his first picture as a producer fearing that it would impart the idea of nepotism 505 It was only once he felt that Kirk Douglas was truly right for the part that he consented to working with his father 505 The Final Countdown ultimately cost 12 000 000 to produce and United Artists agreed to distribute it after seeing only several minutes of early footage 507 The film s copyrights were filed through Polyc International Besloten Vennootschap a Dutch subsidiary of Film Finance Group 510 The Final Countdown was released to theaters on August 1 1980 and was a huge financial success earning more than 3 000 000 during its opening weekend 505 513 The film won a Golden Screen Award and was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film Kirk Douglas was also nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Actor On December 13 1980 Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna Industries Incorporated a holding corporation based in Texas naming Anne Douglas as Secretary 514 In July 1981 The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a 13 500 000 financing co producing and distribution deal for Something Wicked This Way Comes with Walt Disney Productions and Buena Vista 515 The Disney company had originally approach Peter Douglas with offers to buy out the property but The Bryna Company was so interested in producing the picture that it held out until a co production deal could be set 181 Other financing and co producing deals with Avco Embassy Pictures and director John Carpenter were avoided for similar reasons 181 Filming on Something Wicked This Way Comes began on September 28 1981 using Panavision s Panaflex cameras and Technicolor film with Dolby Stereophonic sound on location at Walt Disney Productions Golden Oak Ranch in Santa Clarita California and Walt Disney Studios in Burbank California a second unit also filmed landscapes in Vermont 515 516 The film starred Jason Robards Diane Ladd and Jonathan Pryce and was directed by Jack Clayton 515 Anne Douglas presidency 1982 1985 edit In 1982 Peter Douglas took a hiatus from working at The Bryna Company to properly launch his independent film production company Vincent Pictures securing a financing and distribution deal for the comedy film Fletch with Universal Pictures 517 518 Part of the lengthy development of the Vincent Pictures Universal Pictures deal included securing the principal cast and crew to produce any potential sequels which later developed as Fletch Lives 517 In early August 1982 Kirk Douglas announced that he had appointed his wife Anne Douglas as President of The Bryna Company 519 Buydens revealed that The Bryna Company would increase its film production schedule and had acquired the filming rights to two new novels Frank Rooney s Shadow of God a religious thriller about a nun being stalked by a fanatic priest and Mary Higgins Clark s A Cry in the Night a suspense mystery about a single mother who falls in love and marries an unstable man 519 352 In November 1982 Kirk Douglas expressed a desire to produce a motion picture that included himself and his four sons Kirk Michael and Eric were to act in the picture with Joel as production manager and Peter producing 520 20 years later Michael Douglas wound up producing It Runs in the Family through his company Further Films the movie co starred Kirk Michael Cameron Michael s son and Diana Douglas Kirk s first wife and Michael s mother and was co produced by Michael and Joel Something Wicked This Way Comes opened on April 29 1983 521 While it was generally well received by critics the film failed to recoup its increased 20 000 000 budget at the box office it has since become a cult film 516 423 The Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy amp Horror Films awarded the film a Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film and Bradbury a Saturn Award for Best Writing Jonathan Pryce was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor James Horner was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Music Ruth Myers was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Costumes Lee Dyer was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects and Gary Liddiard and James R Scribner were nominated for Saturn Awards for Best Make Up Jack Clayton was nominated for the Grand Prize at the Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival and Clayton and Bradbury were together nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation In mid June 1983 The Bryna Company announced that it would be filming Draw a comedy western about an aging outlaw and a drunken ex sheriff co starring Kirk Douglas James Coburn and Alexandra Bastedo 522 At the Banff Television Festival held at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity on August 15 1983 Canadian producer Harold Greenberg announced that he would be co producing the 4 200 000 picture through his film production company Astral Film Productions 523 The Stanley Mann script had been in development for seven years and was co financed by HBO Premiere Films and the Alberta Motion Picture Development Corporation 524 525 526 Filming began on August 16 1983 with six weeks on location at Fort Edmonton Alberta followed by another week in Drumheller Alberta with director Steven Hilliard Stern 523 525 Upon returning to the United States in late 1983 Kirk Douglas announced that The Bryna Company would next produce Stanley West s novel Amos a suspense drama about a former baseball coach who uncovers a conspiracy in the nursing home in which he resides as a television film for Columbia Broadcasting System 527 528 The producers originally announced Draw as a theatrical film with plans for Home Box Office to host the United States television premiere afterwards 523 525 Draw had its world premiere at the Banff Television Festival in Alberta Canada on May 20 1984 followed by its United States premiere on July 15 1984 broadcast on Home Box Office 526 529 530 The film earned several nominations at the Canadian Genie Awards ceremony in 1985 Linda Sorensen won a Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role Laszlo George was nominated for Genie Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography Bill Brodie was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Achievement in Art Direction Jim Hopkins was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Achievement in Sound Editing and Joe Grimaldi Dino Pigat Richard Lightstone and Austin Grimaldi were nominated for Genie Awards for Best Achievement in Overall Sound Ron Wisman was also nominated for a CableACE Award for Film Editing Following the success of Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas action adventure film production Romancing the Stone in the spring of 1984 the Douglases attempted to find an action packed violence film to co star Kirk Douglas and Michael Douglas 531 The film was to be a co production between Kirk Douglas Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas with plans for filming in 1985 but the right vehicle never came up 531 Meanwhile Amos was to be co produced by Kirk Douglas and Peter Douglas starring Kirk Douglas and with Eric Douglas portraying the character s younger self in flashback scenes Kirk Douglas ended up portraying his own flashback sequences 531 The filming of Amos was delayed while Peter Douglas wrapped up Fletch In July 1984 The Bryna Company announced that it would remake Seven Days in May as a television film for Columbia Broadcasting System with a slightly modernized plot involving the threat of nuclear warfare 518 The project remained in development for ten years until Peter Douglas managed to produce it through Vincent Pictures in partnership with HBO Pictures under the title The Enemy Within In August 1984 The Bryna Company acquired the filming rights to Charles Dickinson s novel Waltz in Marathon a drama about a loan shark from Marathon Michigan whose life is altered when he is reunited with his ex romantic partner and grown up children 532 Kirk Douglas planned to play the lead in the film 532 Amos began filming in early December 1984 using Panavision cameras on location in Ojay California and at the Los Padres National Forest with director Michael Tuchner 533 534 The film co starred Kirk Douglas Elizabeth Montgomery Dorothy McGuire Pat Morita and Ray Walston and was co produced by Bill Finnegan and Sheldon Pinchuk 535 Lawsuits and mergers 1985 1989 edit In mid June 1985 The Bryna Company was involved in a lawsuit filled by the federal government and the United States Navy seeking 1 300 000 of unpaid military flying time during the filming of The Final Countdown 536 The suit claimed that The Bryna Company and Aspen Productions had only been charged for 32 5 hours of aircraft flying time while the Navy had in fact provided 167 hours of flying time 536 The suit also revealed that Navy Commander Emory Worth Brown Jr a decorated Navy fighter pilot assigned to keep track of the flying hours during shooting had accepted a bribe of 5 563 48 during the filming 537 536 Brown had since been convicted and dishonorably discharged from the Navy but was named in the lawsuit for punitive damages 536 The scandal was also the subject of a CBS 60 Minutes episode which had aired on March 18 1984 537 More than a year after the suit was filled on September 10 1986 the Justice Department ruled that The Bryna Company would have to pay 400 000 to the Federal Government and United States Navy to cover unpaid costs 538 Amos premiered on September 29 1985 broadcast on Columbia Broadcasting System and was a success 4 The film was nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards The film itself was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Comedy Special Kirk Douglas was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special Pat Morita was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Special and Dorothy McGuire was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special While promoting Amos The Bryna Company announced that it was in negotiations with Walt Disney Productions for a film teaming Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster 4 The pair had worked together a number of times over the years including I Walk Alone released theatrically in 1947 Gunfight at the O K Corral released theatrically in 1956 the 30th Academy Awards ceremony in 1958 and the 31st Academy Awards ceremony in 1959 at which they performed comedic song and dance numbers before presenting awards The Devil s Disciple released theatrically in 1959 The List of Adrian Messenger released theatrically in 1963 and in which they did not share any scenes together but as Douglas was executive producer they interacted Seven Days in May released theatrically in 1964 Victory at Entebbe broadcast on television in 1976 and although they both appear in the film the two actors filmed their separate scenes at different times and did not interact during the production The Boys in Autumn which was staged in early 1981 and the 57th Academy Awards ceremony in 1985 at which they appeared on stage together with Michael Douglas On December 23 1985 the California based The Bryna Company was merged into the Texas based Bryna Industries the Texas based company was simultaneously renamed The Bryna Company 514 The Bryna Company would remain under Texas jurisdiction for the next three years 514 Filming of Tough Guys began in late February 1986 using Panavision s Panaflex cameras and DeLuxe film with Dolby Stereophonic sound on location in Los Angeles California Portland Oregon and at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank California with director Jeff Kanew 539 The film was co produced by Joe Wizan Richard Hashimoto and Jana Sue Memel through The Bryna Company and Touchstone Pictures 540 In addition to co stars Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster the film also featured Adolph Cesar Charles Durning Alexis Smith Dana Carvey and Darlanne Fluegel 541 On March 6 1986 Cesar suffered a fatal heart attack on the set before any of his scenes were shot he was replaced by Eli Wallach 542 Tough Guys had its premiere at ShowEast a movie theater owners convention held in Atlantic City New Jersey between September 9 11 1986 543 It then had local premieres at the Miami Film Festival on September 22 1986 and the Boston Film and Video Festival on September 24 1986 544 before opening nationwide to theaters on October 3 1986 545 Composer Burt Bacharach lyricist Carole Bayer Sager and performer Kenny Rogers were nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song Motion Picture for the film s opening theme song They Don t Make Them Like They Used to Rogers titled his 1986 album after the song In late December 1986 Kirk Douglas announced that he wished to retire from producing films 546 On May 19 1987 Columbia Broadcasting System executives announced that their 1987 88 season programming would include Conquistador an eight hour mini series about Hernan Cortes 1519 conquest of Moctezuma II s Aztec Empire currently in pre production by Michael Douglas and Michael Phillips Mercury Douglas Films 547 548 501 In late August 1987 The Bryna Company announced that it was again developing its feature film Montezuma based on Dalton Trumbo s completed screenplay from 1960 549 Neither the television series nor the feature film were ever produced By 1987 Peter Douglas was exclusively working through his own company Vincent Pictures and hired Kirk Douglas to co star with Jason Robards in a remake of Inherit the Wind 550 551 In late August 1987 The Bryna Company filled a 17 800 000 breach of contract lawsuit against the Unisys Corporation and the Sperry Corporation which had employed Kirk Douglas services as corporate spokesman two years prior 552 The Sperry Corporation had secured the services of Kirk Douglas through The Bryna Company for a two year exclusive contract beginning on October 14 1985 the contract had a renewable three year extension option 553 The contract also stipulated that Kirk Douglas could only be let go of his position in the event of a merger in which the Sperry line of products would be discontinued 553 In promotion of the company Kirk Douglas appeared in television commercials researched the company s history studied biographies of executives for personal appearances attended executive meetings and employee conventions and visited public exhibits such as Walt Disney World to film commercials 554 He also produced and appeared in the short film Sperry Goes Hollywood filmed during the making of Tough Guys and co produced by The Bryna Company 555 556 The short film included behind the scenes footage of Tough Guys as well as film footage of Romancing the Stone during which Douglas hinted that he and his son would appear in a biopic about Elmer Ambrose Sperry and his son Lawrence Sperry 555 556 On September 16 1986 Burroughs Corporation acquired the Sperry Corporation and renamed the new entity the Unisys Corporation but failed to discontinue the Sperry line of computer products 553 Nevertheless The Bryna Company was informed via letter on October 23 1986 that Kirk Douglas services were terminated 556 The Bryna Company sought 5 900 000 for breach of contract 5 900 000 for breach of an implied obligation of good faith and 6 000 000 for lost profits 556 On August 23 1988 Anne Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary TBC Merger Incorporated a California based corporation 557 On September 8 1988 the Texas based The Bryna Company was merged into the California based TBC Merger the California company was simultaneously renamed The Bryna Company resuming the company s operations in California after three years 557 From October 13 15 1989 the American Cinematheque held a three day celebratory festival to honor The Bryna Company and Kirk Douglas executive producer accomplishments 6 The festival was held at the Directors Guild of America Theatre in Hollywood where eight films were screened The Indian Fighter The Vikings Paths of Glory an uncut version of Spartacus Lonely Are the Brave Seven Days in May Posse and Amos 558 The event was attended by Motion Picture Association of America President Jack Valenti director John Frankenheimer actor Bo Hopkins actress Dorothy McGuire and Kirk Douglas himself all of whom participated in question and answer sessions between screenings 6 In late August 1999 Kirk Douglas announced plans to make a boxing film through The Bryna Company Douglas wanted to play the role of a trainer and hoped to cast Don King as a promoter 559 Contracted actors editThe following is a list of actors that were signed to long term multi picture contracts with Bryna Productions Kirk Douglas 552 Bryna Productions and The Bryna Company was used as an intermediary to secure the services of Kirk Douglas as an actor companies would employ Kirk Douglas through Bryna Productions and later through The Bryna Company Elsa Martinelli 1956 1958 62 signed to a two pictures a year for two years non exclusive contract in February 1956 following her appearance in The Indian Fighter She was loaned out from Bryna Productions to Universal International Pictures in March 1956 for the film Four Girls in Town 70 Dean Stockwell 1956 1961 98 signed to a five year contract in December 1956 before the start of filming The Careless Years Natalie Trundy 1956 1961 560 signed to a two pictures a year for five years contract in December 1956 before the start of filming The Careless Years Betty Hutton 1957 108 signed to a retroactive two picture contract in early 1957 after the completion of Spring Reunion Janet Leigh 1957 111 signed to an additional one picture deal in 1957 during the filming of The Vikings Nina Foch 1959 1960 561 signed to an additional one picture deal in April 1959 during the filming of Spartacus Film productions editCompleted theatrical films edit Premiere Date Film Production Company Distribution Company Awards December 21 1955 47 The Indian Fighter Bryna Productions United Artists December 1956 99 Spring Reunion Bryna Productions United Artists February 1957 107 Lizzie Bryna Productions Metro Goldwyn Mayer September 1957 125 The Careless Years Bryna Productions Michael Productions United Artists October 1957 127 Ride Out for Revenge Bryna Productions United Artists October 25 1957 130 Paths of Glory Bryna Productions Harris Kubrick Pictures United Artists Grand Prix de l UCC Cantaclaro Award for Best American Motion PictureItalian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon for Best Foreign DirectorJussi Award for Best Foreign DirectorNational Film Preservation Board National Film RegistryNominated BAFTA Award for Best Film from any SourceNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting PerformanceNominated Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama June 12 1958 158 The Vikings Brynaprod Curtleigh Productions United Artists Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Drama San Sebastian International Film Festival Zulueta PrizeNominated Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures July 1959 200 Last Train from Gun Hill Bryna Productions Wallis Hazen Productions Paramount Pictures Nominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance August 20 1959 201 The Devil s Disciple Brynaprod Hecht Hill Lancaster Films United Artists Nominated BAFTA Award for Best British Actor June 29 1960 222 Strangers When We Meet Bryna Productions Quine Productions Columbia Pictures October 6 1960 229 Spartacus Bryna Productions Universal International Pictures Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Academy Award for Best Cinematography ColorAcademy Award for Best Art Direction Set Decoration ColorAcademy Award for Best Costume DesignGolden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture DramaHuabiao Film Award Outstanding Translated Foreign FilmInternational Film Music Critics Award for Best Archival Release of an Existing ScoreMotion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing Feature FilmNational Film Preservation Board National Film RegistryNominated Academy Award for Best Film EditingNominated Academy Award for Best Music Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy PictureNominated Golden Globe Award for Best DirectorNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Actor Motion Picture DramaNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting ActorNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Original ScoreNominated BAFTA Award for Best Film from any SourceNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic PerformanceNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting PerformanceNominated Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama June 8 1961 248 The Last Sunset Brynaprod Universal International Pictures Nominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance May 24 1962 261 Lonely Are the Brave Joel Productions Universal International Pictures Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing Feature Film Nominated BAFTA Award for Best Foreign ActorNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance May 29 1963 269 The List of Adrian Messenger Joel Productions Universal International Pictures Nominated Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture February 12 1964 562 Seven Days in May Joel Productions John Frankenheimer Productions Cayuga Productions Seven Arts Productions Paramount Pictures Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor Bodil Award for Best Non European FilmBoxoffice Blue Ribbon Award for Best Picture of the MonthDavid di Donatello Award for Best Foreign ActorNominated Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting RoleNominated Academy Award for Best Art Direction Set Decoration Black and WhiteNominated Golden Globe Award for Best DirectorNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Actor Motion Picture DramaNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Original ScoreNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top DramaNominated Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Dramatic PerformanceNominated Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama May 16 1966 312 Seconds Douglas and Lewis Productions Joel Productions John Frankenheimer Productions Gibraltar Productions Paramount Pictures National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Nominated Academy Award for Best Cinematography Black and WhiteNominated Bambi Award for Best Actor InternationalNominated Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or December 21 1966 313 Grand Prix Douglas and Lewis Productions Joel Productions John Frankenheimer Productions Cherokee Productions Metro Goldwyn Mayer Academy Award for Best Sound Academy Award for Best Film EditingAcademy Award for Best Effects Sound EffectsNominated Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer MaleNominated Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer FemaleNominated American Cinema Editors Award for Best Edited Feature FilmNominated Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures December 1968 343 The Brotherhood Bryna Productions Martin Ritt Productions The Brotherhood Company Paramount Pictures Nominated Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Original Screenplay May 27 1971 400 A Gunfight The Bryna Company Joel Productions Harvest Productions Thoroughbred Productions Paramount Pictures May 1971 401 Summertree The Bryna Company Bryna Productions Columbia Pictures June 16 1971 402 The Light at the Edge of the World The Bryna Company Bryna Productions Vulcano Film Barcarola Jet Films Triumfilm Rizzoli Film National General Pictures Metro Goldwyn Mayer Nominated Fotogramas de Plata for Best Spanish Movie Performer October 1971 403 To Catch a Spy The Bryna Company Bryna Productions Ludgate Films Les Films de la Pleiade Capitole Films Films Around the World Rank Film Distributors October 16 1973 447 Scalawag The Bryna Company Inex Film Oceania Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografiche Paramount Pictures May 1975 461 Posse The Bryna Company Zeeuwse Maatschappij Paramount Pictures Nominated Berlin International Film Festival Golden Berlin Bear November 19 1975 466 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest The Bryna Company Bigstick Productions Fantasy Films Zwaluw United Artists Academy Award for Best Picture Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading RoleAcademy Award for Best Actress in a Leading RoleAcademy Award for Best DirectorAcademy Award for Best Writing Screenplay Adapted From Other MaterialGolden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture DramaGolden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture DramaGolden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture DramaGolden Globe Award for Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture MaleGolden Globe Award for Best Director Motion PictureGolden Globe Award for Best Screenplay Motion PictureBAFTA Award for Best FilmBAFTA Award for Best ActorBAFTA Award for Best ActressBAFTA Award for Best Supporting ActorBAFTA Award for Best DirectionBAFTA Award for Best Film EditingBodil Award for Best Non European FilmDavid di Donatello Award for Best Foreign DirectorDavid di Donatello Award for Best Foreign ActorDirectors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesReader s Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film DirectorLos Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best PictureNational Board of Review Top Ten FilmsNational Board of Review Award for Best ActorNational Film Preservation Board National Film RegistryNational Society of Film Critics Award for Best ActorNew York Film Critics Circle Award for Best ActorPeople s Choice Award for Favorite Motion PictureSant Jordi Award for Best Foreign ActorWriters Guild of America Award for Best Drama Adapted from Another MediumGolden Screen AwardSilver Ribbon Award for Best Foreign DirectorKansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best DirectorOnline Film amp Television Association Motion Picture Hall of FameNominated Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting RoleNominated Academy Award for Best CinematographyNominated Academy Award for Best EditingNominated Academy Award for Best Music Original Dramatic ScoreNominated Anthony Asquith Award for Film MusicNominated BAFTA Award for Best CinematographyNominated BAFTA Award for Best ScreenplayNominated BAFTA Award for Best Sound TrackNominated Eddie Award for Best Edited Feature FilmNominated Gold Hugo Award for Best FeatureNominated Cesar Award for Best Foreign FilmNominated Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television SpecialNominated New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting ActressNominated Turkish Film Critics Association Award for Best Foreign Film August 1 1980 513 The Final Countdown The Bryna Company Aspen Productions Polyc International Film Finance Group United Artists Golden Screen Award Nominated Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction FilmNominated Saturn Award for Best Actor April 29 1983 521 Something Wicked This Way Comes The Bryna Company Walt Disney Productions Buena Vista Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film Saturn Award for Best WritingNominated Saturn Award for Best Supporting ActorNominated Saturn Award for Best MusicNominated Saturn Award for Best CostumesNominated Saturn Award for Best Make UpNominated Saturn Award for Best Special EffectsNominated Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival Grand PrizeNominated Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation September 9 1986 543 Tough Guys The Bryna Company Touchstone Pictures Silver Screen Partners II Buena Vista Nominated Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song Motion Picture Unrealized film projects edit The Shadow Mr Shadow 1949 1959 19 The Life of David Garrick Garrick s Gayeties 1950 16 Nowhere to Go 1950 18 The Fear Makers 1951 1952 19 Strange Harvest 1952 1953 24 The Quality of Mercy 1954 30 Van Gogh 1954 1955 34 The Dangerous Game 1954 33 Freak Show 1955 40 The Runaway Heart 1955 54 Shadow of the Champ 1955 1956 56 The Syndicate Britain s Two Headed Spy Two Headed Spy 1954 1956 58 The Allison Brothers 1955 1956 50 King Kelly 1955 1957 58 A Most Contagious Game 1956 1959 60 A Very Special Baby 1956 67 The Silent Gun 1956 1959 60 Deliver Us From Evil 1956 74 Mavourneen 1956 80 The Beach House 1956 96 Elisha and the Long Knives 1956 96 Three Rings for Julie 1957 108 I Stole 16 000 000 God Fearing Man 1957 1958 126 The Beach Boys 1958 1960 208 Michael Strogoff 1958 1959 157 Two For the Seesaw 1958 1960 161 Viva Gringo 1958 1959 158 The Chains of Fear 1958 168 The Adventures of Simon Bolivar Simon Bolivar the Liberator 1958 1959 183 And the Rock Cried Out 1958 1959 187 The Indian Wars 1958 1959 187 The Sun at Midnight 1958 1959 187 Earthquake 1959 205 War Between the Gods War of the Gods War of Two Gods 1959 1960 213 Montezuma Savages 1960 1987 215 The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea 1965 1966 1 The Gypsy Moths 1966 1967 1 The Bronc Rider 1968 337 The Photographer 1969 1970 346 The Yellow Jersey 1976 491 Shadow of God 1982 519 A Cry in the Night 1982 519 Waltz in Marathon 1984 532 Television productions editCompleted television series and films edit Premiere Date Film Production Company Distribution Company Awards November 1957 123 King of the Vikings Brynaprod Barbizon Productions Columbia Broadcasting System September 1959 206 Tales of the Vikings Brynaprod United Artists Television March 7 1973 407 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde The Bryna Company Winters Rosen Productions National Broadcasting Company Nominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction of a Variety Musical or Dramatic Program Nominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Costume DesignNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Makeup May 20 1984 526 Draw The Bryna Company Astral Film Productions HBO Premiere Films Home Box Office Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role Nominated CableACE Award for Film EditingNominated Genie Award for Best Achievement in CinematographyNominated Genie Award for Best Achievement in Art DirectionNominated Genie Award for Best Achievement in Sound EditingNominated Genie Award for Best Achievement in Overall Sound September 29 1985 4 Amos The Bryna Company Vincent Pictures Columbia Broadcasting System Nominated Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television Nominated Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Comedy SpecialNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a SpecialNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a SpecialNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special April 23 1986 555 Sperry Goes Hollywood The Bryna Company Sperry Corporation Sperry Corporation Unrealized television projects edit Report from Space Report from Outer Space 1958 1959 179 The Indian Fighter 1958 1959 187 Spartacus 1959 1 The Cruel Sport Grand Prix 1965 1967 303 Gulliver s Travels 1968 338 Barrymore 1975 1976 465 Seven Days in May 1984 1989 518 Stage productions editCompleted stage productions edit Opening Date Closing Date Play Production Company Theater October 24 1963 280 October 26 1963 280 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Eric Productions Seven Arts Productions Shubert Theatre New Haven Connecticut October 28 1963 275 November 9 1963 275 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Eric Productions Seven Arts Productions Shubert Theatre Boston Massachusetts November 13 1963 563 January 25 1964 563 One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Eric Productions Seven Arts Productions Cort Theatre New York City New York Unrealized stage projects edit A Very Special Baby 1956 70 Citizen Tom Paine 1976 486 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Archival Resources in Wisconsin Descriptive Finding Aids digicoll library wisc edu Retrieved 2021 05 24 Kirk Douglas and Bryna Productions Archived 2015 02 23 at the Wayback Machine at Wisconscin Centre for Film and Television Research Photoplay Jan Jun 1950 Media History Digital Library New York MacFadden Publications Inc 1950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco California on September 29 1985 514 Newspapers com 29 September 1985 Retrieved 2021 06 24 Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Retrieved 2021 05 23 a b c Sunday News from Kenosha Wisconsin on October 8 1989 21 Newspapers com 8 October 1989 Retrieved 2021 06 15 The Struggle for Survival Independent Exhibitors Film Bulletin September 2 1957 p23 What s With Hecht Hill Lancaster The Tuscaloosa News September 24 1959 p5 Burt Lancaster Termed Enigma The Spokesman Review May 27 1961 p77 Bryna Productions Inc California Secretary of State September 28 1949 Archived from the original on 2021 05 18 Retrieved May 18 2021 Daily News from Los Angeles California on January 20 1950 18 Newspapers com 20 January 1950 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Valley Times from North Hollywood California on January 24 1950 11 Newspapers com 24 January 1950 Retrieved 2021 05 18 THOMAS F BRADY Mar 28 1947 WELLES PLANNING MACBETH AS FILM The New York Times ProQuest 107976304 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on August 11 1951 9 Newspapers com 11 August 1951 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on January 3 1952 37 Newspapers com 3 January 1952 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on July 10 1951 15 Newspapers com 10 July 1951 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on August 3 1951 17 Newspapers com 3 August 1951 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Variety September 1950 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c d e The Independent Film Journal Jul 1952 Jul 1953 Media History Digital Library ITOA Independent Inc 1952 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on September 20 1951 41 Newspapers com 20 September 1951 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on March 18 1952 51 Newspapers com 18 March 1952 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b Boxoffice March 22 1952 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on October 28 1952 55 Newspapers com 28 October 1952 Retrieved 2021 05 15 a b Variety January 1953 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1953 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Variety June 1953 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1953 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Variety September 1953 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1953 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link www bibliopolis com THE SHADOW SCREENPLAY wrapper title by Ben Hecht Ivan Goff Ben Roberts source work on William Reese Company William Reese Company Retrieved 2021 05 15 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on November 3 1953 59 Newspapers com 3 November 1953 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on January 6 1954 59 Newspapers com 6 January 1954 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b c d e Variety June 1954 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1954 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on June 24 1954 43 Newspapers com 24 June 1954 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Mirror News from Los Angeles California on April 23 1954 20 Newspapers com 23 April 1954 Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on September 9 1954 49 Newspapers com 9 September 1954 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b c d e The Independent Film Journal Jul 1954 Jul 1955 Media History Digital Library ITOA Independent Inc 1954 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Motion Picture Exhibitor Nov 1954 Jan 1955 General Edition Media History Digital Library Philadelphia Jay Emanuel Publications 1954 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Motion Picture Daily Jan Mar 1959 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company January 1959 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Variety January 12 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Variety February 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Boxoffice February 19 1955 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c d Variety March 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety April 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Motion Picture Exhibitor Aug Oct 1956 Media History Digital Library Philadelphia Jay Emanuel Publications 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Motion Picture Daily Jan Mar 1955 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company January 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Film Bulletin 1955 New York The Museum of Modern Art Library New York Film Bulletin Company 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Variety May 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety October 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c d e Motion Picture Daily Oct Dec 1955 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company October 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Variety June 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety September 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b The Belleville Times from Belleville New Jersey on September 2 1955 1 Newspapers com 2 September 1955 Retrieved 2021 07 04 Photoplay Jan Jun 1956 Media History Digital Library New York MacFadden Publications Inc 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Variety July 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety August 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on September 2 1955 63 Newspapers com 2 September 1955 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Boxoffice October 29 1955 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c d e f Variety November 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Boxoffice November 12 1955 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c d e f g Variety December 1955 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Variety April 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c d e f g h i The Independent Film Journal Jul 1955 Jul 1956 Media History Digital Library ITOA Independent Inc 1955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Boxoffice December 10 1955 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c Motion Picture Daily Jan Mar 1956 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company January 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link The Courier Journal from Louisville Kentucky on January 24 1956 Page 19 Newspapers com 24 January 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 The Knoxville News Sentinel from Knoxville Tennessee on October 17 1955 15 Newspapers com 17 October 1955 Retrieved 2021 07 11 The Daily Oklahoman from Oklahoma City Oklahoma on March 18 1956 83 Newspapers com 18 March 1956 Retrieved 2021 07 11 Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on February 18 1956 15 Newspapers com 18 February 1956 Retrieved 2021 07 11 a b c Variety January 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c d e Variety February 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Variety March 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Boxoffice March 24 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on February 27 1956 23 Newspapers com 27 February 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Daily News from New York New York on February 15 1956 577 Newspapers com 15 February 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Boxoffice February 11 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c Valley Times from North Hollywood California on April 11 1956 14 Newspapers com 11 April 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Boxoffice April 21 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Boxoffice April 14 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 14 a b c d Variety May 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Boxoffice June 02 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Variety September 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on July 2 1956 15 Newspapers com 2 July 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Variety June 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on March 20 1956 43 Newspapers com 20 March 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Rocky Mount Telegram from Rocky Mount North Carolina on April 9 1956 4 Newspapers com 9 April 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on May 15 1956 35 Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 05 18 Variety August 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on June 28 1956 33 Newspapers com 28 June 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Contagious Game Bids for Nielsen Los Angeles Times May 3 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 via Newspapers com a b c Boxoffice July 07 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Michael Productions Inc California Secretary of State August 6 1956 Archived from the original on 2021 05 18 Retrieved May 18 2021 a b c THE BRYNA COMPANY California US OpenCorporates opencorporates com Retrieved 2021 06 05 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on October 11 1956 56 Newspapers com 11 October 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on December 27 1956 71 Newspapers com 27 December 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b c d e Variety January 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on December 5 1956 18 Newspapers com 5 December 1956 Retrieved 2021 05 19 a b Variety October 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Variety November 1956 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Boxoffice December 01 1956 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines Iowa on January 3 1957 15 Newspapers com 3 January 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b 31 Dec 1956 8 Evening Standard at Newspapers com Newspapers com 31 December 1956 Archived from the original on 2021 05 17 Retrieved 2021 05 17 Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on February 12 1957 14 Newspapers com 12 February 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Motion Picture Daily Jan Mar 1957 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company January 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Boxoffice January 19 1957 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c Variety February 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Variety March 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Mirror News from Los Angeles California on January 21 1957 22 Newspapers com 21 January 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Boxoffice March 09 1957 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 14 a b The Charlotte Observer from Charlotte North Carolina on February 17 1957 32 Newspapers com 17 February 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 18 a b c The Times Tribune from Scranton Pennsylvania on March 19 1957 19 Newspapers com 19 March 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Variety April 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Daily News from New York New York on April 1 1957 491 Newspapers com April 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 a b Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on November 18 1957 87 Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 06 09 a b Variety May 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety July 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on January 26 1957 23 Newspapers com 26 January 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 Agreement Brynaprod S A 1960 Evening Standard from London Greater London England on June 20 1956 18 Newspapers com 20 June 1956 Retrieved 2021 06 04 a b Variety June 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Variety August 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Motion Picture Daily Jul Sep 1957 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company July 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Billboard Nielsen Business Media 1957 12 23 The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle from Milwaukee Wisconsin on August 30 1957 Page 7 Newspapers com 30 August 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 23 Broadcasting Telecasting Oct Dec 1957 MBRS Library of Congress Broadcasting Publications October 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Variety November 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on July 15 1957 19 Newspapers com 15 July 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 19 a b Variety September 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b c Valley Times from North Hollywood California on October 31 1957 25 Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b c Variety October 1957 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on December 1 1957 124 Newspapers com December 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Time Inc 1958 12 22 Life unknown library Time a b Motion Picture Daily Oct Dec 1957 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company October 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Valley Times from North Hollywood California on November 7 1957 69 Newspapers com 7 November 1957 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Variety January 1958 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Arizona Daily Star from Tucson Arizona on March 31 1958 Page 4 Newspapers com 31 March 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 The Province from Vancouver British Columbia Canada on February 1 1958 4 Newspapers com February 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Arizona Republic from Phoenix Arizona on February 12 1958 Page 27 Newspapers com 12 February 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Boxoffice January 27 1958 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 The Courier Journal August 25 1955 p11 Of Extras Santa Cruz Sentinel September 21 1956 p1 Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines Iowa on February 27 1958 21 Newspapers com 27 February 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 St Louis Post Dispatch April 3 1958 p54 BRYNA CORPORATION California US OpenCorporates opencorporates com Retrieved 2021 06 19 Motion Picture Exhibitor Oct 1957 Apr 1958 New York State Edition Media History Digital Library Philadelphia Jay Emanuel Publications 1957 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Valley Times from North Hollywood California on April 2 1958 8 Newspapers com 2 April 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b c d e Boxoffice Jan Mar 1961 Media History Digital Library New York New York Boxoffice 1961 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Gertner Richard 1983 International motion picture almanac 1983 Internet Archive ISBN 978 0 900610 28 8 a b c Variety April 1958 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Boxoffice April 14 1958 yumpu com Retrieved 2021 06 11 The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia Pennsylvania on March 25 1958 Page 15 Newspapers com 25 March 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Cash Box William and Mary Libraries Special Collections Research Center Cash Box Pub Co 1962 08 11 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Library of Congress Copyright Office 1958 Catalog of Copyright Entries 1958 Music July Dec 3D Ser Vol 12 Pt 5 United States Copyright Office U S Govt Print Off a b Library of Congress Copyright Office 1958 Catalog of Copyright Entries 1958 Music Jan June 3D Ser Vol 12 Pt 5 United States Copyright Office U S Govt Print Off Los Angeles Evening Citizen News from Hollywood California on March 25 1958 16 Newspapers com 25 March 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 The Record from Hackensack New Jersey on April 26 1958 57 Newspapers com 26 April 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Variety May 1959 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1959 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Idaho State Journal from Pocatello Idaho on April 28 1958 Page 10 Newspapers com 28 April 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b c d e Motion Picture Daily Apr Jun 1958 MBRS Library of Congress Quigley Publishing Company 1958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Valley Times from North Hollywood California on March 27 1958 7 Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b c d e f g h Variety May 1958 Media History Digital Library New York NY 1958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link a b Star Tribune from Minneapolis Minnesota on March 3 1958 Page 34 Newspapers com 3 March 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Courier Post from Camden New Jersey on April 23 1958 Page 30 Newspapers com 23 April 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester New York on April 23 1958 Page 25 Newspapers com 23 April 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Dot Acquires Viking Track PDF Billboard April 21 1958 p 5 Cash Box William and Mary Libraries Special Collections Research Center Cash Box Pub Co 1958 05 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Evening Vanguard from Venice California on May 21 1958 18 Newspapers com 21 May 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 21 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on May 12 1958 79 Newspapers com 12 May 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 Dayton Daily News from Dayton Ohio on May 25 1958 78 Newspapers com 25 May 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 21 Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles California on August 8 1958 23 Newspapers com 8 August 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 20 a b The Lawton Constitution And Morning Press from Lawton Oklahoma on June 15 1958 Page 27 Newspapers com 15 June 1958 Retrieved 2021 05 22 Boxoffice June 09 1958 yumpu com span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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