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RKO Pictures

RKO Radio Pictures Inc., commonly known as RKO Pictures or simply RKO, was an American film production and distribution company, one of the "Big Five" film studios of Hollywood's Golden Age. The business was formed after the Keith-Albee-Orpheum theater chain and Joseph P. Kennedy's Film Booking Offices of America studio were brought together under the control of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in October 1928. RCA executive David Sarnoff engineered the merger to create a market for the company's sound-on-film technology, RCA Photophone, and in early 1929 production began under the RKO name (an abbreviation of Radio-Keith-Orpheum). Two years later, another Kennedy concern, the Pathé studio, was folded into the operation. By the mid-1940s, RKO was controlled by investor Floyd Odlum.

RKO Radio Pictures Inc.
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryMotion pictures
Predecessors
FoundedJanuary 25, 1929; 94 years ago (1929-01-25) (as RKO Productions Inc., subsidiary of Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp.)
FounderDavid Sarnoff
Defunct1959; 64 years ago (1959)
Headquarters1270 Avenue of the Americas,
Parent

RKO has long been renowned for its cycle of musicals starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in the mid- to late 1930s. Actors Katharine Hepburn and, later, Robert Mitchum had their first major successes at the studio. Cary Grant was a mainstay for years, with credits including touchstones of the screwball comedy genre with which RKO was identified. The work of producer Val Lewton's low-budget horror unit and RKO's many ventures into the field now known as film noir have been acclaimed, largely after the fact, by film critics and historians. The studio produced two of the most famous films in motion picture history: King Kong and Citizen Kane. RKO was also responsible for notable coproductions such as It's a Wonderful Life and Notorious, and it distributed many celebrated films by animation pioneer Walt Disney and leading independent producer Samuel Goldwyn. Though it often couldn't compete financially for top star and director contracts, RKO's below-the-line personnel were among the finest, including composer Max Steiner, cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca, and designer Van Nest Polglase.

Maverick industrialist Howard Hughes took over RKO in 1948. After years of disarray and decline under his control, the studio was acquired by the General Tire and Rubber Company in 1955. The original RKO Pictures ceased production in 1957 and was effectively dissolved two years later. In 1978, broadcaster RKO General, the corporate heir, launched a production subsidiary, RKO Pictures Inc., which revived the theatrical brand with its first releases three years later. In 1989, this business, with its remaining assets, including the trademarks and remake rights to many classic RKO films, was sold to new owners, who established the small independent company RKO Pictures LLC. The original studio's film library is now largely controlled by Warner Bros. Discovery.

Origin

In October 1927, Warner Bros. released The Jazz Singer, the first feature-length talking picture. Its success prompted Hollywood to convert from silent to sound film production en masse. The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) controlled an advanced optical sound-on-film system, Photophone, recently developed by General Electric, RCA's parent company. Its path to joining the anticipated boom in sound movies had a major hurdle: Warner Bros. and Fox, Hollywood's other vanguard sound studio, were already financially and technologically aligned with ERPI, a subsidiary of AT&T's Western Electric division. The industry's two largest companies, Paramount and Loew's/MGM, along with First National Pictures—third of the silent era "Big Three" major studios, but by then in marked decline—and Universal Pictures, were poised to contract with ERPI and its Vitaphone and Movietone systems for sound conversion as well.[1]

 
David Sarnoff (1929), by Samuel Johnson Woolf, National Portrait Gallery

Seeking a customer for Photophone, then general manager of RCA David Sarnoff approached financier Joseph P. Kennedy in late 1927 about using the system for his Film Booking Offices of America (FBO). A Kennedy-led investment group had acquired the modest-sized, low-budget-focused studio the previous year, and he had turned it into a steady profit maker. Negotiations resulted in RCA acquiring a substantial interest in FBO; Sarnoff had apparently already conceived of a plan for the studio to attain a central position in the film industry, maximizing Photophone revenue. Next was securing a string of exhibition venues like those the leading Hollywood production companies owned. Kennedy began investigating the possibility of such a purchase.[2]

At that same time, the allied Keith-Albee and Orpheum theater circuits, built around the then-fading medium of live vaudeville, were pursuing a transition into the movie business. In 1926 the exhibitors had acquired a 50 percent stake in the holding company of Producers Distributing Corporation (PDC), a smaller studio than FBO but more prestigious. Famed director Cecil B. De Mille—PDC studio chief, principal shareholder, and owner of its production facility—had been draining the company's resources for his well-appointed productions, and it had been finding little success in getting its films into first-run theaters, which were largely tied up by the majors. In early 1927, despite months of DeMille's strenuous objections, an agreement was reached to merge PDC with Pathé, a lower-level studio known for its newsreel and churn out of cheap shorts. In January 1928, a less tense merger, engineered by Keith-Albee general manager John J. Murdock, was finalized, establishing the Keith-Albee-Orpheum (KAO) theater chain. Murdock, who had assumed the presidency of Pathé the previous June, turned to Kennedy as an adviser in consolidating the studio with PDC. The two men found that they had mutual interests—in particular, removing Edward Albee, the "Czar of Vaudeville" and Murdock's nominal boss, from the picture. This was the relationship Sarnoff and Kennedy sought.[3][b]

 
Radio-Keith-Orpheum logo, 1929

With Murdock's assistance, Kennedy quickly maneuvered to interlock KAO and FBO—selling the exhibitor a substantial stake in his studio while buying up copious amounts of KAO stock. Within months, he had installed himself as chairman of the theater chain's new board of directors. When Albee, still KAO president, visited his office, Kennedy reportedly asked, "Didn't you know, Ed? You're washed up. You're through." DeMille departed with a large payout in April and later in the year signed a three-picture deal with MGM. An attempt by Kennedy to reorganize yet another studio that had turned to him for help, now ERPI-aligned First National, strained his relationship with Sarnoff and raised the threat that Photophone would be locked out of the industry entirely. Though Kennedy's deal with First National collapsed within weeks, the RCA executive saw that it was time to make his move.[4]

In September, while Kennedy was traveling in Europe, Sarnoff began negotiations with Wall Street banker Elisha Walker, whose firm was heavily invested in KAO, to merge the exhibition circuit with Film Booking Offices under RCA control. Soon after Kennedy's return at the end of the month, the deal was finalized, with Kennedy arranging to sell off his FBO and KAO shares and options at enormous profit. On October 23, 1928, RCA announced the creation of the Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp. holding company, with Sarnoff as board chairman. Kennedy, who withdrew from his executive positions in the merged businesses, kept Pathé and the PDC assets that it had absorbed separate from RKO and in his personal charge.[5] RCA owned the governing stock interest in RKO, 22 percent (in the early 1930s, its share rose as high as 60 percent).[6] On January 25, 1929, the new company's production arm, presided over by former FBO vice-president Joseph I. Schnitzer, was unveiled as RKO Productions Inc.[7] A week later, it filed for the trademark "Radio Pictures".[8]

Golden Age studio

Early years

 
Rio Rita (1929), first smash hit for RKO (then releasing films under the "Radio Pictures" banner)

While the main FBO studio in Hollywood was refitted for sound, production of shorts began in New York at the RKO Gramercy studio Sarnoff had just opened.[9] RCA's radio network, NBC, began broadcasting a weekly variety show, The RKO Hour, that became a major promotional vehicle for the studio's films.[10] The first two features released by the new company were musicals: The melodramatic Syncopation, which actually completed shooting before FBO was reincorporated as RKO, premiered on March 29, 1929.[11] The comedic Street Girl debuted July 30. This was billed as RKO's first "official" production and its first to be shot in Hollywood.[12][c] As with many early RKO films, the producer was studio chief William LeBaron, who had held the same position at FBO.[13] A few nonsinging pictures followed, but RKO's first major hit was again a musical. The studio spent heavily on the lavish Rio Rita, including a number of Technicolor sequences. Opening in September to rave reviews, it was named one of the ten best pictures of the year by Film Daily.[14] Cinema historian Richard Barrios credits it with initiating the "first age of the filmed Broadway musical".[15] By the end of the year, RKO was making use of an additional production facility—five hundred acres had been acquired near Encino in the San Fernando Valley as a movie ranch for exteriors and large-scale standing sets.[16]

RKO released a limited slate of twelve features in its first year; in 1930, that figure more than doubled to twenty-nine.[17] Initially organized as the distinct business entities RKO Productions Inc. and RKO Distributing Corp., by July the studio was transitioning into the new, unified RKO Radio Pictures Inc.[18] RKO Pictures Ltd. was set up to handle British distribution.[19] Encouraged by Rio Rita's success, RKO produced several costly musicals incorporating Technicolor sequences, among them Dixiana and Hit the Deck, both scripted and directed, like Rio Rita, by Luther Reed.[20] Following the example of the other major studios, RKO had planned to create its own musical revue, Radio Revels. Promoted as the studio's most extravagant production to date, it was to be photographed entirely in Technicolor.[21] The project was abandoned, as the public's taste for musicals temporarily subsided. From more than sixty Hollywood musicals in 1929 and over eighty the following year, the number dropped to eleven in 1931.[22]

Rio Rita star Bebe Daniels, who had joined the new studio as its top female name after the final months of her contract at Paramount were bought out, fell victim to the shifting market. Her big musical follow-up, Dixiana, had been a big money loser, and in January 1931 her contract was sold to Warner Bros.[23] RKO, meanwhile, was in a contractual bind that it couldn't get out of: it was committed to producing two more features with Technicolor's system, even as audiences had come to associate color with the momentarily out-of-favor musical genre. Fulfilling its obligations, RKO produced two all-Technicolor pictures, The Runaround and Fanny Foley Herself (both 1931), containing no musical sequences. Neither was a success.[24]

Despite these issues—and the foundering US economy—RKO had gone on a spending spree, buying up theater after theater to add to its exhibition chain. In October 1930, the company purchased a 50 percent stake in the New York Van Beuren studio, which specialized in cartoons and live shorts.[25] Looking to get out of the film business, Kennedy arranged for RKO to purchase Pathé, in a deal that protected his associates' bond investments while it crushed many small stockholders who had bought in at artificially high prices. (Indeed, Kennedy, who had previously sold all of his Pathé holdings, started buying back bonds, which he turned around for substantial gains.) The deal was secured on January 29, 1931, and the studio, with its contract players, well-regarded newsreel operation, and DeMille's old Culver City studio and backlot, became the semiautonomous RKO Pathé Pictures Inc.[26] The acquisition, though a defensible investment in the long term for Pathé's physical facilities, was yet another major expense borne by the fledgling RKO, particularly as the reliably avaricious Kennedy had masked Pathé's considerable financial woes, just as he had with FBO and KAO.[27]

There was an undeniable plus side to the merger: when Pathé's Constance Bennett, Ann Harding, and Helen Twelvetrees joined the Radio family in early 1931, they were bigger box office draws than anyone on the RKO roster.[28] The studio's production schedule surpassed forty features a year, released under the names "Radio Pictures" and, until late 1932, "RKO Pathé".[29] Cimarron (1931) became the only RKO production to win the Academy Award for Best Picture; it cost a profligate $1.4 million, however, and lost nearly half that on its first release.[30][d] Cimmaron's female principal, Irene Dunne, was the studio's one major homegrown star of this early pre-Code era; having made her screen debut as the lead in the 1930 musical Leathernecking, she would headline at the studio for the entire decade, under contracts that gave her an unusual amount of power.[31] Other significant actors of the period included Joel McCrea, Ricardo Cortez, Dolores del Río, and Mary Astor. Richard Dix, Oscar-nominated for his performance in Cimarron, would serve as RKO's standby B-movie leading man until the early 1940s,[32] while Tom Keene was top-billed in twelve low-budget Westerns between 1931 and 1933.[33] The comedy team of Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey, often wrangling over ingenue Dorothy Lee, was a bankable constant for almost a decade.[34]

Success under Selznick

 
King Kong (1933), one of Hollywood's great spectacles

Exceptions like Cimarron and Rio Rita aside, RKO's product was largely regarded as mediocre, so in October 1931 Sarnoff hired twenty-nine-year-old David O. Selznick to replace LeBaron as production chief.[35] In addition to implementing rigorous cost-control measures, Selznick championed the unit production system, which gave the producers of individual movies much greater independence than they had under the prevailing central producer system. "Under the factory system of production you rob the director of his individualism", said Selznick, "and this being a creative industry that is harmful to the quality of the product made."[36] Instituting unit production, he predicted, would also result in cost savings of 30–40 percent.[36] To make films under the new system, Selznick recruited prize behind-the-camera personnel, such as director George Cukor and producer/director Merian C. Cooper, and gave producer Pandro S. Berman, aged twenty-six, increasingly important projects.[37] Selznick discovered and signed a young actress who would quickly become one of the studio's big stars, Katharine Hepburn. John Barrymore was also enlisted for a few memorable performances.[38]

In November 1931, just as Selznick was assuming his new post, the separate Pathé distribution network was folded into RKO's. After less than a year of largely independent operation out of Culver City, the Pathé feature film division soon followed (due to exhibition contracts, features from the division continued to come out under the combined brand until the following November). RKO Pathé was now effectively the studio's newsreel-and-shorts subsidiary.[39] In January 1932, Variety named Constance Bennett as one of the industry's top six female "money stars".[40] From September, the start of the industry's exhibition season, print advertising for the company's features displayed the revised name "RKO Radio Pictures".[41][e] The New York City–based corporate headquarters moved into the new RKO Building, an Art Deco skyscraper that was one of the first Rockefeller Center structures to open.[42] Hollywood on the Air, an RKO-produced program for NBC radio that promoted films from multiple studios, sparked independent exhibitors' ire at the free access to cinema stars it gave listeners—especially in the middle of prime moviegoing Friday night. Toward the end of 1932, all of the Hollywood studios except for RKO seemingly bowed to the theater owners and prohibited radio appearances by their contract actors. The ban soon crumbled.[43]

Selznick spent a mere fifteen months as RKO production chief, resigning over a dispute with new corporate president Merlin Aylesworth concerning creative control.[44] One of his last acts at RKO was to approve a screen test for a thirty-three-year-old, balding Broadway song-and-dance man named Fred Astaire.[45] In a memo, Selznick wrote, "I feel, in spite of his enormous ears and bad chin line, that his charm is ... tremendous".[46] Selznick's tenure was widely considered masterful: In 1931, before he arrived, the studio had produced forty-two features for $16 million in total budgets. In 1932, under Selznick, forty-one features were made for $10.2 million, with clear improvement in quality and popularity.[47] He backed several major successes, including A Bill of Divorcement (1932), with Cukor directing Hepburn's debut, and the monumental King Kong (1933)—largely Merian Cooper's brainchild, brought to life by the astonishing special effects work of Willis O'Brien.[48] Still, the shaky finances and excesses that marked the company's pre-Selznick days had not left RKO in shape to withstand the Depression. Most of the other major studios were in similar straits. In January 1933, both RKO and Paramount were forced into receivership, from which the latter would emerge in mid-1935; RKO would not until 1940.[49]

Cooper at the helm

 
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers made the annual list of top ten box office stars from 1935 to 1937.[50] Top Hat (1935) was the third of the eight RKO films featuring the duo as co-leads.

Cooper took over as production head after Selznick's departure and oversaw two hits starring Hepburn: Morning Glory (1933), for which she won her first Oscar, and Little Women (1933), director Cukor's second collaboration with the actress.[51] Among the studio's in-house productions, the latter was the biggest box-office success of the decade.[52] Cooper sought to more tightly align costs and prospective grosses, impacting the budgets for "programmers" such as the Wheeler and Woolsey comedies: under Selznick, Hold 'Em Jail and Girl Crazy (both 1932) had cost $408,000 and $532,000, respectively; under Cooper, Diplomaniacs (1933) was shot for just $242,000.[53] Ginger Rogers had already made several minor films for RKO when Cooper signed her to a seven-year contract and cast her in the big-budget musical Flying Down to Rio (1933).[54] Rogers was paired with Fred Astaire, making his second film. Billed fourth and fifth respectively, the picture turned them into stars.[55] Hermes Pan, assistant to the film's dance director, became one of Hollywood's leading choreographers through his subsequent work with Astaire.[56]

Along with Columbia Pictures, RKO became one of the primary homes of the screwball comedy. As film historian James Harvey describes, compared to their richer competition, the two studios were "more receptive to experiment, more tolerant of chaos on the set. It was at these two lesser 'majors' ... that nearly all the preeminent screwball directors did their important films—[Howard] Hawks and [Gregory] La Cava and [Leo] McCarey and [George] Stevens."[57] The relatively unheralded William A. Seiter directed the studio's first significant contribution to the genre, The Richest Girl in the World (1934).[58] The drama Of Human Bondage (1934), directed by John Cromwell, was Bette Davis's first great success.[59] Stevens's Alice Adams and director John Ford's The Informer were each nominated for the 1935 Best Picture Oscar—the Best Director statuette won by Ford was the only one ever given for an RKO production.[60] The Informer's star, Victor McLaglen, also took home an Academy Award; he would appear in a dozen movies for the studio over two decades.[61] From soon after its debut in early 1935 until July 1942, Louis de Rochemont's innovative documentary series The March of Time was distributed by RKO; at its peak in the late 1930s and early 1940s, over twenty million filmgoers saw its two-reelers each month in eleven thousand US and foreign theaters.[62]

Lacking the financial resources of industry leaders MGM, Paramount, and Fox, RKO turned out many pictures during the era that belied their economies with high style in an Art Deco mode, exemplified by such Astaire–Rogers musicals as The Gay Divorcee (1934), their first pairing as leads, and Top Hat (1935).[63] One of the figures most responsible for that style was another Selznick recruit: Van Nest Polglase, supervisor of RKO's highly regarded design department for almost a decade.[64][65] Film historian James Naremore has described RKO as "chiefly a designer's studio. It never had a stable of important actors, writers, or directors, but ... it was rich in artists and special-effects technicians. As a result, its most distinctive pictures contained a strong element of fantasy—not so much the fantasy of horror, which during the thirties was the province of Universal, but the fantasy of the marvelous and adventurous."[66]

As a group, the studio's craft divisions were among the strongest in the industry.[64][67] Costumer Walter Plunkett, who worked with the company from the close of the FBO era through the end of 1939, was known as the top period wardrobist in the business.[68] Sidney Saunders, innovative head of the studio's paint department, was responsible for significant progress in rear projection quality.[69] On June 13, 1935, RKO premiered the first feature film shot entirely in advanced three-strip Technicolor, Becky Sharp. The movie was coproduced with Pioneer Pictures, founded by Cooper—who departed RKO after two years helming production—and John Hay "Jock" Whitney, who brought in his cousin Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney; Cooper had successfully encouraged the Whitneys to purchase a major share of the Technicolor business as well.[70] Although judged by critics a failure as drama, Becky Sharp was widely lauded for its visual brilliance and technical expertise.[71] RKO also employed some of the industry's leading artists and craftsmen whose work was never seen. From the studio's earliest days through late 1935, Max Steiner, regarded by many historians as the most influential composer of the early years of sound cinema, made music for over 100 RKO films.[72] Murray Spivack, head of the studio's audio special effects department, made important advances in the use of rerecording technology first heard in King Kong.[73]

Briskin and Berman

In October 1935 the ownership team expanded, with financier Floyd Odlum leading a syndicate that bought 50 percent of RCA's stake in the company; the Rockefeller brothers, also major stockholders, increasingly became involved in the business.[74] While RKO kept missing the mark in building Hepburn's career, other actors became regular headliners for the studio. Ann Sothern played the lead in seven RKO films between 1935 and 1937, paired five times with Gene Raymond.[75] Stars Barbara Stanwyck and Cary Grant each signed on for several pictures. Both were sound-era trendsetters, working as freelancers under nonexclusive studio deals. Stanwyck had appeared in major studio films since 1929 without a binding long-term contract, as subsequently would several other top-billed women, including Dunne, Bennett, and Harding.[76] When Grant went freelance after wrapping up his Paramount contract in late 1936, it was still rare for a leading man to do so while his star was on the rise.[77][f] He ultimately appeared in fourteen RKO releases between 1937 and 1948.[78]

 
Katharine Hepburn's last film for RKO, Bringing Up Baby (1938), was a bomb. Today it is regarded as one of Hollywood's finest screwball comedies.[79]

Soon after the appointment of a new production chief, Samuel Briskin, in late 1936, RKO entered into an important distribution deal with animator Walt Disney (Van Beuren consequently folded its cartoon operations).[80] For nearly two decades, the studio released his company's features and shorts; Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) was the highest-grossing movie in the period between The Birth of a Nation (1915) and Gone with the Wind (1939).[81] In February 1937, Selznick, now a leading independent producer, took over RKO's Culver City studio and Forty Acres, as the backlot was known, under a long-term lease. Gone with the Wind, his coproduction with MGM, was largely shot there.[82][g] Following the shift in print advertising a few years earlier, the screen brand on RKO's output, aside from the RKO Pathé line of newsreels and shorts, was changed from "Radio Pictures" to "RKO Radio Pictures".[83] In addition to its central Hollywood studio, RKO production now revolved around its Encino ranch. While the Disney association was beneficial, RKO's own product was widely seen as declining in quality and Briskin was gone by the end of the year.[84][85]

Pandro Berman—who had filled in on three previous occasions—accepted the position of production chief on a noninterim basis. He left the job before the decade's turn, but his brief tenure resulted in some of the most notable films in studio history, including Gunga Din, with Grant and McLaglen; Love Affair, starring Dunne and Charles Boyer; and The Hunchback of Notre Dame (all 1939).[86] Charles Laughton, who gave a now fabled performance as Quasimodo in the latter, returned periodically to the studio, headlining six more RKO features.[87] For Maureen O'Hara, who made her American screen debut in the film, it was the first of ten pictures she made for RKO through 1952.[88] Carole Lombard signed freelance deals for headlining roles in four films between 1939 and 1941—the last of her pictures to come out before her death in a plane crash.[89] After costarring with Ginger Rogers for the eighth time in The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939), Fred Astaire departed the studio.[90]

The studio's B Western star of the period was George O'Brien, who made eighteen RKO pictures, sixteen between 1938 and 1940. The Saint in New York (1938) successfully launched a B detective series featuring the character Simon Templar that ran through 1943.[91] The Wheeler and Woolsey comedy series ended in 1937 when Woolsey became ill (he died the following year). RKO filled the void by releasing independently produced features such as the Dr. Christian series and the Laurel and Hardy comedy The Flying Deuces (1939).[92] The studio soon had its own new B comedy stars in Lupe Vélez and Leon Errol: The Girl from Mexico (1939) was followed by seven frantic installments of the Mexican Spitfire series between 1940 and 1943.[91] The studio's technical departments maintained their reputation as industry leaders; Vernon Walker's special effects unit became famous for its sophisticated use of the optical printer and lifelike matte work, an art that reached its apex with 1941's Citizen Kane.[93]

Kane and Schaefer's troubles

 
Orson Welles in the title role of Citizen Kane (1941), often cited as the greatest film of all time.[94]

Pan Berman had received his first screen credit in 1925 as a nineteen-year-old assistant director on FBO's Midnight Molly.[95] He departed RKO in December 1939 after policy clashes with studio president George J. Schaefer, handpicked the previous year by the Rockefellers and backed by Sarnoff.[96] With Berman gone, Schaefer became in effect production chief, though other men—including the former head of the industry censorship board, Joseph I. Breen—nominally filled the role.[97] Schaefer, announcing his philosophy with a new studio slogan, "Quality Pictures at a Premium Price", was keen on signing up independent producers whose films RKO would distribute.[98] In 1941, the studio landed one of the most prestigious independents in Hollywood when it arranged to handle Samuel Goldwyn's productions. The first two Goldwyn pictures released by the studio did excellent box office: The Little Foxes, directed by William Wyler and starring Bette Davis, and the Howard Hawks–directed Ball of Fire also garnered four Oscar nominations apiece; the latter was Barbara Stanwyck's biggest hit under the RKO banner. However, Schaefer agreed to terms so favorable to Goldwyn that it was next to impossible for the studio to make money with his films.[99] David O. Selznick loaned out his leading contracted director for two RKO pictures in 1941: Alfred Hitchcock's Mr. and Mrs. Smith, the final release of Carole Lombard's lifetime, was a modest success and Suspicion a substantial one, with an Oscar-winning turn by Joan Fontaine.[100][h]

That May, having granted twenty-five-year-old star and director Orson Welles virtually complete creative control over the film, RKO released Citizen Kane.[i] While it opened to strong reviews and went on to be hailed as one of the greatest movies ever made, it lost money at the time and brought down the wrath of the Hearst newspaper chain on RKO.[101] The next year saw the commercial failure of Welles's The Magnificent Ambersons—like Kane, critically lauded and overbudget—and the expensive embarrassment of his aborted documentary It's All True.[102] The three Welles productions combined to drain $2 million from the RKO coffers, major money for a corporation that had reported an overall deficit of $1 million in 1940 and a nominal profit of a bit more than $500,000 in 1941.[j] Many of RKO's other artistically ambitious pictures were also dying at the box office and it was losing its last exclusive deal with a major star as well. Rogers, after winning an Oscar in 1941 for her performance in the previous year's Kitty Foyle, held out for a freelance contract like Lombard's or Grant's. No star appeared in more RKO films than Rogers: thirty between 1931 and 1943, then one-offs in 1946 and 1956.[103] On June 17, 1942, Schaefer tendered his resignation.[104] He departed a weakened and troubled studio, but RKO was about to turn the corner. Propelled by the box-office boom of World War II and guided by new management, RKO made a strong comeback over the next half-decade.[105]

Rebound under Koerner

By the end of June 1942, Floyd Odlum had taken over a controlling interest in the company via his Atlas Corporation, edging aside the Rockefellers and Sarnoff. Charles Koerner, former head of the RKO theater chain and allied with Odlum, had assumed the title of production chief some time prior to Schaefer's departure.[106] With Schaefer gone, Koerner could actually do the job. Announcing a new corporate motto, "Showmanship in Place of Genius: A New Deal at RKO", a snipe at Schaefer's artistic ambitions in general and his sponsorship of Welles in particular,[107] Koerner brought the studio much-needed stability until his death in February 1946.[108] The change in RKO's fortunes was virtually immediate: corporate profits rose from $736,241 in 1942 (the theatrical division compensating for the studio's $2.34 million deficit) to $6.96 million the following year.[109] The Rockefellers sold off their stock and, early in 1943, RCA dispensed with the last of its holdings in the company as well, cutting David Sarnoff's ties to the studio that was largely his conception.[110] A new RKO Pathé "news magazine" series, This Is America, had been launched the previous October to take the place of The March of Time after Time Inc. switched its distribution to Twentieth Century-Fox.[111] In June 1944, a subsidiary, RKO Television Corporation, was established to produce content for the fledgling medium. Talk Fast, Mister, an hour-long drama shot at the RKO Pathé studio in Manhattan and broadcast by the DuMont Laboratories–owned New York station WABD on December 18, 1944, was the first made-for-TV movie.[112] In collaboration with Mexican businessman Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta, RKO established Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City in 1945.[113]

 
Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman in Notorious (1946). RKO made over $1 million profit on the coproduction with David O. Selznick's Vanguard Films.[114]

With RKO on increasingly secure ground, Koerner sought to increase its output of handsomely budgeted, star-driven features. However, the studio's only remaining major stars with anything like extended deals were Grant, whose services were shared with Columbia Pictures, and O'Hara, shared with Fox.[115] Lacking in-house stars, Koerner and his successors under Odlum arranged with the other studios to loan out their biggest names or signed one of the growing number of freelance performers to short-term, "pay or play" deals. Thus RKO pictures of the mid- and late forties offered Bing Crosby, Henry Fonda, and others who were out of the studio's price range for extended contracts.[116] John Wayne appeared in 1943's A Lady Takes a Chance while on loan from Republic Pictures; he was soon working regularly with RKO, making nine more movies for the studio.[117] Gary Cooper appeared in RKO releases produced by Goldwyn and, later, the startup International Pictures,[118] and Claudette Colbert starred in a number of RKO coproductions.[119] Ingrid Bergman, on loan out from Selznick, starred opposite Bing Crosby in The Bells of St. Mary's (1945), a coproduction with director Leo McCarey. The top box-office film of the year, it turned a $3.7 million profit for RKO, the most in the company's history.[120] Bergman returned in the coproductions Notorious (1946) and Stromboli (1950), and in the independently produced Joan of Arc (1948).[121] Freelancing Randolph Scott appeared in one major RKO release annually from 1943 through 1948.[122]

In similar fashion, many leading directors made one or more films for RKO during this era, including Alfred Hitchcock once more, with Notorious, and Jean Renoir, with This Land Is Mine (1943), reuniting Laughton and O'Hara, and The Woman on the Beach (1947).[123] RKO and Orson Welles had an arm's-length reunion via The Stranger (1946), an independent production he starred in as well as directed. Welles later called it his worst film, but it was the only one he ever made that turned a profit in its first run.[124] In December 1946, the studio released Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life; while it would eventually be recognized as one of the greatest films of Hollywood's Golden Age, at the time it lost more than half a million dollars for RKO.[125] John Ford's The Fugitive (1947) and Fort Apache (1948), which appeared right before studio ownership changed hands again, were followed by She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) and Wagon Master (1950); all four were coproductions between RKO and Argosy, the company run by Ford and RKO alumnus Merian C. Cooper.[126] Of the directors under long-term contract to RKO in the 1940s, the best known was Edward Dmytryk, who first came to notice with the remarkably profitable Hitler's Children (1943). Shot on a $205,000 budget, placing it in the bottom quartile of Big Five studio productions, it was one of the ten biggest Hollywood hits of the year.[127][k] Another low-cost war-themed film directed by Dmytryk, Behind the Rising Sun, released a few months later, was similarly profitable.[52][128]

Focus on B movies

 
Film art at low budget: I Walked with a Zombie (1943), produced by Val Lewton and directed by Jacques Tourneur.

Much more than the other Big Five studios, RKO relied on B pictures to fill up its schedule. Of the thirty-one features released by RKO in 1944, for instance, ten were budgeted below $200,000, twelve were in the $200,000 to $500,000 range, and only nine cost more. In contrast, a clear majority of the features put out by the other top four studios were budgeted at over half a million dollars.[129] A focus on B pictures limited the studio's financial risk; while it also limited the potential for reward (Dmytryk's extraordinary coups aside), RKO had a history of making better profits with its run-of-the-mill and low-cost product than with its A movies.[6] The studio's low-budget films offered training opportunities for new directors, as well, among them Mark Robson, Robert Wise, and Anthony Mann.[130][131] Robson and Wise received their first directing assignments with producer Val Lewton, whose specialized B horror unit also included the more experienced director Jacques Tourneur. The Lewton unit's moody, atmospheric work—represented by films such as Cat People (1942), I Walked with a Zombie (1943), and The Body Snatcher (1945)—is now highly regarded.[130][132] Richard Dix concluded his lengthy RKO career with the 1943 Lewton production The Ghost Ship.[133]

Tim Holt, who succeeded George O'Brien as RKO's cowboy star, appeared in forty-six B Westerns and more than fifty movies altogether for the studio, beginning in 1940.[134] That same year, Chester Lauck and Norris Goff brought their famous comic characters Lum and Abner from radio to the screen for the first of six independently produced RKO releases.[135] Between 1943 and 1946, the studio teamed contract actors Wally Brown and Alan Carney for comedies that openly mimicked the work of the wildly popular Abbott and Costello; Brown and Carney's eight pairings didn't approach their prototypes' success.[136] The Falcon detective series began in 1941; the Saint and the Falcon were so similar that Saint creator Leslie Charteris sued RKO.[137] The Falcon was first played by George Sanders, who had appeared five times as the Saint. He bowed out after four Falcon films and was replaced by his brother, Tom Conway. Conway had a nine-film run in the part before the series ended in 1946. Johnny Weissmuller starred in six Tarzan pictures for RKO between 1943 and 1948 before being replaced by Lex Barker for five more.[75]

Film noir, to which lower budgets lent themselves, became something of a house style at the studio; indeed, the RKO B Stranger on the Third Floor (1940) is widely seen as initiating noir's classic period.[138] Its cinematographer, Nicholas Musuraca, who began at FBO in the 1920s and stayed with RKO through 1954, is a central figure in creating the look of classic noir.[139] Design chief Albert D'Agostino—another long-termer, who succeeded Van Nest Polglase in 1941—and art director Walter Keller, along with others in the department, such as art directors Carroll Clark and Jack Okey and set decorator Darrell Silvera, are similarly credited.[140] The studio's 1940s list of contract players was filled with noir regulars: Robert Mitchum (who graduated to major star status) and Robert Ryan each made no fewer than ten film noirs for RKO.[141] Gloria Grahame, Jane Greer, and Lawrence Tierney were also notable studio players in the field.[142] Freelancer George Raft starred in two noir hits: Johnny Angel (1945) and Nocturne (1946).[143] Tourneur, Musuraca, Mitchum, and Greer, along with D'Agostino's design group, joined to make the A-budgeted Out of the Past (1947), now considered one of the greatest of all film noirs.[144] Nicholas Ray began his directing career with the noir They Live by Night (1948), the first of a number of well-received films he made for RKO.[145]

HUAC and Howard Hughes

 
Crossfire (1947) was a hit, but no American studio would hire blacklisted director Edward Dmytryk again until he named names to HUAC in 1951.[146] Producer Adrian Scott did not get another screen credit for two decades. He died before he could see it.[147]

RKO, and the movie industry as a whole, had its most profitable year ever in 1946. A Goldwyn production released by RKO, The Best Years of Our Lives, was the most successful Hollywood film of the decade and won the Academy Award for Best Picture.[148] But the legal status of the industry's reigning business model was increasingly being called into doubt: the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Bigelow v. RKO that the company was liable for damages under antitrust statutes for having denied an independent movie house access to first-run films—a common practice among all of the Big Five.[149] With profits at a high point, Floyd Odlum cashed in by selling off about 40 percent of his shares in the company to a group of investment firms.[150] After Koerner's death, Radio-Keith-Orpheum president N. Peter Rathvon and RKO Radio Pictures president Ned Depinet had exchanged positions, with Depinet moving to the corporate offices in New York and Rathvon relocating to Hollywood and doubling as production chief while a permanent replacement was sought for Koerner. On the first day of 1947, producer and Oscar-winning screenwriter Dore Schary, who had been working at the studio on loan from Selznick, took over the role.[151]

RKO appeared in good shape to build on its recent successes, but the year brought a number of unpleasant harbingers for all of Hollywood. The British government imposed a 75 percent tax on films produced abroad; along with similarly confiscatory taxes and quota laws enacted by other countries, this led to a sharp decline in foreign revenues.[152] The postwar attendance boom peaked sooner than expected and television emerged as a competitor for audience interest. Across the board, profits fell—a 27 percent drop for the Hollywood studios from 1946 to 1947.[153] In July, RKO Pathé's signature newsreel was sold to Warner Bros. for a reported $4 million.[154] The phenomenon later called McCarthyism was building strength, and in October, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) began hearings into Communism in the motion picture industry. Two of RKO's top talents, Dmytryk and producer Adrian Scott, refused to cooperate. As a consequence, they were fired by RKO per the terms of the Waldorf Statement, the major studios' pledge to "eliminate any subversives". Scott, Dmytryk, and eight others who also defied HUAC—dubbed the Hollywood Ten—were blacklisted across the industry.[155] Ironically, the studio's major success of the year was Crossfire, a Scott–Dmytryk film.[156] Odlum concluded it was time to exit the film business, and he put Atlas's remaining RKO shares—approximately 25 percent of the outstanding stock—on the market.[157] For her performance in The Farmer's Daughter (1947), a coproduction with Selznick's Vanguard Films, Loretta Young won the Best Actress Oscar the following March. It was the last major Academy Award for an RKO picture.[158]

In May 1948, eccentric aviation tycoon and occasional movie producer Howard Hughes spent $8.8 million to gain control of the company, beating out British film magnate J. Arthur Rank for Odlum's stake.[159] During Hughes's tenure, RKO suffered its worst years since the early 1930s, as his capricious management style took a heavy toll. Production chief Schary quit almost immediately due to his new boss's interference and Rathvon soon followed.[160] Within weeks of taking over, Hughes had dismissed three-fourths of the work force; production was virtually shut down for six months as the conservative Hughes shelved or canceled several of the "message pictures" that Schary had backed.[161] All of the Big Five saw their profits dwindle in 1948—from Fox, down 11 percent, to Loew's/MGM, down 62 percent—but at RKO they virtually vanished: from $5.1 million in 1947 to $0.5 million, a drop of 90 percent.[162] The production-distribution end of the RKO business, now deep in the red, would never make a profit again.[163]

Offscreen, Robert Mitchum's arrest and conviction for marijuana possession—he served two months in jail—was widely assumed to mean career death for RKO's most promising young star, but Hughes surprised the industry by announcing that his contract was not endangered.[164] Of much broader significance, Hughes decided to get the jump on his Big Five competitors by being the first to settle the federal government's antitrust suit against the major studios, which had won a crucial Supreme Court ruling in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. Under the consent decree he signed, Hughes agreed to dissolve the old parent company, Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp., and split RKO's production-distribution business and its exhibition chain into two entirely separate corporations—RKO Pictures Corp. and RKO Theatres Corp.—with the obligation to promptly sell off one or the other. While Hughes delayed the divorcement procedure until December 1950 and didn't actually sell his stock in the theater company for another three years, his decision to acquiesce was one of the crucial steps in the collapse of classical Hollywood's studio system.[165]

Turmoil under Hughes

 
Robert Mitchum, RKO's most prolific lead of the late 1940s and early 1950s,[166] costarred in Macao (1952) with Jane Russell, who was personally contracted to Howard Hughes.[167] Director Josef von Sternberg's work was combined with scenes shot by Nicholas Ray and Mel Ferrer.[168]

Shooting at RKO picked up again in early 1949, but from an average of around thirty films annually before Hughes's takeover, production fell to just twelve that year. Sporting the new title of managing director of production, Hughes quickly became notorious for meddling in minute filmmaking matters and promoting actresses he favored—including two under personal contract to him, Jane Russell and Faith Domergue.[169] While his time at RKO was marked by both diminished production and a slew of expensive flops, the studio continued to turn out some well-received films under production chiefs Sid Rogell and Sam Bischoff, though both became fed up with Hughes's interloping and quit after less than two years. Bischoff was the last man to hold the job under Hughes.[170] There were B noirs such as The Window (1949), which turned into a hit,[171] and The Set-Up (1949), directed by Robert Wise and starring Robert Ryan, which won the Critic's Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.[172] The Thing from Another World (1951), a science-fiction drama coproduced with Howard Hawks's Winchester Pictures, is seen as a classic of the genre.[173] In 1952, RKO put out two films directed by Fritz Lang, Rancho Notorious and Clash by Night. The latter was a project of the renowned Jerry WaldNorman Krasna production team, lured by Hughes from Warner Bros. with great fanfare in August 1950.[174]

The company also began a close working relationship with Ida Lupino. She starred in two suspense films with Robert Ryan—Nicholas Ray's On Dangerous Ground (1952, though shooting had been completed two years earlier) and Beware, My Lovely (1952), a coproduction between RKO and Lupino's company, The Filmakers.[175] Of more historic note, Lupino was Hollywood's only female director during the period; of the five pictures The Filmakers made with RKO, Lupino directed three, including her now celebrated The Hitch-Hiker (1953).[176] Exposing many moviegoers to Asian cinema for the first time, RKO distributed Akira Kurosawa's epochal Rashomon in the United States, sixteen months after its original 1950 Japanese release.[177] The only smash hits released by RKO in the 1950s came out during this period, but neither was an in-house production: Goldwyn's Hans Christian Andersen (1952) was followed by Disney's Peter Pan (1953).[52][178] In 1951, a twenty-two-year-old photographer from the Bronx directed his first two short films—Stanley Kubrick's Day of the Fight and Flying Padre were both released by RKO Pathé.[179]

In early 1952, Hughes fought off a lawsuit by screenwriter Paul Jarrico, who had been caught up in the latest round of HUAC hearings—Hughes had fired him and removed his name from the credits of a recent release, The Las Vegas Story, a money-losing melodrama starring Jane Russell.[180] The studio owner subsequently ordered 100 RKO employees on "leave of absence" while he established a "security office" to oversee an ideological vetting system. "We are going to screen everyone in a creative or executive capacity", he declared. "The work of Communist sympathizers will not be used."[181] As more credits were expunged, some in the industry began to question whether Hughes's hunt for subversives served primarily as a convenient rationale for further curtailing production and trimming expenses.[182]

In September, Hughes and his corporate president, Ned E. Depinet, sold their RKO studio stock to a Chicago-based syndicate with no experience in the movie business; the syndicate's chaotic reign lasted until February 1953, when the stock and control were reacquired by Hughes.[183] The studio's net loss in 1952 was over $10 million, and shooting had taken place for just a single in-house production over the last five months of the year.[184] During the turmoil, Samuel Goldwyn ended his eleven-year-long distribution deal with RKO. Wald and Krasna escaped their contracts and the studio as well. The deal that brought the team to RKO had called for them to produce sixty features over five years; in just shy of half that time, they succeeded in making four.[185] The Encino ranch shut down permanently in 1953 and the property was sold off.[186] In November, Hughes finally fulfilled his obligations under the 1948 consent decree, divesting RKO Theatres; Albert A. List purchased the controlling interest in the business and renamed it List Industries.[187] Hughes soon found himself the target of no fewer than five separate lawsuits filed by minority shareholders in RKO, accusing him of malfeasance in his dealings with the Chicago group and a wide array of acts of mismanagement. "RKO's contract list is down to three actors and 127 lawyers", quipped Dick Powell.[188] Leery of the studio's mounting problems and sparring with it over the release of the forthcoming nature documentary The Living Desert, the Disney company exited its long-standing arrangement with RKO and set up its own distribution firm, Buena Vista.[189] Contractual obligations meant that one last Disney feature would be released by RKO in 1954, and it continued to handle Disney shorts into 1956.[190]

Looking to forestall the impending legal imbroglio, by early 1954 Hughes was offering to buy out all of RKO's other stockholders.[191] Before the end of the year, at a cost of $23.5 million, Hughes had gained near-total control of RKO Pictures, becoming the first virtual sole owner of a studio since Hollywood's pioneer days—virtual, but not quite actual. Floyd Odlum reemerged to block Hughes's acquisition of the 95 percent ownership of RKO stock he needed to write off the company's losses against his earnings elsewhere. Hughes had reneged on his promise to give Odlum first option on buying the RKO theater chain when he divested it, and was now paying the price.[192] With negotiations between the two at a stalemate, in July 1955, Hughes turned around and sold RKO Pictures to the General Tire and Rubber Company for $25 million.[193] For Hughes, this was the effective end of a quarter-century's involvement in the movie business. Historian Betty Lasky describes Hughes's relationship with RKO as a "systematic seven-year rape."[194]

General Tire and demise

 
Jet Pilot, a Hughes pet production launched in 1949. Shooting wrapped in May 1951, but it was not released until 1957 due to his interminable tinkering. RKO was by then out of the distribution business. The movie was released by Universal-International.[195]

In taking control of the studio, General Tire restored RKO's close ties to broadcasting. General Tire had bought the Yankee Network, a New England regional radio network, in 1943.[196] In 1950, it purchased the West Coast regional Don Lee Broadcasting System,[197] and two years later, the Bamberger Broadcasting Service, owner of the WOR radio and television stations in New York City.[198] The latter acquisition gave General Tire majority control of the Mutual Broadcasting System, one of America's leading radio networks.[199] General Tire then merged its broadcasting interests into a new division, General Teleradio.[200]

Thomas O'Neil, son of General Tire's founder William O'Neil and chairman of the broadcasting group, saw that the company's new television stations, indeed all TV outlets, were in need of programming.[201][202] In September 1954, WOR-TV had launched the Million Dollar Movie program, running a single film for a week, twice every night plus Saturday and Sunday matinees; the format proved hugely successful and non-network-affiliated stations around the country were eager to emulate it.[203][204] With the purchase of RKO, the studio's library was under O'Neil's control and he quickly put the rights to the 742 films to which RKO retained clear title up for sale. C&C Television Corp., a subsidiary of beverage maker Cantrell & Cochrane, won the bidding in December 1955 and was soon offering the films to independent stations in a package called "MovieTime USA".[201][205] RKO Teleradio Pictures—the new company created from the merger of General Teleradio and the RKO studio—retained the broadcast rights for the cities where it owned TV stations. By 1956, RKO's classic movies were playing widely on television, often in the Million Dollar Movie format, allowing many to see such films as Citizen Kane and King Kong for the first time. The $15.2 million RKO made on the deal convinced the other major studios that their libraries held profit potential—a turning point in the way Hollywood did business.[201][206]

The new owners of RKO made an initial effort to revive the studio, hiring veteran producer William Dozier to head production.[207][208] In the first half of 1956, the production facilities were as busy as they had been in a half-decade.[207][209] RKO Teleradio Pictures released Fritz Lang's final two American films, While the City Sleeps and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (both 1956), but years of mismanagement had driven away many directors, producers, and stars.[210] The studio was also saddled with the last of the inflated B movies such as Pearl of the South Pacific (1955) and The Conqueror (1956) that enchanted Hughes.[211] The latter, starring John Wayne, was the biggest hit produced at the studio during the decade, but its $4.5 million in North American rentals did not come close to covering its $6 million cost.[52] In March 1956 came the news that RKO Pathé was being dissolved.[212]

On January 22, 1957, after a year and a half without a notable success, RKO announced that it was closing its domestic distribution offices—Universal would take over most future releases—and that a reduced production wing would move to the Culver City lot.[213] In fact, General Tire shut down RKO production for good.[207] Overseas distribution exchanges were dispensed with: RKO Japan Ltd. was sold to Disney and the British Commonwealth Film Corporation in July 1957, and RKO Radio Pictures Ltd. in the UK was dissolved a year later.[214] The Hollywood and Culver City facilities were sold in late 1957 for $6.15 million to Desilu Productions, owned by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball, who had been an RKO contract player from 1935 to 1942.[215] Desilu was acquired by Gulf and Western Industries in 1967 and merged into G+W's other production company, neighboring Paramount Pictures; the former RKO Hollywood studio, FBO's old home, is now part of the Paramount lot.[216] The renovated Culver City studio, where DeMille once reigned, is now owned and operated as an independent production facility.[217] Forty Acres, the Culver City backlot, was razed in the mid-1970s.[218] List Industries, the former RKO Theatres Corp., was bought by Glen Alden Corp. in 1959. Glen Alden acquired another chain in 1967, creating RKO–Stanley Warner Theatres. Cinerama purchased the exhibition circuit from Glen Alden in 1971.[219]

Now little more than a name and beneficiary of General Tire's doubtful largesse, RKO announced in early 1958 that it would continue as a financial backer, coproducing independently made pictures. Fewer than half a dozen resulted.[220] The final RKO film, Verboten!, a coproduction with director Samuel Fuller's Globe Enterprises, was released, fitfully, beginning in March 1959, first by Rank and then Columbia.[221] That same year, "Pictures" was stripped from the corporate identity; the holding company for General Tire's broadcasting operation and the few remaining motion picture assets was renamed RKO General.[222][l] In the words of scholar Richard B. Jewell, "The supreme irony of RKO's existence is that the studio earned a position of lasting importance in cinema history largely because of its extraordinarily unstable history. Since it was the weakling of Hollywood's 'majors,' RKO welcomed a diverse group of individualistic creators and provided them ... with an extraordinary degree of freedom to express their artistic idiosyncrasies.... [I]t never became predictable and it never became a factory."[223]

Later incarnations

Beginning with 1981's Carbon Copy, RKO General became involved in the coproduction of a number of feature films and TV projects through a subsidiary created three years earlier, RKO Pictures Inc.[224] In collaboration with Universal Studios, RKO put out five films over the next three years. Although the studio frequently worked with major names—including Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Jack Nicholson in The Border, and Nastassja Kinski in Cat People (all 1982)—it met with little success. Starting with the Meryl Streep vehicle Plenty (1985), RKO took on more projects as sole studio backer.[225] In January 1986, Paramount signed a two-year distribution agreement with the company.[226] Films such as the erotic thriller Half Moon Street (1986) and the Vietnam War drama Hamburger Hill (1987) followed, but production ended as GenCorp underwent a massive reorganization following an attempted hostile takeover.[225] With RKO General dismantling its broadcast business, RKO Pictures Inc., along with the original RKO studio's trademarks, remake rights, and other remaining assets, was spun off and put up for sale. After a bid by RKO Pictures' own management team failed, the managers made a deal with Wesray Capital Corporation—under the control of former US treasury secretary William E. Simon and investor Ray Chambers—to buy RKO through Entertainment Acquisition Co., a newly created purchasing entity.[227] The sale was completed in late 1987, and Wesray linked RKO with its Six Flags amusement parks to form RKO/Six Flags Entertainment Inc.[228]

RKO Pictures LLC
 
TypeLimited liability company (LLC)
IndustryMotion pictures
Founded1990; 33 years ago (1990)
HeadquartersLA Office:
11301 West Olympic Blvd., Suite 510, Los Angeles, CA 90064
NY Office:
750 Lexington Ave., Suite 2200, New York, NY 10022
Key people
Ted Hartley (Chairman and CEO)
Mary Beth O'Connor (Vice Chair)
DivisionsRKO Stage Productions
RKO Radio
Websitewww.rko.com  

In 1989, RKO Pictures, which had produced no films while under Wesray control, was spun off yet again. Actress and Post Cereals heiress Dina Merrill and her husband, producer Ted Hartley, acquired a majority interest and merged the company with their Pavilion Communications. After a brief period as RKO/Pavilion, the business was reorganized as RKO Pictures LLC.[229][230] With the inaugural RKO production under Hartley and Merrill's ownership, False Identity (1990), the company also stepped into the distribution business. In 1992, it handled the well-regarded independent production Laws of Gravity, directed by Nick Gomez.[231] RKO's next significant film came in 1998 with Mighty Joe Young, a remake of a 1949 RKO movie that was itself a King Kong knockoff; the Disney coproduction was distributed by Buena Vista.[232] In the early 2000s, the company was involved as a coproducer of TV movies and modestly budgeted features, about one a year.[233] In 2003, it coproduced a Broadway stage version of the 1936 Astaire–Rogers vehicle Swing Time, under the title Never Gonna Dance.[234]

That same year, RKO Pictures entered into a legal battle with Wall Street Financial Associates (WSFA). Hartley and Merrill claimed that the owners of WSFA fraudulently induced them into signing an acquisition agreement by concealing their "cynical and rapacious" plans to purchase RKO, with the intention only of dismantling it. WSFA sought a preliminary injunction prohibiting RKO's majority owners from selling their interests in the company to any third parties.[235] The WSFA motion was denied in July 2003, freeing RKO to deal with another potential purchaser, InternetStudios.com. In 2004, that planned sale fell through when InternetStudios.com apparently folded.[236] The company's minimal involvement in new film production continued to focus on its remake rights: Are We Done Yet?, based on Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948), was released in April 2007 to dismal reviews.[237] In 2009, Beyond a Reasonable Doubt, a remake of a 1956 RKO film directed by Fritz Lang, fared even worse critically, receiving a 7% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[238] A stage version of Top Hat toured Great Britain in the second half of 2011.[239] The most recent RKO film coproductions are the well-received A Late Quartet (2012) and the 2015 flop Barely Lethal.[240] Two months after Dina Merrill's May 2017 death,[241] independent producer Keith Patterson sued RKO, Hartley, and his second-in-command, Mary Beth O'Connor, over the collapse of plans to create multiple TV series based on RKO properties, starting with Citizen Kane. According to Patterson's suit, O'Connor controls access to Hartley and holds both his healthcare proxy and an option to acquire RKO and its intellectual property at a deep markdown after his death.[242] As of November 2022, 98-year-old Hartley was still making public appearances connected with his avocation as a painter.[243]

Library

 
The pre-Code Rafter Romance (1933), one of the "lost" films long held by Merian Cooper, debuted four months before Ginger Rogers's first pairing with Fred Astaire. Costar Norman Foster later directed Journey into Fear (1943) and Rachel and the Stranger (1948) for RKO.

RKO Pictures LLC owns the RKO Radio Pictures Inc. film copyrights, trademarks, and story library, with title to more than 500 screenplays (giving it the right to produce remakes, sequels, and prequels) and approximately 900 unproduced scripts.[233][244][m] The actual films and their television, video, and theatrical distribution rights are in other hands.

In 1971, the US and Canadian TV—and consequently, video—rights to most of the RKO film library were sold at auction after the holders, TransBeacon (a corporate descendant of C&C Television), went bankrupt. The auctioned rights were split between United Artists (UA) and Marian B. Inc. (MBI). In 1984, MBI created a subsidiary, Marian Pictures Inc. (MBP), to which it transferred its share of the RKO rights. Two years later GenCorp's subsidiaries, RKO General and RKO Pictures, repurchased the rights then controlled by MBP.[245] In the meantime, United Artists had been acquired by MGM. In 1986, MGM/UA's considerable library, including its RKO film negatives and rights, was bought by Turner Broadcasting System for its new Turner Entertainment division. When Turner announced plans to colorize ten of the RKO films, GenCorp resisted, claiming copyright infringement, leading to both sides filing lawsuits.[246] During RKO Pictures' brief Wesray episode, Turner acquired many of the distribution rights that had returned to RKO via MBP, as well as both the theatrical rights and the TV rights originally held back from C&C for the cities where RKO owned stations.[247] The new owners of RKO also allowed Turner to move forward with colorization of the library.[248] Early in 1989, Turner declared that no less than the historic Citizen Kane would be colorized; upon review of Welles's ironclad creative contract with RKO, that plan was abandoned.[249] In October 1996, Turner was merged into Time Warner (now Warner Bros. Discovery), which today owns the bulk of the RKO library and controls its distribution in North America.[250] In 2007, Warners' Turner Classic Movies channel obtained the rights to six "lost" RKO films that Merian Cooper acquired in a 1946 legal settlement with his former employer and later transferred to a business associate as a tax shelter.[251]

The Disney films originally distributed by RKO are owned and fully controlled by the Walt Disney Company,[252] as is the 1940 RKO adaptation of Swiss Family Robinson, purchased by Disney prior to its 1960 remake.[253] Rights to many other independent productions distributed by the studio, as well as some notable coproductions, are in new hands. Most Samuel Goldwyn films are owned by his estate and administered by Warner Bros. in North America and Miramax—in which Paramount Global currently holds a 49 percent stake—internationally.[254] It's a Wonderful Life, coproduced by Frank Capra's Liberty Films,[255] and The Bells of St. Mary's, coproduced by Leo McCarey's Rainbow Productions,[256] are now owned by Paramount Global, through its predecessor Viacom's indirect acquisition of the latter-day Republic Pictures, formerly National Telefilm Associates.[257] Notorious, a coproduction between RKO and David Selznick's Vanguard Films, is now owned by Disney;[258] it is currently licensed to the Criterion Collection.[259] The Stranger, from William Goetz's International Pictures, has been in the public domain since 1973.[260] Eighteen films produced by RKO itself in 1930–31, including Dixiana, were also allowed to fall into the public domain, as were several later in-house productions, including high-profile releases such as The Animal Kingdom, Bird of Paradise, Of Human Bondage, Love Affair, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and They Knew What They Wanted.[261] In the late 1950s, Hughes bought his beloved Jet Pilot and The Conqueror back from RKO Teleradio; in 1979, Universal acquired the rights to the latter.[262]

European rights

Ownership of the major European TV and video distribution rights to the RKO library differs by country: In the UK, the RKO rights, long held by Universal Studios, are now under Warner Bros.' control.[263] The German rights were acquired in 1969 by KirchGruppe on behalf of its KirchMedia division, which went bankrupt in 2002. EOS Entertainment's Beta Film purchased many of KirchMedia's rights in 2004, and the library as of 2010 was distributed by Kineos, created five years earlier as a Beta Film–KirchMedia joint venture.[264] At the end of 2014, Warners took over the French rights from longtime distributor Éditions Montparnasse.[265] Rome's Red Film claims the rights in Italy.[266] Vértice 360 (formerly Manga Films) holds the Spanish rights.[267]

Logos

 
Classic closing logo of RKO Radio Pictures

Most of the films released by RKO Pictures between 1929 and 1957 have an opening logo displaying the studio's famous trademark, a spinning globe and radio tower, nicknamed the "Transmitter." It was inspired by a 200-foot (61 m) tower built in Colorado for a giant electrical amplifier, or Tesla coil, created by inventor Nikola Tesla.[268] For many years, the RKO tower beeped out the Morse code for "A Radio Picture" (during much of World War II, "V for Victory" was substituted).[269] Orson Welles referred to the Transmitter as his "favorite among the old logos, not just because it was so often a reliable portent.... It reminds us to listen."[270] The RKO Pathé feature logo replaced the radio tower with the Pathé brand's hallmark rooster, who stood stock-still as the world turned beneath his feet.[271] RKO's closing logo, an inverted triangle enclosing a thunderbolt, was also a well-known trademark.[272] Instead of the Transmitter, many Disney and Goldwyn films released by the studio originally appeared with colorful versions of the RKO closing logo as part of the main title sequence.[273] For decades, re-releases of these films had Disney/Buena Vista and MGM/Goldwyn logos replacing the RKO insignia, but the originals were restored in many DVD editions.[274] In the 1990s, the Hartley–Merrill RKO Pictures commissioned a new, CGI version of the Transmitter.[233][275]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The online edition of Encyclopædia Britannica erroneously states that RKO resulted "from the merger of the Radio Corporation of America, the Keith-Albee-Orpheum theatre chain, and the American Pathé production firm." See RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. entry (retrieved October 22, 2022). Many other sources make the same false claim. Note also the following:
    • Some sources incorrectly describe Keith-Albee-Orpheum as the union of three theater chains; in fact the name describes the union of just two chains, B. F. Keith Corp. (doing business as Keith-Albee) and Orpheum Circuit Inc. Edward F. Albee was Benjamin F. Keith's right-hand man. He took over the company after the deaths of its founder, in 1914, and his son, A. Paul Keith, four years later.[276]
    • Some sources—e.g., Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930–1939, by Tino Balio (Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1995), p. 16—incorrectly claim that RCA Photophone was "amalgamated" or "combined" with FBO and KAO under the Radio-Keith-Orpheum holding company. It was not.[277]
    • Many sources—e.g., Balio (1995), p. 16 again—incorrectly give FBO's full name as "Film Booking Office of America"; the proper name is Film Booking Offices of America, which may be confirmed by examining its official logo.[278]
  2. ^ The claim in the January 1928 New York Times article cited here that FBO would be able to book its films "in practically 700 theatres which make up the Keith-Albee-Orpheum circuits and affiliated houses in America and Canada" is misleading. First, "affiliated houses" almost certainly constituted the vast majority of that figure. Time (1927) indicates that, as of May 1927, Keith-Albee (legally the B. F. Keith Corp.) had 50 theaters and Orpheum had 47—presumably counts of their fully owned venues. More important, per Jewell (2012): "Many of the vaudeville houses would not be converted into sound film theaters. In actuality, the original chain of K-A-O motion picture theaters would number fewer than two hundred" (p. 14). Crafton (1997) refers to "KAO and its 200 theaters" at the time of RKO's founding (p. 141) and states that in 1930, "The number of theaters owned outright by RKO increased to 180" (p. 208). While he references no contemporary sources for those figures, he does cite Film Daily in a description of RKO as controlling 250 theaters in mid-1930, following the major studios' "buying binge" (p. 256: "Big 6 Have Less than 20% of Houses". Film Daily. July 9, 1930. pp. 1–2. Retrieved December 28, 2022.) Schatz (1998) describes an "RKO chain of 161 theaters" around the time David O. Selznick became production chief in October 1931 (p. 128). Schatz (1999) writes that, as of 1940, RKO had "slightly more than 100 theaters" (p. 17). He explains that "the figures on studio-affiliated theaters vary considerably, owing to the number of houses in which the studios held only partial interest—as little as 5 percent in some cases" (p. 484, n. 24). A 1944 book, Economic Control of the Motion Picture Industry, includes the table "Theater holdings of the major companies are approximately as follows"—RKO is listed as holding 222 theaters.[279] Lasky (1989) indicates that a 1953 Fortune article tallied the RKO circuit in 1948, at the time of Hughes's purchase, at "124 theaters, plus a share in about 75 others" (p. 205). Porst (2015) states then when RKO agreed, in late 1948, to divest its theaters, it had "only 109" (p. 115).
  3. ^ The standard reference guide to the studio's films, The RKO Story, by Richard B. Jewell, with Vernon Harbin (New York: Arlington House/Crown, 1982), is used as the final arbiter of whether specific films made between 1929 and 1957 were RKO solo productions, coproductions, or completely independent productions. Official year of release is also per The RKO Story.
  4. ^ Only one previous sound film had cost more than $1 million, and just barely: Noah's Ark (1929), from Warner Bros.[280]
  5. ^ For an example of US print advertising's switch to the RKO Radio Pictures brand at the beginning of the 1932–33 exhibition season, see this original poster for The Most Dangerous Game, which premiered September 9, 1932.[281]
  6. ^ Grant biographer Graham McCann's paean, "No one of [Grant's] stature had contemplated acting as a freelance performer since the days before the studio system took hold of Hollywood",[282] ignores two women: Stanwyck and Miriam Hopkins had both previously gone freelance before they were major box-office draws or Oscar nominees (Becky Sharp, Hopkins's freelance debut, garnered her first and only Academy Award nomination). It also overlooks one man who took that route when of comparable youth and as yet forming "stature". Among still-ascendant male stars, Grant was preceded as a freelancer by Fredric March, admittedly more established when he bid on himself in 1933.[283] In July 1935, Variety identified other prior male members of the "itinerant class": Leslie Howard (eleven years Grant's senior), easing-out-of-his-prime Adolphe Menjou, well-past-his-prime Richard Barthelmess, evergreen Walter Huston, B-movie lead Lee Tracy, and character actor Edward Everett Horton.[284] Ronald Colman (thirteen years Grant's senior) had also freelanced since 1934.[285] For a discussion of the terms and application of the "option contract" standard in Hollywood for most of the 1930s, binding an actor for seven years while giving the studio the "option" every six months to terminate them (the actor had no reciprocal "option" to walk away), see Regev (2018), pp. 123–27.
  7. ^ By August 1940, the lease was no longer exclusive—see "Screen News Here and in Hollywood," New York Times, August 28, 1940. By mid-1949, Selznick had left the studio entirely—see two articles by Thomas F. Brady: "Republic to Make Film on Baseball," New York Times, April 8, 1949; and "Hollywood Buys More Stories," New York Times, May 1, 1949.
  8. ^ Thomas Schatz's brief description of Mr. and Mrs. Smith as a "critical and commercial failure" is evidently incorrect.[286] According to historian Leonard Leff, "Mr. and Mrs. Smith had a happy ending: good reviews and modest box office success."[287] Emily Carman, who examined the studio ledgers, describes it as an unqualified "box-office success, with total domestic and foreign gross amounting to $1,311,855, thus bringing in $582,000 in total profits for RKO."[288] Ed Sikov characterizes it as a "solid commercial hit".[289] Donald Spoto's report on its release lends further support to this position.[290] United Artists' To Be or Not to Be (1942), headlined by Lombard, was released a month after her death.
  9. ^ Though Citizen Kane was technically structured through a set of three contracts originally drawn up in 1939 as a coproduction between RKO and Welles's then newly formed Mercury Productions Inc. (and, indeed, was billed on a title card as "A Mercury Production"), in bottom-line terms it was an RKO production: the studio provided the entire budget and production facilities, assumed all the financial risk, and held all the rights once Welles delivered his final, inviolable cut.[249][291]
  10. ^ Citizen Kane lost $150,000–$160,000 on original release (the production cost was precisely $805,527.53); The Magnificent Ambersons lost $624,000 (production cost $1.125 million); and the unreleased It's All True cost the studio an estimated $1.2 million.[292] Note that the studio operation itself was almost certainly a bigger money-loser than the cited figures suggest, with profits coming from the corporation's theatrical division.[293]
  11. ^ Jewell (1982) states that it "attracted $3,355,000 in film rentals" (p. 181); Lasky (1989) refers to an article in The Hollywood Reporter on the film, published seven months after its premiere, predicting it "would do better than $3 million in the U.S. alone" (p. 185). It is not listed in Schatz's (1999) appendix of annual top box-office films of the 1940s (p. 466), based on a 1992 Variety reckoning, perhaps because of its unusual production history. Assuming Jewell's figure is accurate, and the Schatz/Variety list is otherwise accurate and complete, Hitler's Children was the ninth biggest earner of 1943, an impressive feat for a movie with a B budget and star (Tim Holt).
  12. ^ Many online sources give RKO General's year of inception as 1958, without evidence; O'Neill's 1959 dating is supported by the fact that there is no mention of RKO General in either the New York Times or the Los Angeles Times before February 1960.
  13. ^ RKO Pictures LLC, while it owns the copyright to the original movie and its 1933 sequel, does not control the remake or other ancillary rights to what would be by far its most valuable property: King Kong. Certain elements of the concept are in the public domain, while some are controlled by the Merian Cooper estate and Universal Pictures, among others.[294]

References

  1. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 9; Lasky (1989), pp. 22–24; Gomery (1985), pp. 63–65; Crafton (1997), pp. 68, 129–31, 140; Finler (2003), pp. 31, 230.
  2. ^ Goodwin (1987), pp. 348, 375; Jewell (1982), p. 9; Lasky (1989), pp. 24–25; Gomery (1985), p. 65; Crafton (1997), pp. 136, 138; Nasaw (2012), pp. 111–12.
  3. ^ Goodwin (1987), pp. 375–76; Jewell (1982), p. 9; Lasky (1989), pp. 25–26; Gomery (1985), p. 65; Crafton (1997), pp. 135–39; Beauchamp (2010), pp. 169–74; Eyman (2010), pp. 211–12, 219–20, 223–27, 238–41; Nasaw (2012), pp. 112–13, 115–16; Erickson (2020), p. 12. "Cinemerger". Time. May 2, 1927. Retrieved November 5, 2022. "700 Theatres Merged in Vaudeville Circuit; Keith-Albee and Orpheum Now Largest in Country—Final Papers Signed", New York Times, January 27, 1928.
  4. ^ Goodwin (1987), pp. 375–79; Jewell (1982), pp. 9–10; Lasky (1989), pp. 26–29; Crafton (1997), pp. 138–41, 193, 195; Beauchamp (2010), pp. 169–74, 192–211; Eyman (2010), pp. 254–55; Nasaw (2012), pp. 116–17, 120–29; Erickson (2020), pp. 12–14. Goodwin and Eyman offer widely differing perspectives on the Kennedy–DeMille dealings.
  5. ^ Goodwin (1987), pp. 379–80; Jewell (1982), p. 10; Lasky (1989), pp. 33–34; Gomery (1985), pp. 65–66; Crafton (1997), pp. 141–42; Beauchamp (2010), pp. 142, 169–71, 211–14, 218–24, 230–31; Nasaw (2012), pp. 112, 129–31; Erickson (2020), pp. 12–14. Vischer, Peter (October 27, 1928). "Radio-Keith-FBO Deal Closed with Sarnoff as Board Head". Exhibitors Herald and Moving Picture World. p. 21. Retrieved December 28, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Crafton (1997), p. 210.
  7. ^ Jewell (2012), pp. 20, 18, 25.
  8. ^ "Radio Pictures Trademark Information". Trademarkia. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  9. ^ Jewell (2012), p. 22; "$250,000 for Construction Program at RKO Studio". Film Daily. January 23, 1929. p. 6. Retrieved December 5, 2015.; Koszarski (2008), pp. 164–69.
  10. ^ Korwar (2013), p. 257; Terrace (1999), p. 285.
  11. ^ Koszarski (2008), pp. 169–71; Barrios (1995), pp. 86–88, 209.
  12. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 20; Lasky (1989), pp. 46–47; Barrios (1995), pp. 209, 226.
  13. ^ Jewell (2012), pp. 12, 18–19, 21–25; Lasky (1989), pp. 15, 45–46, 51–55.
  14. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 42–47; Barrios (1995), pp. 225–29.
  15. ^ Barrios (1995), p. 225.
  16. ^ Jewell (2012), p. 22.
  17. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 20, 24.
  18. ^ Catalogue of Copyright Entries (1930), p. 369 et al.
  19. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 298.
  20. ^ Barrios (1995), p. 127; Lasky (1989), p. 52.
  21. ^ Bradley (1996), p. 260; "R.-K.-O. Signs More Noted Names", Los Angeles Times, June 20, 1929; "Studios Plan Huge Programs", Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1929.
  22. ^ Bradley (1996), p. 279.
  23. ^ Jewell (2012), pp. 24, 28, 36, 38; Jewell (1982), p. 29; Lasky (1989), pp. 44–47, 52.
  24. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 38, 41. For Technicolor contracts during this era, see Kalmus, Herbert (October 28, 1938). "Technicolor Adventures in Cinemaland". Widescreen Museum. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  25. ^ Crafton (1997), pp. 207–8, 210; Barrier (2003), p. 169.
  26. ^ Beauchamp (2010), pp. 310–23; Nasaw (2012), pp. 158–61; Goodwin (1987), pp. 422–24; Jewell (2012), pp. 30–32; Lasky (1989), pp. 58–59; Crafton (1997), pp. 208, 210; Ward (2016), pp. 141–45, 147–48. For further details, see Exhibits I and II Annexed to Affidavit of William Mallard, New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division–First Department, Turin Theatre Corporation v. Pathe Exchange, Inc., Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation, and R.K.O. Pathe Distributing Corporation, Papers on Appeal from Order, May 29, 1931.
  27. ^ Beauchamp (2010), pp. 232, 311, 315; Goodwin (1987), p. 422; Jewell (2012), pp. 30–32; Lasky (1989), pp. 58; Ward (2016), pp. 146–48.
  28. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 58, 74; Jewell (2012), p. 31; Crafton (1997), p. 195; Ward (2016), pp. 138, 148.
  29. ^ Schatz (1998), pp. 131; Jewell (1982), p. 54; Ward (2016), p. 149.
  30. ^ Crafton (1997), p. 552; Lasky (1989), p. 55.
  31. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 30; Carman (2012), p. 17; Carman (2016), pp. 48–49, 151, 153–54.
  32. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 221, 223.
  33. ^ Finler (2003), p. 214; Jewell (1982), p. 40, 42, 44, 47, 49–51, 54, 56, 58, 62, 64.
  34. ^ Finler (2003), p. 214.
  35. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 67–70.
  36. ^ a b Bordwell et al. (1985), p. 321.
  37. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 74–76; Jewell (1982), p. 17.
  38. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 77–80, 93.
  39. ^ Jewell (2012), pp. 32, 35, 43, 56; Ward (2016), pp. 146–50; Jewell (1982), pp. 32, 44, 54.
  40. ^ "Six Best Money Stars". Variety. January 5, 1932. p. 1. Retrieved November 28, 2022. The roll actually included seven names, with Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo somehow tied on an alphabetical list.
  41. ^ RKO Radio Picture Book, 1932–1933 (1932). New York: RKO Radio Pictures.
  42. ^ Kroessler (2002), p. 219.
  43. ^ Korwar (2013), p. 257; Hilmes (1990), pp. 57–60.
  44. ^ Schatz (1998), pp. 131–33; Lasky (1989), pp. 81–82.
  45. ^ Schatz (1998), p. 133; Lasky (1989), p. 83.
  46. ^ Mueller (1986), p. 7.
  47. ^ Schatz (1998), pp. 131.
  48. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 78–79, 93–95; Jewell (1982), pp. 52, 60.
  49. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 81–82; Gomery (2005), chap. Paramount, chap. RKO and Disney.
  50. ^ Finler (2003), p. 221.
  51. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 100–1.
  52. ^ a b c d Finler (2003), p. 219.
  53. ^ Lasky (1989), p. 98; Jewell (1982), p. 62.
  54. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 98–99.
  55. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 69.
  56. ^ Lasky (1989), p. 112; Finler (2003), p. 229.
  57. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 290.
  58. ^ See, e.g., Di Battista (2001), p. 90.
  59. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 109–10.
  60. ^ Finler (2003), p. 224.
  61. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 71, 84, 103, 126, 128, 134, 168, 172, 196, 228, 241, 283.
  62. ^ Setliff, Jonathan Stuart (2007). The March of Time and the American Century (PDF) (PhD diss.). University of Maryland. pp. 78–81, 88–89. Retrieved March 18, 2023. Slide (1998), p. 122; Koszarski (2008), pp. 351–55; Fielding, Raymond (Summer 1957). "Time Flickers Out: Notes on the Passing of the 'March of Time'". Quarterly of Film Radio and Television. 11 (4): 357. doi:10.2307/1209995. JSTOR 120995. (registration required)
  63. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 77, 88; Lasky (1989), p. 117.
  64. ^ a b Finler (2003), p. 227.
  65. ^ Albrecht, Donald (June 2009). "The Art of RKO—Van Nest Polglase and the Modern Movie Set: A Pioneer Who Changed the Cinematic Landscape". Architectural Digest. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  66. ^ Naremore (1989), pp. 17–18.
  67. ^ Rode (2007), pp. 58–59.
  68. ^ Morton (2005), p. 43.
  69. ^ Cotta Vaz and Barron (2002), p. 59.
  70. ^ "What? Color in the Movies Again?" Fortune, October 1934 (available online); Morton (2005), pp. 111–12; Lasky (1989), p. 104.
  71. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 87; Lasky (1989), pp. 115–16.
  72. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 229, 231.
  73. ^ Brunelle (1996); Morton (2005), pp. 75–77, 108–9.
  74. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 118–19; Jewell (1982), p. 19.
  75. ^ a b Finler (2003), p. 215.
  76. ^ Carman (2012), pp. 9, 17–18, 20–22, 24, 169 n. 33.
  77. ^ Carman (2012), pp. 21–22; McCann (1998), pp. 79–80, 144.
  78. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 110, 117, 128, 132, 148, 167, 177, 183, 198, 212, 221, 224, 230, 232.
  79. ^ Dickstein (2002), p. 48.
  80. ^ Barrier (2003), p. 170; Lasky (1989), p. 137; Jewell (1982), p. 92.
  81. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 36, 47, 319.
  82. ^ "News of the Screen," New York Times, February 16, 1937; Schatz (1998), p. 181.
  83. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 102.
  84. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 18–19, 102.
  85. ^ "Briskin Resigns as RKO Radio Production Head". The Film Daily. November 4, 1937. p. 1. Retrieved November 9, 2015. 
  86. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 154–57; Jewell (1982), pp. 19, 128–29, 138.
  87. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 138, 152, 171, 178, 181, 246, 260.
  88. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 138, 148, 150, 158, 178, 186, 206, 217, 235, 264.
  89. ^ Carman (2016), pp. 1–2, 75–76.
  90. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 153–54.
  91. ^ a b Finler (2003), pp. 214–15.
  92. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 136.
  93. ^ Bordwell et al. (1985), p. 349. For Walker's earlier work on King Kong: Morton (2005), pp. 30, 43, 52.
  94. ^ . Village Voice. Filmsite.org. 2001. Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved August 29, 2009. . Sight and Sound. BFI. 2002. Archived from the original on May 25, 2012. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  95. ^ Kear (2009), p. 144.
  96. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 152, 156–57; Jewell (1982), p. 116.
  97. ^ For Breen's position, see Jeff and Simmons (2001), pp. 119, 122–125.
  98. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 140.
  99. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 304; Schatz (1999), p. 57; Jewell (2012), p. 253.
  100. ^ Jewell (2012), pp. 231–34; Jewell (1982), pp. 156, 167.
  101. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 161–65.
  102. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 167, 176–80.
  103. ^ For ambitious box office failures: Jewell (1982), pp. 144, 146 (Abe Lincoln in Illinois), 152 (They Knew What They Wanted), 156, 166 (All That Money Can Buy); Lasky (1989), p. 165; Schatz (1999), p. 57. For Rogers: Jewell (1982), pp. 156, 211, 288; Schatz (1999), p. 57; Carman (2016), p. 133.
  104. ^ "Ned Depinet Heads RKO Pictures Unit; Ex-Vice President in Charge of Distribution Is Elected to Succeed G. J. Schaefer", New York Times, June 26, 1942.
  105. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 142, 168.
  106. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 167–68, 174–76.
  107. ^ McBride (2006), p. 63; Server (2002), p. 78.
  108. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 142, 168, 208.
  109. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 168, 178.
  110. ^ Lasky (1989), p. 187.
  111. ^ Koszarski (2021), pp. 34–37, 49, 320; Jewell (2016), pp. 13, 219 n. 43; Barsam, Richard Meran (Spring 1973). "'This Is America': Documentaries for Theaters, 1942–1951". Cinema Journal. 12 (2): 22–38. doi:10.2307/1225493. JSTOR 1225493. (registration required)
  112. ^ Schatz (1999), p. 430; "Television Groups to See First Film Made for Medium". Motion Picture Herald. December 9, 1944. p. 15. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  113. ^ Fein (2000), passim; Lasky (1989), p. 228.
  114. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 213.
  115. ^ Finler (2003), p. 222; Lasky (1989), p. 176.
  116. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 200, 208, 226.
  117. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 187, 198, 204, 211, 225, 241, 259, 286, 290, 295.
  118. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 164, 168, 192, 203, 232.
  119. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 209, 211, 241, 248, 283.
  120. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 206; Finler (2003), p 177.
  121. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 212, 247, 232.
  122. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 184, 196, 203, 211, 218, 229.
  123. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 212, 178, 220.
  124. ^ Thomson (1997), p. 268; Brady (1990), pp. 378–81.
  125. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 215. For its later status, see, e.g., . Village Voice. Filmsite.org. 2001. Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved January 11, 2018. (Sixteenth overall, fifth among Hollywood movies made between 1929 and 1959.)
  126. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 228, 241, 248.
  127. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 181; Lasky (1989), pp. 184–85. For budgets of Big Five releases the following year: Schatz (1999), p. 173, table 6.3.
  128. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 186.
  129. ^ Schatz (1999), p. 173, table 6.3.
  130. ^ a b Schatz (1999), p. 232; Ballinger and Graydon (2007), p. 23.
  131. ^ For B films and slightly higher budgeted "intermediates" directed by Robson: Jewell (1982), pp. 187, 190, 195, 204, 211, 238. By Wise: Jewell (1982), pp. 193, 195, 201, 206, 215, 219, 231, 236. By Mann: Jewell (1982), pp. 202, 205, 212, 219.
  132. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 219–20.
  133. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 190.
  134. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 214–15, 221–22.
  135. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 151, 171, 180, 186, 197, 211.
  136. ^ Erickson (2012), pp. 102–4; Senn (2018), chap. Zombies on Broadway (1945).
  137. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 164.
  138. ^ See, e.g., Ballinger and Graydon (2007), p. 19; Finler (2003), p. 216.
  139. ^ Spicer (2014), pp. 17, 49–50, 55; Finler (2003), p. 216.
  140. ^ Cook (2007), p. 22; Stephens (1995), p. 102; Jacobs (2007), pp. 315–16.
  141. ^ Ballinger and Graydon (2007), pp. 196–98, 205–6. For noir and noir-related films featuring Mitchum: Jewell (1982), pp. 216, 222, 223, 231, 237, 250, 255, 256, 259, 265, 267, 272, 274. Featuring Ryan: Jewell (1982), pp. 220, 222, 227, 236, 247, 248, 252, 255, 259, 262, 266.
  142. ^ Ballinger and Graydon (2007), pp. 100–2, 152, 189–90, 210; Lasky (1989), p. 198; Schwartz (2005), p. 60.
  143. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 205, 216.
  144. ^ See, e.g., Ballinger and Graydon (2007), pp. 56, 151–52; Schatz (1999), p. 364; Ottoson (1981), p. 132.
  145. ^ Finler (2003), p. 225.
  146. ^ Dixon (2005), p. 112.
  147. ^ Langdon-Teclaw (2007), p. 168.
  148. ^ Finler (2003), p. 357; Jewell (1982), p. 214.
  149. ^ Glick, Reymann, and Hoffman (2003), pp. 35–36; Schatz (1999), pp. 16–17.
  150. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 203–4.
  151. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 192–93, 195.
  152. ^ Schatz (1999), pp. 299, 331; Lasky (1989), p. 202; Jewell (1982), p. 216.
  153. ^ Schatz (1999), pp. 290–91.
  154. ^ Koszarski (2021), pp. 36–37, 45; Ward (2016), pp. 149–50.
  155. ^ Friedrich (1997), pp. 333–36; Lasky (1989), pp. 198–202.
  156. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 194–98, 202.
  157. ^ Brown and Broeske (2004), p. 281.
  158. ^ Finler (2003), p. 231; Jewell (1982), pp. 306–7.
  159. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 204–5; Dietrich and Thomas (1972), pp. 235–36.
  160. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 206, 216–17.
  161. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 216–17; Jewell (1982), p. 143.
  162. ^ Analysis based on Schatz (1999), p. 330, table 10.2. See Jewell (1982), pp. 216, 226, for confirmation of RKO figures.
  163. ^ Finler (2003), p. 220.
  164. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 226.
  165. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 218–20, 223, 227; "Part 6: The Supreme Court Verdict That Brought an End to the Hollywood Studio System, 1948". The Independent Producers and the Paramount Case, 1938–1949. Society of Independent Motion Picture Producers. Retrieved July 22, 2006.
  166. ^ Finler (2003), p. 222.
  167. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 205, 219.
  168. ^ Server (2002), pp. 219–22.
  169. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 143, 234, 249–50; Lasky (1989), pp. 205, 219–23; Dietrich and Thomas (1972), pp. 188, 234–37.
  170. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 246, 254.
  171. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 237.
  172. ^ Ottoson (1981), p. 155.
  173. ^ See, e.g., Finler (2003), p. 216.
  174. ^ Lasky (1989), pp. 220–21.
  175. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 262, 266.
  176. ^ Muller (1998), pp. 176–77; Jewell (1982), pp. 251, 257, 271.
  177. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 265.
  178. ^ Finler (2003), pp. 358–59.
  179. ^ Ward (2016), p. 150; Koszarski (2021), pp. 49, 318–21. Day of the Fight was released as an episode of This Is America, in its final year; Flying Padre, as part of the RKO Pathé Screenliner series.
  180. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 263.
  181. ^ Quoted in Lasky (1989), p. 224.
  182. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 243; Lasky (1989), pp. 223–24.
  183. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 243–44, 262, 270; Lasky (1989), pp. 225–26; "An Old Flame Returns". Time. February 23, 1953. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  184. ^ Jewell (1982), p. 262.
  185. ^ Jewell (1982), pp. 246, 262; Lasky (1989), pp. 221, 223, 225.
  186. ^ Crosby (2009), p. 75.
  187. ^ Conant (1981), p. 567.
  188. ^ Quoted in Lasky (1989), p. 226.
  189. ^ Gabler (2006), pp. 518–20; Barrier (2008), pp. 208, 262–63; Smith (1996), pp. 127, 294, 298.
  190. ^ Smith (1996), p. 407; Jewell (1982), pp. 276–77.
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  • Rode, Alan K. (2007). Charles McGraw: Biography of a Film Noir Tough Guy. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-3167-9
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External links

  • list of RKO Pathé–branded films of 1931–32; part of Vitaphone Video Early Talkies
  • RKO Theater Chain list of classic movie houses belonging to RKO chain; part of Cinema Treasures
  • extensive discussion of RKO preservation and rights issues, by David Chierichetti; part of eFilmCenter
  • RKO Radio Pictures: Main Logos gallery and analysis; part of the Audiovisual Identity Database
  • RKO Radio Pictures Logo History video survey of the evolving Transmitter and more

pictures, redirects, here, filmography, list, films, radio, pictures, commonly, known, simply, american, film, production, distribution, company, five, film, studios, hollywood, golden, business, formed, after, keith, albee, orpheum, theater, chain, joseph, ke. RKO redirects here For the filmography see List of RKO Pictures films RKO Radio Pictures Inc commonly known as RKO Pictures or simply RKO was an American film production and distribution company one of the Big Five film studios of Hollywood s Golden Age The business was formed after the Keith Albee Orpheum theater chain and Joseph P Kennedy s Film Booking Offices of America studio were brought together under the control of the Radio Corporation of America RCA in October 1928 RCA executive David Sarnoff engineered the merger to create a market for the company s sound on film technology RCA Photophone and in early 1929 production began under the RKO name an abbreviation of Radio Keith Orpheum Two years later another Kennedy concern the Pathe studio was folded into the operation By the mid 1940s RKO was controlled by investor Floyd Odlum RKO Radio Pictures Inc Opening logoTypeSubsidiaryIndustryMotion picturesPredecessorsKeith Albee Orpheum Corporation Film Booking Offices of AmericaFoundedJanuary 25 1929 94 years ago 1929 01 25 as RKO Productions Inc subsidiary of Radio Keith Orpheum Corp FounderDavid SarnoffDefunct1959 64 years ago 1959 Headquarters1270 Avenue of the Americas New York City New YorkParentRadio Corporation of America Atlas Corporation Hughes Tool Company General Tire and Rubber CompanyRKO has long been renowned for its cycle of musicals starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in the mid to late 1930s Actors Katharine Hepburn and later Robert Mitchum had their first major successes at the studio Cary Grant was a mainstay for years with credits including touchstones of the screwball comedy genre with which RKO was identified The work of producer Val Lewton s low budget horror unit and RKO s many ventures into the field now known as film noir have been acclaimed largely after the fact by film critics and historians The studio produced two of the most famous films in motion picture history King Kong and Citizen Kane RKO was also responsible for notable coproductions such as It s a Wonderful Life and Notorious and it distributed many celebrated films by animation pioneer Walt Disney and leading independent producer Samuel Goldwyn Though it often couldn t compete financially for top star and director contracts RKO s below the line personnel were among the finest including composer Max Steiner cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca and designer Van Nest Polglase Maverick industrialist Howard Hughes took over RKO in 1948 After years of disarray and decline under his control the studio was acquired by the General Tire and Rubber Company in 1955 The original RKO Pictures ceased production in 1957 and was effectively dissolved two years later In 1978 broadcaster RKO General the corporate heir launched a production subsidiary RKO Pictures Inc which revived the theatrical brand with its first releases three years later In 1989 this business with its remaining assets including the trademarks and remake rights to many classic RKO films was sold to new owners who established the small independent company RKO Pictures LLC The original studio s film library is now largely controlled by Warner Bros Discovery Contents 1 Origin 2 Golden Age studio 2 1 Early years 2 2 Success under Selznick 2 3 Cooper at the helm 2 4 Briskin and Berman 2 5 Kane and Schaefer s troubles 2 6 Rebound under Koerner 2 7 Focus on B movies 2 8 HUAC and Howard Hughes 2 9 Turmoil under Hughes 2 10 General Tire and demise 3 Later incarnations 4 Library 4 1 European rights 5 Logos 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksOrigin EditIn October 1927 Warner Bros released The Jazz Singer the first feature length talking picture Its success prompted Hollywood to convert from silent to sound film production en masse The Radio Corporation of America RCA controlled an advanced optical sound on film system Photophone recently developed by General Electric RCA s parent company Its path to joining the anticipated boom in sound movies had a major hurdle Warner Bros and Fox Hollywood s other vanguard sound studio were already financially and technologically aligned with ERPI a subsidiary of AT amp T s Western Electric division The industry s two largest companies Paramount and Loew s MGM along with First National Pictures third of the silent era Big Three major studios but by then in marked decline and Universal Pictures were poised to contract with ERPI and its Vitaphone and Movietone systems for sound conversion as well 1 David Sarnoff 1929 by Samuel Johnson Woolf National Portrait Gallery Seeking a customer for Photophone then general manager of RCA David Sarnoff approached financier Joseph P Kennedy in late 1927 about using the system for his Film Booking Offices of America FBO A Kennedy led investment group had acquired the modest sized low budget focused studio the previous year and he had turned it into a steady profit maker Negotiations resulted in RCA acquiring a substantial interest in FBO Sarnoff had apparently already conceived of a plan for the studio to attain a central position in the film industry maximizing Photophone revenue Next was securing a string of exhibition venues like those the leading Hollywood production companies owned Kennedy began investigating the possibility of such a purchase 2 At that same time the allied Keith Albee and Orpheum theater circuits built around the then fading medium of live vaudeville were pursuing a transition into the movie business In 1926 the exhibitors had acquired a 50 percent stake in the holding company of Producers Distributing Corporation PDC a smaller studio than FBO but more prestigious Famed director Cecil B De Mille PDC studio chief principal shareholder and owner of its production facility had been draining the company s resources for his well appointed productions and it had been finding little success in getting its films into first run theaters which were largely tied up by the majors In early 1927 despite months of DeMille s strenuous objections an agreement was reached to merge PDC with Pathe a lower level studio known for its newsreel and churn out of cheap shorts In January 1928 a less tense merger engineered by Keith Albee general manager John J Murdock was finalized establishing the Keith Albee Orpheum KAO theater chain Murdock who had assumed the presidency of Pathe the previous June turned to Kennedy as an adviser in consolidating the studio with PDC The two men found that they had mutual interests in particular removing Edward Albee the Czar of Vaudeville and Murdock s nominal boss from the picture This was the relationship Sarnoff and Kennedy sought 3 b Radio Keith Orpheum logo 1929 With Murdock s assistance Kennedy quickly maneuvered to interlock KAO and FBO selling the exhibitor a substantial stake in his studio while buying up copious amounts of KAO stock Within months he had installed himself as chairman of the theater chain s new board of directors When Albee still KAO president visited his office Kennedy reportedly asked Didn t you know Ed You re washed up You re through DeMille departed with a large payout in April and later in the year signed a three picture deal with MGM An attempt by Kennedy to reorganize yet another studio that had turned to him for help now ERPI aligned First National strained his relationship with Sarnoff and raised the threat that Photophone would be locked out of the industry entirely Though Kennedy s deal with First National collapsed within weeks the RCA executive saw that it was time to make his move 4 In September while Kennedy was traveling in Europe Sarnoff began negotiations with Wall Street banker Elisha Walker whose firm was heavily invested in KAO to merge the exhibition circuit with Film Booking Offices under RCA control Soon after Kennedy s return at the end of the month the deal was finalized with Kennedy arranging to sell off his FBO and KAO shares and options at enormous profit On October 23 1928 RCA announced the creation of the Radio Keith Orpheum Corp holding company with Sarnoff as board chairman Kennedy who withdrew from his executive positions in the merged businesses kept Pathe and the PDC assets that it had absorbed separate from RKO and in his personal charge 5 RCA owned the governing stock interest in RKO 22 percent in the early 1930s its share rose as high as 60 percent 6 On January 25 1929 the new company s production arm presided over by former FBO vice president Joseph I Schnitzer was unveiled as RKO Productions Inc 7 A week later it filed for the trademark Radio Pictures 8 Golden Age studio EditEarly years Edit Rio Rita 1929 first smash hit for RKO then releasing films under the Radio Pictures banner While the main FBO studio in Hollywood was refitted for sound production of shorts began in New York at the RKO Gramercy studio Sarnoff had just opened 9 RCA s radio network NBC began broadcasting a weekly variety show The RKO Hour that became a major promotional vehicle for the studio s films 10 The first two features released by the new company were musicals The melodramatic Syncopation which actually completed shooting before FBO was reincorporated as RKO premiered on March 29 1929 11 The comedic Street Girl debuted July 30 This was billed as RKO s first official production and its first to be shot in Hollywood 12 c As with many early RKO films the producer was studio chief William LeBaron who had held the same position at FBO 13 A few nonsinging pictures followed but RKO s first major hit was again a musical The studio spent heavily on the lavish Rio Rita including a number of Technicolor sequences Opening in September to rave reviews it was named one of the ten best pictures of the year by Film Daily 14 Cinema historian Richard Barrios credits it with initiating the first age of the filmed Broadway musical 15 By the end of the year RKO was making use of an additional production facility five hundred acres had been acquired near Encino in the San Fernando Valley as a movie ranch for exteriors and large scale standing sets 16 RKO released a limited slate of twelve features in its first year in 1930 that figure more than doubled to twenty nine 17 Initially organized as the distinct business entities RKO Productions Inc and RKO Distributing Corp by July the studio was transitioning into the new unified RKO Radio Pictures Inc 18 RKO Pictures Ltd was set up to handle British distribution 19 Encouraged by Rio Rita s success RKO produced several costly musicals incorporating Technicolor sequences among them Dixiana and Hit the Deck both scripted and directed like Rio Rita by Luther Reed 20 Following the example of the other major studios RKO had planned to create its own musical revue Radio Revels Promoted as the studio s most extravagant production to date it was to be photographed entirely in Technicolor 21 The project was abandoned as the public s taste for musicals temporarily subsided From more than sixty Hollywood musicals in 1929 and over eighty the following year the number dropped to eleven in 1931 22 Rio Rita star Bebe Daniels who had joined the new studio as its top female name after the final months of her contract at Paramount were bought out fell victim to the shifting market Her big musical follow up Dixiana had been a big money loser and in January 1931 her contract was sold to Warner Bros 23 RKO meanwhile was in a contractual bind that it couldn t get out of it was committed to producing two more features with Technicolor s system even as audiences had come to associate color with the momentarily out of favor musical genre Fulfilling its obligations RKO produced two all Technicolor pictures The Runaround and Fanny Foley Herself both 1931 containing no musical sequences Neither was a success 24 Despite these issues and the foundering US economy RKO had gone on a spending spree buying up theater after theater to add to its exhibition chain In October 1930 the company purchased a 50 percent stake in the New York Van Beuren studio which specialized in cartoons and live shorts 25 Looking to get out of the film business Kennedy arranged for RKO to purchase Pathe in a deal that protected his associates bond investments while it crushed many small stockholders who had bought in at artificially high prices Indeed Kennedy who had previously sold all of his Pathe holdings started buying back bonds which he turned around for substantial gains The deal was secured on January 29 1931 and the studio with its contract players well regarded newsreel operation and DeMille s old Culver City studio and backlot became the semiautonomous RKO Pathe Pictures Inc 26 The acquisition though a defensible investment in the long term for Pathe s physical facilities was yet another major expense borne by the fledgling RKO particularly as the reliably avaricious Kennedy had masked Pathe s considerable financial woes just as he had with FBO and KAO 27 There was an undeniable plus side to the merger when Pathe s Constance Bennett Ann Harding and Helen Twelvetrees joined the Radio family in early 1931 they were bigger box office draws than anyone on the RKO roster 28 The studio s production schedule surpassed forty features a year released under the names Radio Pictures and until late 1932 RKO Pathe 29 Cimarron 1931 became the only RKO production to win the Academy Award for Best Picture it cost a profligate 1 4 million however and lost nearly half that on its first release 30 d Cimmaron s female principal Irene Dunne was the studio s one major homegrown star of this early pre Code era having made her screen debut as the lead in the 1930 musical Leathernecking she would headline at the studio for the entire decade under contracts that gave her an unusual amount of power 31 Other significant actors of the period included Joel McCrea Ricardo Cortez Dolores del Rio and Mary Astor Richard Dix Oscar nominated for his performance in Cimarron would serve as RKO s standby B movie leading man until the early 1940s 32 while Tom Keene was top billed in twelve low budget Westerns between 1931 and 1933 33 The comedy team of Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey often wrangling over ingenue Dorothy Lee was a bankable constant for almost a decade 34 Success under Selznick Edit King Kong 1933 one of Hollywood s great spectacles Exceptions like Cimarron and Rio Rita aside RKO s product was largely regarded as mediocre so in October 1931 Sarnoff hired twenty nine year old David O Selznick to replace LeBaron as production chief 35 In addition to implementing rigorous cost control measures Selznick championed the unit production system which gave the producers of individual movies much greater independence than they had under the prevailing central producer system Under the factory system of production you rob the director of his individualism said Selznick and this being a creative industry that is harmful to the quality of the product made 36 Instituting unit production he predicted would also result in cost savings of 30 40 percent 36 To make films under the new system Selznick recruited prize behind the camera personnel such as director George Cukor and producer director Merian C Cooper and gave producer Pandro S Berman aged twenty six increasingly important projects 37 Selznick discovered and signed a young actress who would quickly become one of the studio s big stars Katharine Hepburn John Barrymore was also enlisted for a few memorable performances 38 In November 1931 just as Selznick was assuming his new post the separate Pathe distribution network was folded into RKO s After less than a year of largely independent operation out of Culver City the Pathe feature film division soon followed due to exhibition contracts features from the division continued to come out under the combined brand until the following November RKO Pathe was now effectively the studio s newsreel and shorts subsidiary 39 In January 1932 Variety named Constance Bennett as one of the industry s top six female money stars 40 From September the start of the industry s exhibition season print advertising for the company s features displayed the revised name RKO Radio Pictures 41 e The New York City based corporate headquarters moved into the new RKO Building an Art Deco skyscraper that was one of the first Rockefeller Center structures to open 42 Hollywood on the Air an RKO produced program for NBC radio that promoted films from multiple studios sparked independent exhibitors ire at the free access to cinema stars it gave listeners especially in the middle of prime moviegoing Friday night Toward the end of 1932 all of the Hollywood studios except for RKO seemingly bowed to the theater owners and prohibited radio appearances by their contract actors The ban soon crumbled 43 Selznick spent a mere fifteen months as RKO production chief resigning over a dispute with new corporate president Merlin Aylesworth concerning creative control 44 One of his last acts at RKO was to approve a screen test for a thirty three year old balding Broadway song and dance man named Fred Astaire 45 In a memo Selznick wrote I feel in spite of his enormous ears and bad chin line that his charm is tremendous 46 Selznick s tenure was widely considered masterful In 1931 before he arrived the studio had produced forty two features for 16 million in total budgets In 1932 under Selznick forty one features were made for 10 2 million with clear improvement in quality and popularity 47 He backed several major successes including A Bill of Divorcement 1932 with Cukor directing Hepburn s debut and the monumental King Kong 1933 largely Merian Cooper s brainchild brought to life by the astonishing special effects work of Willis O Brien 48 Still the shaky finances and excesses that marked the company s pre Selznick days had not left RKO in shape to withstand the Depression Most of the other major studios were in similar straits In January 1933 both RKO and Paramount were forced into receivership from which the latter would emerge in mid 1935 RKO would not until 1940 49 Cooper at the helm Edit Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers made the annual list of top ten box office stars from 1935 to 1937 50 Top Hat 1935 was the third of the eight RKO films featuring the duo as co leads Cooper took over as production head after Selznick s departure and oversaw two hits starring Hepburn Morning Glory 1933 for which she won her first Oscar and Little Women 1933 director Cukor s second collaboration with the actress 51 Among the studio s in house productions the latter was the biggest box office success of the decade 52 Cooper sought to more tightly align costs and prospective grosses impacting the budgets for programmers such as the Wheeler and Woolsey comedies under Selznick Hold Em Jail and Girl Crazy both 1932 had cost 408 000 and 532 000 respectively under Cooper Diplomaniacs 1933 was shot for just 242 000 53 Ginger Rogers had already made several minor films for RKO when Cooper signed her to a seven year contract and cast her in the big budget musical Flying Down to Rio 1933 54 Rogers was paired with Fred Astaire making his second film Billed fourth and fifth respectively the picture turned them into stars 55 Hermes Pan assistant to the film s dance director became one of Hollywood s leading choreographers through his subsequent work with Astaire 56 Along with Columbia Pictures RKO became one of the primary homes of the screwball comedy As film historian James Harvey describes compared to their richer competition the two studios were more receptive to experiment more tolerant of chaos on the set It was at these two lesser majors that nearly all the preeminent screwball directors did their important films Howard Hawks and Gregory La Cava and Leo McCarey and George Stevens 57 The relatively unheralded William A Seiter directed the studio s first significant contribution to the genre The Richest Girl in the World 1934 58 The drama Of Human Bondage 1934 directed by John Cromwell was Bette Davis s first great success 59 Stevens s Alice Adams and director John Ford s The Informer were each nominated for the 1935 Best Picture Oscar the Best Director statuette won by Ford was the only one ever given for an RKO production 60 The Informer s star Victor McLaglen also took home an Academy Award he would appear in a dozen movies for the studio over two decades 61 From soon after its debut in early 1935 until July 1942 Louis de Rochemont s innovative documentary series The March of Time was distributed by RKO at its peak in the late 1930s and early 1940s over twenty million filmgoers saw its two reelers each month in eleven thousand US and foreign theaters 62 Lacking the financial resources of industry leaders MGM Paramount and Fox RKO turned out many pictures during the era that belied their economies with high style in an Art Deco mode exemplified by such Astaire Rogers musicals as The Gay Divorcee 1934 their first pairing as leads and Top Hat 1935 63 One of the figures most responsible for that style was another Selznick recruit Van Nest Polglase supervisor of RKO s highly regarded design department for almost a decade 64 65 Film historian James Naremore has described RKO as chiefly a designer s studio It never had a stable of important actors writers or directors but it was rich in artists and special effects technicians As a result its most distinctive pictures contained a strong element of fantasy not so much the fantasy of horror which during the thirties was the province of Universal but the fantasy of the marvelous and adventurous 66 As a group the studio s craft divisions were among the strongest in the industry 64 67 Costumer Walter Plunkett who worked with the company from the close of the FBO era through the end of 1939 was known as the top period wardrobist in the business 68 Sidney Saunders innovative head of the studio s paint department was responsible for significant progress in rear projection quality 69 On June 13 1935 RKO premiered the first feature film shot entirely in advanced three strip Technicolor Becky Sharp The movie was coproduced with Pioneer Pictures founded by Cooper who departed RKO after two years helming production and John Hay Jock Whitney who brought in his cousin Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney Cooper had successfully encouraged the Whitneys to purchase a major share of the Technicolor business as well 70 Although judged by critics a failure as drama Becky Sharp was widely lauded for its visual brilliance and technical expertise 71 RKO also employed some of the industry s leading artists and craftsmen whose work was never seen From the studio s earliest days through late 1935 Max Steiner regarded by many historians as the most influential composer of the early years of sound cinema made music for over 100 RKO films 72 Murray Spivack head of the studio s audio special effects department made important advances in the use of rerecording technology first heard in King Kong 73 Briskin and Berman Edit In October 1935 the ownership team expanded with financier Floyd Odlum leading a syndicate that bought 50 percent of RCA s stake in the company the Rockefeller brothers also major stockholders increasingly became involved in the business 74 While RKO kept missing the mark in building Hepburn s career other actors became regular headliners for the studio Ann Sothern played the lead in seven RKO films between 1935 and 1937 paired five times with Gene Raymond 75 Stars Barbara Stanwyck and Cary Grant each signed on for several pictures Both were sound era trendsetters working as freelancers under nonexclusive studio deals Stanwyck had appeared in major studio films since 1929 without a binding long term contract as subsequently would several other top billed women including Dunne Bennett and Harding 76 When Grant went freelance after wrapping up his Paramount contract in late 1936 it was still rare for a leading man to do so while his star was on the rise 77 f He ultimately appeared in fourteen RKO releases between 1937 and 1948 78 Katharine Hepburn s last film for RKO Bringing Up Baby 1938 was a bomb Today it is regarded as one of Hollywood s finest screwball comedies 79 Soon after the appointment of a new production chief Samuel Briskin in late 1936 RKO entered into an important distribution deal with animator Walt Disney Van Beuren consequently folded its cartoon operations 80 For nearly two decades the studio released his company s features and shorts Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 1937 was the highest grossing movie in the period between The Birth of a Nation 1915 and Gone with the Wind 1939 81 In February 1937 Selznick now a leading independent producer took over RKO s Culver City studio and Forty Acres as the backlot was known under a long term lease Gone with the Wind his coproduction with MGM was largely shot there 82 g Following the shift in print advertising a few years earlier the screen brand on RKO s output aside from the RKO Pathe line of newsreels and shorts was changed from Radio Pictures to RKO Radio Pictures 83 In addition to its central Hollywood studio RKO production now revolved around its Encino ranch While the Disney association was beneficial RKO s own product was widely seen as declining in quality and Briskin was gone by the end of the year 84 85 Pandro Berman who had filled in on three previous occasions accepted the position of production chief on a noninterim basis He left the job before the decade s turn but his brief tenure resulted in some of the most notable films in studio history including Gunga Din with Grant and McLaglen Love Affair starring Dunne and Charles Boyer and The Hunchback of Notre Dame all 1939 86 Charles Laughton who gave a now fabled performance as Quasimodo in the latter returned periodically to the studio headlining six more RKO features 87 For Maureen O Hara who made her American screen debut in the film it was the first of ten pictures she made for RKO through 1952 88 Carole Lombard signed freelance deals for headlining roles in four films between 1939 and 1941 the last of her pictures to come out before her death in a plane crash 89 After costarring with Ginger Rogers for the eighth time in The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle 1939 Fred Astaire departed the studio 90 The studio s B Western star of the period was George O Brien who made eighteen RKO pictures sixteen between 1938 and 1940 The Saint in New York 1938 successfully launched a B detective series featuring the character Simon Templar that ran through 1943 91 The Wheeler and Woolsey comedy series ended in 1937 when Woolsey became ill he died the following year RKO filled the void by releasing independently produced features such as the Dr Christian series and the Laurel and Hardy comedy The Flying Deuces 1939 92 The studio soon had its own new B comedy stars in Lupe Velez and Leon Errol The Girl from Mexico 1939 was followed by seven frantic installments of the Mexican Spitfire series between 1940 and 1943 91 The studio s technical departments maintained their reputation as industry leaders Vernon Walker s special effects unit became famous for its sophisticated use of the optical printer and lifelike matte work an art that reached its apex with 1941 s Citizen Kane 93 Kane and Schaefer s troubles Edit Orson Welles in the title role of Citizen Kane 1941 often cited as the greatest film of all time 94 Pan Berman had received his first screen credit in 1925 as a nineteen year old assistant director on FBO s Midnight Molly 95 He departed RKO in December 1939 after policy clashes with studio president George J Schaefer handpicked the previous year by the Rockefellers and backed by Sarnoff 96 With Berman gone Schaefer became in effect production chief though other men including the former head of the industry censorship board Joseph I Breen nominally filled the role 97 Schaefer announcing his philosophy with a new studio slogan Quality Pictures at a Premium Price was keen on signing up independent producers whose films RKO would distribute 98 In 1941 the studio landed one of the most prestigious independents in Hollywood when it arranged to handle Samuel Goldwyn s productions The first two Goldwyn pictures released by the studio did excellent box office The Little Foxes directed by William Wyler and starring Bette Davis and the Howard Hawks directed Ball of Fire also garnered four Oscar nominations apiece the latter was Barbara Stanwyck s biggest hit under the RKO banner However Schaefer agreed to terms so favorable to Goldwyn that it was next to impossible for the studio to make money with his films 99 David O Selznick loaned out his leading contracted director for two RKO pictures in 1941 Alfred Hitchcock s Mr and Mrs Smith the final release of Carole Lombard s lifetime was a modest success and Suspicion a substantial one with an Oscar winning turn by Joan Fontaine 100 h That May having granted twenty five year old star and director Orson Welles virtually complete creative control over the film RKO released Citizen Kane i While it opened to strong reviews and went on to be hailed as one of the greatest movies ever made it lost money at the time and brought down the wrath of the Hearst newspaper chain on RKO 101 The next year saw the commercial failure of Welles s The Magnificent Ambersons like Kane critically lauded and overbudget and the expensive embarrassment of his aborted documentary It s All True 102 The three Welles productions combined to drain 2 million from the RKO coffers major money for a corporation that had reported an overall deficit of 1 million in 1940 and a nominal profit of a bit more than 500 000 in 1941 j Many of RKO s other artistically ambitious pictures were also dying at the box office and it was losing its last exclusive deal with a major star as well Rogers after winning an Oscar in 1941 for her performance in the previous year s Kitty Foyle held out for a freelance contract like Lombard s or Grant s No star appeared in more RKO films than Rogers thirty between 1931 and 1943 then one offs in 1946 and 1956 103 On June 17 1942 Schaefer tendered his resignation 104 He departed a weakened and troubled studio but RKO was about to turn the corner Propelled by the box office boom of World War II and guided by new management RKO made a strong comeback over the next half decade 105 Rebound under Koerner Edit By the end of June 1942 Floyd Odlum had taken over a controlling interest in the company via his Atlas Corporation edging aside the Rockefellers and Sarnoff Charles Koerner former head of the RKO theater chain and allied with Odlum had assumed the title of production chief some time prior to Schaefer s departure 106 With Schaefer gone Koerner could actually do the job Announcing a new corporate motto Showmanship in Place of Genius A New Deal at RKO a snipe at Schaefer s artistic ambitions in general and his sponsorship of Welles in particular 107 Koerner brought the studio much needed stability until his death in February 1946 108 The change in RKO s fortunes was virtually immediate corporate profits rose from 736 241 in 1942 the theatrical division compensating for the studio s 2 34 million deficit to 6 96 million the following year 109 The Rockefellers sold off their stock and early in 1943 RCA dispensed with the last of its holdings in the company as well cutting David Sarnoff s ties to the studio that was largely his conception 110 A new RKO Pathe news magazine series This Is America had been launched the previous October to take the place of The March of Time after Time Inc switched its distribution to Twentieth Century Fox 111 In June 1944 a subsidiary RKO Television Corporation was established to produce content for the fledgling medium Talk Fast Mister an hour long drama shot at the RKO Pathe studio in Manhattan and broadcast by the DuMont Laboratories owned New York station WABD on December 18 1944 was the first made for TV movie 112 In collaboration with Mexican businessman Emilio Azcarraga Vidaurreta RKO established Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City in 1945 113 Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman in Notorious 1946 RKO made over 1 million profit on the coproduction with David O Selznick s Vanguard Films 114 With RKO on increasingly secure ground Koerner sought to increase its output of handsomely budgeted star driven features However the studio s only remaining major stars with anything like extended deals were Grant whose services were shared with Columbia Pictures and O Hara shared with Fox 115 Lacking in house stars Koerner and his successors under Odlum arranged with the other studios to loan out their biggest names or signed one of the growing number of freelance performers to short term pay or play deals Thus RKO pictures of the mid and late forties offered Bing Crosby Henry Fonda and others who were out of the studio s price range for extended contracts 116 John Wayne appeared in 1943 s A Lady Takes a Chance while on loan from Republic Pictures he was soon working regularly with RKO making nine more movies for the studio 117 Gary Cooper appeared in RKO releases produced by Goldwyn and later the startup International Pictures 118 and Claudette Colbert starred in a number of RKO coproductions 119 Ingrid Bergman on loan out from Selznick starred opposite Bing Crosby in The Bells of St Mary s 1945 a coproduction with director Leo McCarey The top box office film of the year it turned a 3 7 million profit for RKO the most in the company s history 120 Bergman returned in the coproductions Notorious 1946 and Stromboli 1950 and in the independently produced Joan of Arc 1948 121 Freelancing Randolph Scott appeared in one major RKO release annually from 1943 through 1948 122 In similar fashion many leading directors made one or more films for RKO during this era including Alfred Hitchcock once more with Notorious and Jean Renoir with This Land Is Mine 1943 reuniting Laughton and O Hara and The Woman on the Beach 1947 123 RKO and Orson Welles had an arm s length reunion via The Stranger 1946 an independent production he starred in as well as directed Welles later called it his worst film but it was the only one he ever made that turned a profit in its first run 124 In December 1946 the studio released Frank Capra s It s a Wonderful Life while it would eventually be recognized as one of the greatest films of Hollywood s Golden Age at the time it lost more than half a million dollars for RKO 125 John Ford s The Fugitive 1947 and Fort Apache 1948 which appeared right before studio ownership changed hands again were followed by She Wore a Yellow Ribbon 1949 and Wagon Master 1950 all four were coproductions between RKO and Argosy the company run by Ford and RKO alumnus Merian C Cooper 126 Of the directors under long term contract to RKO in the 1940s the best known was Edward Dmytryk who first came to notice with the remarkably profitable Hitler s Children 1943 Shot on a 205 000 budget placing it in the bottom quartile of Big Five studio productions it was one of the ten biggest Hollywood hits of the year 127 k Another low cost war themed film directed by Dmytryk Behind the Rising Sun released a few months later was similarly profitable 52 128 Focus on B movies Edit Film art at low budget I Walked with a Zombie 1943 produced by Val Lewton and directed by Jacques Tourneur Much more than the other Big Five studios RKO relied on B pictures to fill up its schedule Of the thirty one features released by RKO in 1944 for instance ten were budgeted below 200 000 twelve were in the 200 000 to 500 000 range and only nine cost more In contrast a clear majority of the features put out by the other top four studios were budgeted at over half a million dollars 129 A focus on B pictures limited the studio s financial risk while it also limited the potential for reward Dmytryk s extraordinary coups aside RKO had a history of making better profits with its run of the mill and low cost product than with its A movies 6 The studio s low budget films offered training opportunities for new directors as well among them Mark Robson Robert Wise and Anthony Mann 130 131 Robson and Wise received their first directing assignments with producer Val Lewton whose specialized B horror unit also included the more experienced director Jacques Tourneur The Lewton unit s moody atmospheric work represented by films such as Cat People 1942 I Walked with a Zombie 1943 and The Body Snatcher 1945 is now highly regarded 130 132 Richard Dix concluded his lengthy RKO career with the 1943 Lewton production The Ghost Ship 133 Tim Holt who succeeded George O Brien as RKO s cowboy star appeared in forty six B Westerns and more than fifty movies altogether for the studio beginning in 1940 134 That same year Chester Lauck and Norris Goff brought their famous comic characters Lum and Abner from radio to the screen for the first of six independently produced RKO releases 135 Between 1943 and 1946 the studio teamed contract actors Wally Brown and Alan Carney for comedies that openly mimicked the work of the wildly popular Abbott and Costello Brown and Carney s eight pairings didn t approach their prototypes success 136 The Falcon detective series began in 1941 the Saint and the Falcon were so similar that Saint creator Leslie Charteris sued RKO 137 The Falcon was first played by George Sanders who had appeared five times as the Saint He bowed out after four Falcon films and was replaced by his brother Tom Conway Conway had a nine film run in the part before the series ended in 1946 Johnny Weissmuller starred in six Tarzan pictures for RKO between 1943 and 1948 before being replaced by Lex Barker for five more 75 Film noir to which lower budgets lent themselves became something of a house style at the studio indeed the RKO B Stranger on the Third Floor 1940 is widely seen as initiating noir s classic period 138 Its cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca who began at FBO in the 1920s and stayed with RKO through 1954 is a central figure in creating the look of classic noir 139 Design chief Albert D Agostino another long termer who succeeded Van Nest Polglase in 1941 and art director Walter Keller along with others in the department such as art directors Carroll Clark and Jack Okey and set decorator Darrell Silvera are similarly credited 140 The studio s 1940s list of contract players was filled with noir regulars Robert Mitchum who graduated to major star status and Robert Ryan each made no fewer than ten film noirs for RKO 141 Gloria Grahame Jane Greer and Lawrence Tierney were also notable studio players in the field 142 Freelancer George Raft starred in two noir hits Johnny Angel 1945 and Nocturne 1946 143 Tourneur Musuraca Mitchum and Greer along with D Agostino s design group joined to make the A budgeted Out of the Past 1947 now considered one of the greatest of all film noirs 144 Nicholas Ray began his directing career with the noir They Live by Night 1948 the first of a number of well received films he made for RKO 145 HUAC and Howard Hughes Edit Crossfire 1947 was a hit but no American studio would hire blacklisted director Edward Dmytryk again until he named names to HUAC in 1951 146 Producer Adrian Scott did not get another screen credit for two decades He died before he could see it 147 RKO and the movie industry as a whole had its most profitable year ever in 1946 A Goldwyn production released by RKO The Best Years of Our Lives was the most successful Hollywood film of the decade and won the Academy Award for Best Picture 148 But the legal status of the industry s reigning business model was increasingly being called into doubt the U S Supreme Court ruled in Bigelow v RKO that the company was liable for damages under antitrust statutes for having denied an independent movie house access to first run films a common practice among all of the Big Five 149 With profits at a high point Floyd Odlum cashed in by selling off about 40 percent of his shares in the company to a group of investment firms 150 After Koerner s death Radio Keith Orpheum president N Peter Rathvon and RKO Radio Pictures president Ned Depinet had exchanged positions with Depinet moving to the corporate offices in New York and Rathvon relocating to Hollywood and doubling as production chief while a permanent replacement was sought for Koerner On the first day of 1947 producer and Oscar winning screenwriter Dore Schary who had been working at the studio on loan from Selznick took over the role 151 RKO appeared in good shape to build on its recent successes but the year brought a number of unpleasant harbingers for all of Hollywood The British government imposed a 75 percent tax on films produced abroad along with similarly confiscatory taxes and quota laws enacted by other countries this led to a sharp decline in foreign revenues 152 The postwar attendance boom peaked sooner than expected and television emerged as a competitor for audience interest Across the board profits fell a 27 percent drop for the Hollywood studios from 1946 to 1947 153 In July RKO Pathe s signature newsreel was sold to Warner Bros for a reported 4 million 154 The phenomenon later called McCarthyism was building strength and in October the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC began hearings into Communism in the motion picture industry Two of RKO s top talents Dmytryk and producer Adrian Scott refused to cooperate As a consequence they were fired by RKO per the terms of the Waldorf Statement the major studios pledge to eliminate any subversives Scott Dmytryk and eight others who also defied HUAC dubbed the Hollywood Ten were blacklisted across the industry 155 Ironically the studio s major success of the year was Crossfire a Scott Dmytryk film 156 Odlum concluded it was time to exit the film business and he put Atlas s remaining RKO shares approximately 25 percent of the outstanding stock on the market 157 For her performance in The Farmer s Daughter 1947 a coproduction with Selznick s Vanguard Films Loretta Young won the Best Actress Oscar the following March It was the last major Academy Award for an RKO picture 158 In May 1948 eccentric aviation tycoon and occasional movie producer Howard Hughes spent 8 8 million to gain control of the company beating out British film magnate J Arthur Rank for Odlum s stake 159 During Hughes s tenure RKO suffered its worst years since the early 1930s as his capricious management style took a heavy toll Production chief Schary quit almost immediately due to his new boss s interference and Rathvon soon followed 160 Within weeks of taking over Hughes had dismissed three fourths of the work force production was virtually shut down for six months as the conservative Hughes shelved or canceled several of the message pictures that Schary had backed 161 All of the Big Five saw their profits dwindle in 1948 from Fox down 11 percent to Loew s MGM down 62 percent but at RKO they virtually vanished from 5 1 million in 1947 to 0 5 million a drop of 90 percent 162 The production distribution end of the RKO business now deep in the red would never make a profit again 163 Offscreen Robert Mitchum s arrest and conviction for marijuana possession he served two months in jail was widely assumed to mean career death for RKO s most promising young star but Hughes surprised the industry by announcing that his contract was not endangered 164 Of much broader significance Hughes decided to get the jump on his Big Five competitors by being the first to settle the federal government s antitrust suit against the major studios which had won a crucial Supreme Court ruling in United States v Paramount Pictures Inc Under the consent decree he signed Hughes agreed to dissolve the old parent company Radio Keith Orpheum Corp and split RKO s production distribution business and its exhibition chain into two entirely separate corporations RKO Pictures Corp and RKO Theatres Corp with the obligation to promptly sell off one or the other While Hughes delayed the divorcement procedure until December 1950 and didn t actually sell his stock in the theater company for another three years his decision to acquiesce was one of the crucial steps in the collapse of classical Hollywood s studio system 165 Turmoil under Hughes Edit Robert Mitchum RKO s most prolific lead of the late 1940s and early 1950s 166 costarred in Macao 1952 with Jane Russell who was personally contracted to Howard Hughes 167 Director Josef von Sternberg s work was combined with scenes shot by Nicholas Ray and Mel Ferrer 168 Shooting at RKO picked up again in early 1949 but from an average of around thirty films annually before Hughes s takeover production fell to just twelve that year Sporting the new title of managing director of production Hughes quickly became notorious for meddling in minute filmmaking matters and promoting actresses he favored including two under personal contract to him Jane Russell and Faith Domergue 169 While his time at RKO was marked by both diminished production and a slew of expensive flops the studio continued to turn out some well received films under production chiefs Sid Rogell and Sam Bischoff though both became fed up with Hughes s interloping and quit after less than two years Bischoff was the last man to hold the job under Hughes 170 There were B noirs such as The Window 1949 which turned into a hit 171 and The Set Up 1949 directed by Robert Wise and starring Robert Ryan which won the Critic s Prize at the Cannes Film Festival 172 The Thing from Another World 1951 a science fiction drama coproduced with Howard Hawks s Winchester Pictures is seen as a classic of the genre 173 In 1952 RKO put out two films directed by Fritz Lang Rancho Notorious and Clash by Night The latter was a project of the renowned Jerry Wald Norman Krasna production team lured by Hughes from Warner Bros with great fanfare in August 1950 174 The company also began a close working relationship with Ida Lupino She starred in two suspense films with Robert Ryan Nicholas Ray s On Dangerous Ground 1952 though shooting had been completed two years earlier and Beware My Lovely 1952 a coproduction between RKO and Lupino s company The Filmakers 175 Of more historic note Lupino was Hollywood s only female director during the period of the five pictures The Filmakers made with RKO Lupino directed three including her now celebrated The Hitch Hiker 1953 176 Exposing many moviegoers to Asian cinema for the first time RKO distributed Akira Kurosawa s epochal Rashomon in the United States sixteen months after its original 1950 Japanese release 177 The only smash hits released by RKO in the 1950s came out during this period but neither was an in house production Goldwyn s Hans Christian Andersen 1952 was followed by Disney s Peter Pan 1953 52 178 In 1951 a twenty two year old photographer from the Bronx directed his first two short films Stanley Kubrick s Day of the Fight and Flying Padre were both released by RKO Pathe 179 In early 1952 Hughes fought off a lawsuit by screenwriter Paul Jarrico who had been caught up in the latest round of HUAC hearings Hughes had fired him and removed his name from the credits of a recent release The Las Vegas Story a money losing melodrama starring Jane Russell 180 The studio owner subsequently ordered 100 RKO employees on leave of absence while he established a security office to oversee an ideological vetting system We are going to screen everyone in a creative or executive capacity he declared The work of Communist sympathizers will not be used 181 As more credits were expunged some in the industry began to question whether Hughes s hunt for subversives served primarily as a convenient rationale for further curtailing production and trimming expenses 182 In September Hughes and his corporate president Ned E Depinet sold their RKO studio stock to a Chicago based syndicate with no experience in the movie business the syndicate s chaotic reign lasted until February 1953 when the stock and control were reacquired by Hughes 183 The studio s net loss in 1952 was over 10 million and shooting had taken place for just a single in house production over the last five months of the year 184 During the turmoil Samuel Goldwyn ended his eleven year long distribution deal with RKO Wald and Krasna escaped their contracts and the studio as well The deal that brought the team to RKO had called for them to produce sixty features over five years in just shy of half that time they succeeded in making four 185 The Encino ranch shut down permanently in 1953 and the property was sold off 186 In November Hughes finally fulfilled his obligations under the 1948 consent decree divesting RKO Theatres Albert A List purchased the controlling interest in the business and renamed it List Industries 187 Hughes soon found himself the target of no fewer than five separate lawsuits filed by minority shareholders in RKO accusing him of malfeasance in his dealings with the Chicago group and a wide array of acts of mismanagement RKO s contract list is down to three actors and 127 lawyers quipped Dick Powell 188 Leery of the studio s mounting problems and sparring with it over the release of the forthcoming nature documentary The Living Desert the Disney company exited its long standing arrangement with RKO and set up its own distribution firm Buena Vista 189 Contractual obligations meant that one last Disney feature would be released by RKO in 1954 and it continued to handle Disney shorts into 1956 190 Looking to forestall the impending legal imbroglio by early 1954 Hughes was offering to buy out all of RKO s other stockholders 191 Before the end of the year at a cost of 23 5 million Hughes had gained near total control of RKO Pictures becoming the first virtual sole owner of a studio since Hollywood s pioneer days virtual but not quite actual Floyd Odlum reemerged to block Hughes s acquisition of the 95 percent ownership of RKO stock he needed to write off the company s losses against his earnings elsewhere Hughes had reneged on his promise to give Odlum first option on buying the RKO theater chain when he divested it and was now paying the price 192 With negotiations between the two at a stalemate in July 1955 Hughes turned around and sold RKO Pictures to the General Tire and Rubber Company for 25 million 193 For Hughes this was the effective end of a quarter century s involvement in the movie business Historian Betty Lasky describes Hughes s relationship with RKO as a systematic seven year rape 194 General Tire and demise Edit Jet Pilot a Hughes pet production launched in 1949 Shooting wrapped in May 1951 but it was not released until 1957 due to his interminable tinkering RKO was by then out of the distribution business The movie was released by Universal International 195 In taking control of the studio General Tire restored RKO s close ties to broadcasting General Tire had bought the Yankee Network a New England regional radio network in 1943 196 In 1950 it purchased the West Coast regional Don Lee Broadcasting System 197 and two years later the Bamberger Broadcasting Service owner of the WOR radio and television stations in New York City 198 The latter acquisition gave General Tire majority control of the Mutual Broadcasting System one of America s leading radio networks 199 General Tire then merged its broadcasting interests into a new division General Teleradio 200 Thomas O Neil son of General Tire s founder William O Neil and chairman of the broadcasting group saw that the company s new television stations indeed all TV outlets were in need of programming 201 202 In September 1954 WOR TV had launched the Million Dollar Movie program running a single film for a week twice every night plus Saturday and Sunday matinees the format proved hugely successful and non network affiliated stations around the country were eager to emulate it 203 204 With the purchase of RKO the studio s library was under O Neil s control and he quickly put the rights to the 742 films to which RKO retained clear title up for sale C amp C Television Corp a subsidiary of beverage maker Cantrell amp Cochrane won the bidding in December 1955 and was soon offering the films to independent stations in a package called MovieTime USA 201 205 RKO Teleradio Pictures the new company created from the merger of General Teleradio and the RKO studio retained the broadcast rights for the cities where it owned TV stations By 1956 RKO s classic movies were playing widely on television often in the Million Dollar Movie format allowing many to see such films as Citizen Kane and King Kong for the first time The 15 2 million RKO made on the deal convinced the other major studios that their libraries held profit potential a turning point in the way Hollywood did business 201 206 The new owners of RKO made an initial effort to revive the studio hiring veteran producer William Dozier to head production 207 208 In the first half of 1956 the production facilities were as busy as they had been in a half decade 207 209 RKO Teleradio Pictures released Fritz Lang s final two American films While the City Sleeps and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt both 1956 but years of mismanagement had driven away many directors producers and stars 210 The studio was also saddled with the last of the inflated B movies such as Pearl of the South Pacific 1955 and The Conqueror 1956 that enchanted Hughes 211 The latter starring John Wayne was the biggest hit produced at the studio during the decade but its 4 5 million in North American rentals did not come close to covering its 6 million cost 52 In March 1956 came the news that RKO Pathe was being dissolved 212 On January 22 1957 after a year and a half without a notable success RKO announced that it was closing its domestic distribution offices Universal would take over most future releases and that a reduced production wing would move to the Culver City lot 213 In fact General Tire shut down RKO production for good 207 Overseas distribution exchanges were dispensed with RKO Japan Ltd was sold to Disney and the British Commonwealth Film Corporation in July 1957 and RKO Radio Pictures Ltd in the UK was dissolved a year later 214 The Hollywood and Culver City facilities were sold in late 1957 for 6 15 million to Desilu Productions owned by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball who had been an RKO contract player from 1935 to 1942 215 Desilu was acquired by Gulf and Western Industries in 1967 and merged into G W s other production company neighboring Paramount Pictures the former RKO Hollywood studio FBO s old home is now part of the Paramount lot 216 The renovated Culver City studio where DeMille once reigned is now owned and operated as an independent production facility 217 Forty Acres the Culver City backlot was razed in the mid 1970s 218 List Industries the former RKO Theatres Corp was bought by Glen Alden Corp in 1959 Glen Alden acquired another chain in 1967 creating RKO Stanley Warner Theatres Cinerama purchased the exhibition circuit from Glen Alden in 1971 219 Now little more than a name and beneficiary of General Tire s doubtful largesse RKO announced in early 1958 that it would continue as a financial backer coproducing independently made pictures Fewer than half a dozen resulted 220 The final RKO film Verboten a coproduction with director Samuel Fuller s Globe Enterprises was released fitfully beginning in March 1959 first by Rank and then Columbia 221 That same year Pictures was stripped from the corporate identity the holding company for General Tire s broadcasting operation and the few remaining motion picture assets was renamed RKO General 222 l In the words of scholar Richard B Jewell The supreme irony of RKO s existence is that the studio earned a position of lasting importance in cinema history largely because of its extraordinarily unstable history Since it was the weakling of Hollywood s majors RKO welcomed a diverse group of individualistic creators and provided them with an extraordinary degree of freedom to express their artistic idiosyncrasies I t never became predictable and it never became a factory 223 Later incarnations EditBeginning with 1981 s Carbon Copy RKO General became involved in the coproduction of a number of feature films and TV projects through a subsidiary created three years earlier RKO Pictures Inc 224 In collaboration with Universal Studios RKO put out five films over the next three years Although the studio frequently worked with major names including Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas Jack Nicholson in The Border and Nastassja Kinski in Cat People all 1982 it met with little success Starting with the Meryl Streep vehicle Plenty 1985 RKO took on more projects as sole studio backer 225 In January 1986 Paramount signed a two year distribution agreement with the company 226 Films such as the erotic thriller Half Moon Street 1986 and the Vietnam War drama Hamburger Hill 1987 followed but production ended as GenCorp underwent a massive reorganization following an attempted hostile takeover 225 With RKO General dismantling its broadcast business RKO Pictures Inc along with the original RKO studio s trademarks remake rights and other remaining assets was spun off and put up for sale After a bid by RKO Pictures own management team failed the managers made a deal with Wesray Capital Corporation under the control of former US treasury secretary William E Simon and investor Ray Chambers to buy RKO through Entertainment Acquisition Co a newly created purchasing entity 227 The sale was completed in late 1987 and Wesray linked RKO with its Six Flags amusement parks to form RKO Six Flags Entertainment Inc 228 RKO Pictures LLC TypeLimited liability company LLC IndustryMotion picturesFounded1990 33 years ago 1990 HeadquartersLA Office 11301 West Olympic Blvd Suite 510 Los Angeles CA 90064NY Office 750 Lexington Ave Suite 2200 New York NY 10022Key peopleTed Hartley Chairman and CEO Mary Beth O Connor Vice Chair DivisionsRKO Stage Productions RKO RadioWebsitewww wbr rko wbr com In 1989 RKO Pictures which had produced no films while under Wesray control was spun off yet again Actress and Post Cereals heiress Dina Merrill and her husband producer Ted Hartley acquired a majority interest and merged the company with their Pavilion Communications After a brief period as RKO Pavilion the business was reorganized as RKO Pictures LLC 229 230 With the inaugural RKO production under Hartley and Merrill s ownership False Identity 1990 the company also stepped into the distribution business In 1992 it handled the well regarded independent production Laws of Gravity directed by Nick Gomez 231 RKO s next significant film came in 1998 with Mighty Joe Young a remake of a 1949 RKO movie that was itself a King Kong knockoff the Disney coproduction was distributed by Buena Vista 232 In the early 2000s the company was involved as a coproducer of TV movies and modestly budgeted features about one a year 233 In 2003 it coproduced a Broadway stage version of the 1936 Astaire Rogers vehicle Swing Time under the title Never Gonna Dance 234 That same year RKO Pictures entered into a legal battle with Wall Street Financial Associates WSFA Hartley and Merrill claimed that the owners of WSFA fraudulently induced them into signing an acquisition agreement by concealing their cynical and rapacious plans to purchase RKO with the intention only of dismantling it WSFA sought a preliminary injunction prohibiting RKO s majority owners from selling their interests in the company to any third parties 235 The WSFA motion was denied in July 2003 freeing RKO to deal with another potential purchaser InternetStudios com In 2004 that planned sale fell through when InternetStudios com apparently folded 236 The company s minimal involvement in new film production continued to focus on its remake rights Are We Done Yet based on Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House 1948 was released in April 2007 to dismal reviews 237 In 2009 Beyond a Reasonable Doubt a remake of a 1956 RKO film directed by Fritz Lang fared even worse critically receiving a 7 rating on Rotten Tomatoes 238 A stage version of Top Hat toured Great Britain in the second half of 2011 239 The most recent RKO film coproductions are the well received A Late Quartet 2012 and the 2015 flop Barely Lethal 240 Two months after Dina Merrill s May 2017 death 241 independent producer Keith Patterson sued RKO Hartley and his second in command Mary Beth O Connor over the collapse of plans to create multiple TV series based on RKO properties starting with Citizen Kane According to Patterson s suit O Connor controls access to Hartley and holds both his healthcare proxy and an option to acquire RKO and its intellectual property at a deep markdown after his death 242 As of November 2022 98 year old Hartley was still making public appearances connected with his avocation as a painter 243 Library Edit The pre Code Rafter Romance 1933 one of the lost films long held by Merian Cooper debuted four months before Ginger Rogers s first pairing with Fred Astaire Costar Norman Foster later directed Journey into Fear 1943 and Rachel and the Stranger 1948 for RKO RKO Pictures LLC owns the RKO Radio Pictures Inc film copyrights trademarks and story library with title to more than 500 screenplays giving it the right to produce remakes sequels and prequels and approximately 900 unproduced scripts 233 244 m The actual films and their television video and theatrical distribution rights are in other hands In 1971 the US and Canadian TV and consequently video rights to most of the RKO film library were sold at auction after the holders TransBeacon a corporate descendant of C amp C Television went bankrupt The auctioned rights were split between United Artists UA and Marian B Inc MBI In 1984 MBI created a subsidiary Marian Pictures Inc MBP to which it transferred its share of the RKO rights Two years later GenCorp s subsidiaries RKO General and RKO Pictures repurchased the rights then controlled by MBP 245 In the meantime United Artists had been acquired by MGM In 1986 MGM UA s considerable library including its RKO film negatives and rights was bought by Turner Broadcasting System for its new Turner Entertainment division When Turner announced plans to colorize ten of the RKO films GenCorp resisted claiming copyright infringement leading to both sides filing lawsuits 246 During RKO Pictures brief Wesray episode Turner acquired many of the distribution rights that had returned to RKO via MBP as well as both the theatrical rights and the TV rights originally held back from C amp C for the cities where RKO owned stations 247 The new owners of RKO also allowed Turner to move forward with colorization of the library 248 Early in 1989 Turner declared that no less than the historic Citizen Kane would be colorized upon review of Welles s ironclad creative contract with RKO that plan was abandoned 249 In October 1996 Turner was merged into Time Warner now Warner Bros Discovery which today owns the bulk of the RKO library and controls its distribution in North America 250 In 2007 Warners Turner Classic Movies channel obtained the rights to six lost RKO films that Merian Cooper acquired in a 1946 legal settlement with his former employer and later transferred to a business associate as a tax shelter 251 The Disney films originally distributed by RKO are owned and fully controlled by the Walt Disney Company 252 as is the 1940 RKO adaptation of Swiss Family Robinson purchased by Disney prior to its 1960 remake 253 Rights to many other independent productions distributed by the studio as well as some notable coproductions are in new hands Most Samuel Goldwyn films are owned by his estate and administered by Warner Bros in North America and Miramax in which Paramount Global currently holds a 49 percent stake internationally 254 It s a Wonderful Life coproduced by Frank Capra s Liberty Films 255 and The Bells of St Mary s coproduced by Leo McCarey s Rainbow Productions 256 are now owned by Paramount Global through its predecessor Viacom s indirect acquisition of the latter day Republic Pictures formerly National Telefilm Associates 257 Notorious a coproduction between RKO and David Selznick s Vanguard Films is now owned by Disney 258 it is currently licensed to the Criterion Collection 259 The Stranger from William Goetz s International Pictures has been in the public domain since 1973 260 Eighteen films produced by RKO itself in 1930 31 including Dixiana were also allowed to fall into the public domain as were several later in house productions including high profile releases such as The Animal Kingdom Bird of Paradise Of Human Bondage Love Affair The Hunchback of Notre Dame and They Knew What They Wanted 261 In the late 1950s Hughes bought his beloved Jet Pilot and The Conqueror back from RKO Teleradio in 1979 Universal acquired the rights to the latter 262 European rights Edit Ownership of the major European TV and video distribution rights to the RKO library differs by country In the UK the RKO rights long held by Universal Studios are now under Warner Bros control 263 The German rights were acquired in 1969 by KirchGruppe on behalf of its KirchMedia division which went bankrupt in 2002 EOS Entertainment s Beta Film purchased many of KirchMedia s rights in 2004 and the library as of 2010 was distributed by Kineos created five years earlier as a Beta Film KirchMedia joint venture 264 At the end of 2014 Warners took over the French rights from longtime distributor Editions Montparnasse 265 Rome s Red Film claims the rights in Italy 266 Vertice 360 formerly Manga Films holds the Spanish rights 267 Logos Edit Classic closing logo of RKO Radio Pictures Most of the films released by RKO Pictures between 1929 and 1957 have an opening logo displaying the studio s famous trademark a spinning globe and radio tower nicknamed the Transmitter It was inspired by a 200 foot 61 m tower built in Colorado for a giant electrical amplifier or Tesla coil created by inventor Nikola Tesla 268 For many years the RKO tower beeped out the Morse code for A Radio Picture during much of World War II V for Victory was substituted 269 Orson Welles referred to the Transmitter as his favorite among the old logos not just because it was so often a reliable portent It reminds us to listen 270 The RKO Pathe feature logo replaced the radio tower with the Pathe brand s hallmark rooster who stood stock still as the world turned beneath his feet 271 RKO s closing logo an inverted triangle enclosing a thunderbolt was also a well known trademark 272 Instead of the Transmitter many Disney and Goldwyn films released by the studio originally appeared with colorful versions of the RKO closing logo as part of the main title sequence 273 For decades re releases of these films had Disney Buena Vista and MGM Goldwyn logos replacing the RKO insignia but the originals were restored in many DVD editions 274 In the 1990s the Hartley Merrill RKO Pictures commissioned a new CGI version of the Transmitter 233 275 See also EditList of RKO Pictures filmsNotes Edit The online edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica erroneously states that RKO resulted from the merger of the Radio Corporation of America the Keith Albee Orpheum theatre chain and the American Pathe production firm See RKO Radio Pictures Inc entry retrieved October 22 2022 Many other sources make the same false claim Note also the following Some sources incorrectly describe Keith Albee Orpheum as the union of three theater chains in fact the name describes the union of just two chains B F Keith Corp doing business as Keith Albee and Orpheum Circuit Inc Edward F Albee was Benjamin F Keith s right hand man He took over the company after the deaths of its founder in 1914 and his son A Paul Keith four years later 276 Some sources e g Grand Design Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise 1930 1939 by Tino Balio Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press 1995 p 16 incorrectly claim that RCA Photophone was amalgamated or combined with FBO and KAO under the Radio Keith Orpheum holding company It was not 277 Many sources e g Balio 1995 p 16 again incorrectly give FBO s full name as Film Booking Office of America the proper name is Film Booking Offices of America which may be confirmed by examining its official logo 278 The claim in the January 1928 New York Times article cited here that FBO would be able to book its films in practically 700 theatres which make up the Keith Albee Orpheum circuits and affiliated houses in America and Canada is misleading First affiliated houses almost certainly constituted the vast majority of that figure Time 1927 indicates that as of May 1927 Keith Albee legally the B F Keith Corp had 50 theaters and Orpheum had 47 presumably counts of their fully owned venues More important per Jewell 2012 Many of the vaudeville houses would not be converted into sound film theaters In actuality the original chain of K A O motion picture theaters would number fewer than two hundred p 14 Crafton 1997 refers to KAO and its 200 theaters at the time of RKO s founding p 141 and states that in 1930 The number of theaters owned outright by RKO increased to 180 p 208 While he references no contemporary sources for those figures he does cite Film Daily in a description of RKO as controlling 250 theaters in mid 1930 following the major studios buying binge p 256 Big 6 Have Less than 20 of Houses Film Daily July 9 1930 pp 1 2 Retrieved December 28 2022 Schatz 1998 describes an RKO chain of 161 theaters around the time David O Selznick became production chief in October 1931 p 128 Schatz 1999 writes that as of 1940 RKO had slightly more than 100 theaters p 17 He explains that the figures on studio affiliated theaters vary considerably owing to the number of houses in which the studios held only partial interest as little as 5 percent in some cases p 484 n 24 A 1944 book Economic Control of the Motion Picture Industry includes the table Theater holdings of the major companies are approximately as follows RKO is listed as holding 222 theaters 279 Lasky 1989 indicates that a 1953 Fortune article tallied the RKO circuit in 1948 at the time of Hughes s purchase at 124 theaters plus a share in about 75 others p 205 Porst 2015 states then when RKO agreed in late 1948 to divest its theaters it had only 109 p 115 The standard reference guide to the studio s films The RKO Story by Richard B Jewell with Vernon Harbin New York Arlington House Crown 1982 is used as the final arbiter of whether specific films made between 1929 and 1957 were RKO solo productions coproductions or completely independent productions Official year of release is also per The RKO Story Only one previous sound film had cost more than 1 million and just barely Noah s Ark 1929 from Warner Bros 280 For an example of US print advertising s switch to the RKO Radio Pictures brand at the beginning of the 1932 33 exhibition season see this original poster for The Most Dangerous Game which premiered September 9 1932 281 Grant biographer Graham McCann s paean No one of Grant s stature had contemplated acting as a freelance performer since the days before the studio system took hold of Hollywood 282 ignores two women Stanwyck and Miriam Hopkins had both previously gone freelance before they were major box office draws or Oscar nominees Becky Sharp Hopkins s freelance debut garnered her first and only Academy Award nomination It also overlooks one man who took that route when of comparable youth and as yet forming stature Among still ascendant male stars Grant was preceded as a freelancer by Fredric March admittedly more established when he bid on himself in 1933 283 In July 1935 Variety identified other prior male members of the itinerant class Leslie Howard eleven years Grant s senior easing out of his prime Adolphe Menjou well past his prime Richard Barthelmess evergreen Walter Huston B movie lead Lee Tracy and character actor Edward Everett Horton 284 Ronald Colman thirteen years Grant s senior had also freelanced since 1934 285 For a discussion of the terms and application of the option contract standard in Hollywood for most of the 1930s binding an actor for seven years while giving the studio the option every six months to terminate them the actor had no reciprocal option to walk away see Regev 2018 pp 123 27 By August 1940 the lease was no longer exclusive see Screen News Here and in Hollywood New York Times August 28 1940 By mid 1949 Selznick had left the studio entirely see two articles by Thomas F Brady Republic to Make Film on Baseball New York Times April 8 1949 and Hollywood Buys More Stories New York Times May 1 1949 Thomas Schatz s brief description of Mr and Mrs Smith as a critical and commercial failure is evidently incorrect 286 According to historian Leonard Leff Mr and Mrs Smith had a happy ending good reviews and modest box office success 287 Emily Carman who examined the studio ledgers describes it as an unqualified box office success with total domestic and foreign gross amounting to 1 311 855 thus bringing in 582 000 in total profits for RKO 288 Ed Sikov characterizes it as a solid commercial hit 289 Donald Spoto s report on its release lends further support to this position 290 United Artists To Be or Not to Be 1942 headlined by Lombard was released a month after her death Though Citizen Kane was technically structured through a set of three contracts originally drawn up in 1939 as a coproduction between RKO and Welles s then newly formed Mercury Productions Inc and indeed was billed on a title card as A Mercury Production in bottom line terms it was an RKO production the studio provided the entire budget and production facilities assumed all the financial risk and held all the rights once Welles delivered his final inviolable cut 249 291 Citizen Kane lost 150 000 160 000 on original release the production cost was precisely 805 527 53 The Magnificent Ambersons lost 624 000 production cost 1 125 million and the unreleased It s All True cost the studio an estimated 1 2 million 292 Note that the studio operation itself was almost certainly a bigger money loser than the cited figures suggest with profits coming from the corporation s theatrical division 293 Jewell 1982 states that it attracted 3 355 000 in film rentals p 181 Lasky 1989 refers to an article in The Hollywood Reporter on the film published seven months after its premiere predicting it would do better than 3 million in the U S alone p 185 It is not listed in Schatz s 1999 appendix of annual top box office films of the 1940s p 466 based on a 1992 Variety reckoning perhaps because of its unusual production history Assuming Jewell s figure is accurate and the Schatz Variety list is otherwise accurate and complete Hitler s Children was the ninth biggest earner of 1943 an impressive feat for a movie with a B budget and star Tim Holt Many online sources give RKO General s year of inception as 1958 without evidence O Neill s 1959 dating is supported by the fact that there is no mention of RKO General in either the New York Times or the Los Angeles Times before February 1960 RKO Pictures LLC while it owns the copyright to the original movie and its 1933 sequel does not control the remake or other ancillary rights to what would be by far its most valuable property King Kong Certain elements of the concept are in the public domain while some are controlled by the Merian Cooper estate and Universal Pictures among others 294 References Edit Jewell 1982 p 9 Lasky 1989 pp 22 24 Gomery 1985 pp 63 65 Crafton 1997 pp 68 129 31 140 Finler 2003 pp 31 230 Goodwin 1987 pp 348 375 Jewell 1982 p 9 Lasky 1989 pp 24 25 Gomery 1985 p 65 Crafton 1997 pp 136 138 Nasaw 2012 pp 111 12 Goodwin 1987 pp 375 76 Jewell 1982 p 9 Lasky 1989 pp 25 26 Gomery 1985 p 65 Crafton 1997 pp 135 39 Beauchamp 2010 pp 169 74 Eyman 2010 pp 211 12 219 20 223 27 238 41 Nasaw 2012 pp 112 13 115 16 Erickson 2020 p 12 Cinemerger Time May 2 1927 Retrieved November 5 2022 700 Theatres Merged in Vaudeville Circuit Keith Albee and Orpheum Now Largest in Country Final Papers Signed New York Times January 27 1928 Goodwin 1987 pp 375 79 Jewell 1982 pp 9 10 Lasky 1989 pp 26 29 Crafton 1997 pp 138 41 193 195 Beauchamp 2010 pp 169 74 192 211 Eyman 2010 pp 254 55 Nasaw 2012 pp 116 17 120 29 Erickson 2020 pp 12 14 Goodwin and Eyman offer widely differing perspectives on the Kennedy DeMille dealings Goodwin 1987 pp 379 80 Jewell 1982 p 10 Lasky 1989 pp 33 34 Gomery 1985 pp 65 66 Crafton 1997 pp 141 42 Beauchamp 2010 pp 142 169 71 211 14 218 24 230 31 Nasaw 2012 pp 112 129 31 Erickson 2020 pp 12 14 Vischer Peter October 27 1928 Radio Keith FBO Deal Closed with Sarnoff as Board Head Exhibitors Herald and Moving Picture World p 21 Retrieved December 28 2022 a b Crafton 1997 p 210 Jewell 2012 pp 20 18 25 Radio Pictures Trademark Information Trademarkia Retrieved January 11 2018 Jewell 2012 p 22 250 000 for Construction Program at RKO Studio Film Daily January 23 1929 p 6 Retrieved December 5 2015 Koszarski 2008 pp 164 69 Korwar 2013 p 257 Terrace 1999 p 285 Koszarski 2008 pp 169 71 Barrios 1995 pp 86 88 209 Jewell 1982 p 20 Lasky 1989 pp 46 47 Barrios 1995 pp 209 226 Jewell 2012 pp 12 18 19 21 25 Lasky 1989 pp 15 45 46 51 55 Lasky 1989 pp 42 47 Barrios 1995 pp 225 29 Barrios 1995 p 225 Jewell 2012 p 22 Jewell 1982 pp 20 24 Catalogue of Copyright Entries 1930 p 369 et al Jewell 1982 p 298 Barrios 1995 p 127 Lasky 1989 p 52 Bradley 1996 p 260 R K O Signs More Noted Names Los Angeles Times June 20 1929 Studios Plan Huge Programs Los Angeles Times July 21 1929 Bradley 1996 p 279 Jewell 2012 pp 24 28 36 38 Jewell 1982 p 29 Lasky 1989 pp 44 47 52 Jewell 1982 pp 38 41 For Technicolor contracts during this era see Kalmus Herbert October 28 1938 Technicolor Adventures in Cinemaland Widescreen Museum Retrieved May 3 2010 Crafton 1997 pp 207 8 210 Barrier 2003 p 169 Beauchamp 2010 pp 310 23 Nasaw 2012 pp 158 61 Goodwin 1987 pp 422 24 Jewell 2012 pp 30 32 Lasky 1989 pp 58 59 Crafton 1997 pp 208 210 Ward 2016 pp 141 45 147 48 For further details see Exhibits I and II Annexed to Affidavit of William Mallard New York Supreme Court Appellate Division First Department Turin Theatre Corporation v Pathe Exchange Inc Radio Keith Orpheum Corporation and R K O Pathe Distributing Corporation Papers on Appeal from Order May 29 1931 Beauchamp 2010 pp 232 311 315 Goodwin 1987 p 422 Jewell 2012 pp 30 32 Lasky 1989 pp 58 Ward 2016 pp 146 48 Lasky 1989 pp 58 74 Jewell 2012 p 31 Crafton 1997 p 195 Ward 2016 pp 138 148 Schatz 1998 pp 131 Jewell 1982 p 54 Ward 2016 p 149 Crafton 1997 p 552 Lasky 1989 p 55 Jewell 1982 p 30 Carman 2012 p 17 Carman 2016 pp 48 49 151 153 54 Finler 2003 pp 221 223 Finler 2003 p 214 Jewell 1982 p 40 42 44 47 49 51 54 56 58 62 64 Finler 2003 p 214 Lasky 1989 pp 67 70 a b Bordwell et al 1985 p 321 Lasky 1989 pp 74 76 Jewell 1982 p 17 Lasky 1989 pp 77 80 93 Jewell 2012 pp 32 35 43 56 Ward 2016 pp 146 50 Jewell 1982 pp 32 44 54 Six Best Money Stars Variety January 5 1932 p 1 Retrieved November 28 2022 The roll actually included seven names with Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo somehow tied on an alphabetical list RKO Radio Picture Book 1932 1933 1932 New York RKO Radio Pictures Kroessler 2002 p 219 Korwar 2013 p 257 Hilmes 1990 pp 57 60 Schatz 1998 pp 131 33 Lasky 1989 pp 81 82 Schatz 1998 p 133 Lasky 1989 p 83 Mueller 1986 p 7 Schatz 1998 pp 131 Lasky 1989 pp 78 79 93 95 Jewell 1982 pp 52 60 Lasky 1989 pp 81 82 Gomery 2005 chap Paramount chap RKO and Disney Finler 2003 p 221 Lasky 1989 pp 100 1 a b c d Finler 2003 p 219 Lasky 1989 p 98 Jewell 1982 p 62 Lasky 1989 pp 98 99 Jewell 1982 p 69 Lasky 1989 p 112 Finler 2003 p 229 Harvey 1998 p 290 See e g Di Battista 2001 p 90 Lasky 1989 pp 109 10 Finler 2003 p 224 Jewell 1982 pp 71 84 103 126 128 134 168 172 196 228 241 283 Setliff Jonathan Stuart 2007 The March of Time and the American Century PDF PhD diss University of Maryland pp 78 81 88 89 Retrieved March 18 2023 Slide 1998 p 122 Koszarski 2008 pp 351 55 Fielding Raymond Summer 1957 Time Flickers Out Notes on the Passing of the March of Time Quarterly of Film Radio and Television 11 4 357 doi 10 2307 1209995 JSTOR 120995 registration required Jewell 1982 pp 77 88 Lasky 1989 p 117 a b Finler 2003 p 227 Albrecht Donald June 2009 The Art of RKO Van Nest Polglase and the Modern Movie Set A Pioneer Who Changed the Cinematic Landscape Architectural Digest Retrieved May 3 2010 Naremore 1989 pp 17 18 Rode 2007 pp 58 59 Morton 2005 p 43 Cotta Vaz and Barron 2002 p 59 What Color in the Movies Again Fortune October 1934 available online Morton 2005 pp 111 12 Lasky 1989 p 104 Jewell 1982 p 87 Lasky 1989 pp 115 16 Finler 2003 pp 229 231 Brunelle 1996 Morton 2005 pp 75 77 108 9 Lasky 1989 pp 118 19 Jewell 1982 p 19 a b Finler 2003 p 215 Carman 2012 pp 9 17 18 20 22 24 169 n 33 Carman 2012 pp 21 22 McCann 1998 pp 79 80 144 Jewell 1982 pp 110 117 128 132 148 167 177 183 198 212 221 224 230 232 Dickstein 2002 p 48 Barrier 2003 p 170 Lasky 1989 p 137 Jewell 1982 p 92 Finler 2003 pp 36 47 319 News of the Screen New York Times February 16 1937 Schatz 1998 p 181 Jewell 1982 p 102 Jewell 1982 pp 18 19 102 Briskin Resigns as RKO Radio Production Head The Film Daily November 4 1937 p 1 Retrieved November 9 2015 Lasky 1989 pp 154 57 Jewell 1982 pp 19 128 29 138 Jewell 1982 pp 138 152 171 178 181 246 260 Jewell 1982 pp 138 148 150 158 178 186 206 217 235 264 Carman 2016 pp 1 2 75 76 Lasky 1989 pp 153 54 a b Finler 2003 pp 214 15 Jewell 1982 p 136 Bordwell et al 1985 p 349 For Walker s earlier work on King Kong Morton 2005 pp 30 43 52 100 Best Films of the 20th Century Village Voice Filmsite org 2001 Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved August 29 2009 Top Ten Poll Sight and Sound BFI 2002 Archived from the original on May 25 2012 Retrieved August 29 2009 Kear 2009 p 144 Lasky 1989 pp 152 156 57 Jewell 1982 p 116 For Breen s position see Jeff and Simmons 2001 pp 119 122 125 Jewell 1982 p 140 Jewell 1982 p 304 Schatz 1999 p 57 Jewell 2012 p 253 Jewell 2012 pp 231 34 Jewell 1982 pp 156 167 Lasky 1989 pp 161 65 Lasky 1989 pp 167 176 80 For ambitious box office failures Jewell 1982 pp 144 146 Abe Lincoln in Illinois 152 They Knew What They Wanted 156 166 All That Money Can Buy Lasky 1989 p 165 Schatz 1999 p 57 For Rogers Jewell 1982 pp 156 211 288 Schatz 1999 p 57 Carman 2016 p 133 Ned Depinet Heads RKO Pictures Unit Ex Vice President in Charge of Distribution Is Elected to Succeed G J Schaefer New York Times June 26 1942 Jewell 1982 pp 142 168 Lasky 1989 pp 167 68 174 76 McBride 2006 p 63 Server 2002 p 78 Jewell 1982 pp 142 168 208 Jewell 1982 pp 168 178 Lasky 1989 p 187 Koszarski 2021 pp 34 37 49 320 Jewell 2016 pp 13 219 n 43 Barsam Richard Meran Spring 1973 This Is America Documentaries for Theaters 1942 1951 Cinema Journal 12 2 22 38 doi 10 2307 1225493 JSTOR 1225493 registration required Schatz 1999 p 430 Television Groups to See First Film Made for Medium Motion Picture Herald December 9 1944 p 15 Retrieved November 26 2022 Fein 2000 passim Lasky 1989 p 228 Jewell 1982 p 213 Finler 2003 p 222 Lasky 1989 p 176 Jewell 1982 pp 200 208 226 Jewell 1982 pp 187 198 204 211 225 241 259 286 290 295 Jewell 1982 pp 164 168 192 203 232 Jewell 1982 pp 209 211 241 248 283 Jewell 1982 p 206 Finler 2003 p 177 Jewell 1982 pp 212 247 232 Jewell 1982 pp 184 196 203 211 218 229 Jewell 1982 pp 212 178 220 Thomson 1997 p 268 Brady 1990 pp 378 81 Jewell 1982 p 215 For its later status see e g 100 Best Films of the 20th Century Village Voice Filmsite org 2001 Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved January 11 2018 Sixteenth overall fifth among Hollywood movies made between 1929 and 1959 Jewell 1982 pp 228 241 248 Jewell 1982 p 181 Lasky 1989 pp 184 85 For budgets of Big Five releases the following year Schatz 1999 p 173 table 6 3 Jewell 1982 p 186 Schatz 1999 p 173 table 6 3 a b Schatz 1999 p 232 Ballinger and Graydon 2007 p 23 For B films and slightly higher budgeted intermediates directed by Robson Jewell 1982 pp 187 190 195 204 211 238 By Wise Jewell 1982 pp 193 195 201 206 215 219 231 236 By Mann Jewell 1982 pp 202 205 212 219 Finler 2003 pp 219 20 Jewell 1982 p 190 Finler 2003 pp 214 15 221 22 Jewell 1982 pp 151 171 180 186 197 211 Erickson 2012 pp 102 4 Senn 2018 chap Zombies on Broadway 1945 Jewell 1982 p 164 See e g Ballinger and Graydon 2007 p 19 Finler 2003 p 216 Spicer 2014 pp 17 49 50 55 Finler 2003 p 216 Cook 2007 p 22 Stephens 1995 p 102 Jacobs 2007 pp 315 16 Ballinger and Graydon 2007 pp 196 98 205 6 For noir and noir related films featuring Mitchum Jewell 1982 pp 216 222 223 231 237 250 255 256 259 265 267 272 274 Featuring Ryan Jewell 1982 pp 220 222 227 236 247 248 252 255 259 262 266 Ballinger and Graydon 2007 pp 100 2 152 189 90 210 Lasky 1989 p 198 Schwartz 2005 p 60 Jewell 1982 pp 205 216 See e g Ballinger and Graydon 2007 pp 56 151 52 Schatz 1999 p 364 Ottoson 1981 p 132 Finler 2003 p 225 Dixon 2005 p 112 Langdon Teclaw 2007 p 168 Finler 2003 p 357 Jewell 1982 p 214 Glick Reymann and Hoffman 2003 pp 35 36 Schatz 1999 pp 16 17 Lasky 1989 pp 203 4 Lasky 1989 pp 192 93 195 Schatz 1999 pp 299 331 Lasky 1989 p 202 Jewell 1982 p 216 Schatz 1999 pp 290 91 Koszarski 2021 pp 36 37 45 Ward 2016 pp 149 50 Friedrich 1997 pp 333 36 Lasky 1989 pp 198 202 Lasky 1989 pp 194 98 202 Brown and Broeske 2004 p 281 Finler 2003 p 231 Jewell 1982 pp 306 7 Lasky 1989 pp 204 5 Dietrich and Thomas 1972 pp 235 36 Lasky 1989 pp 206 216 17 Lasky 1989 pp 216 17 Jewell 1982 p 143 Analysis based on Schatz 1999 p 330 table 10 2 See Jewell 1982 pp 216 226 for confirmation of RKO figures Finler 2003 p 220 Jewell 1982 p 226 Lasky 1989 pp 218 20 223 227 Part 6 The Supreme Court Verdict That Brought an End to the Hollywood Studio System 1948 The Independent Producers and the Paramount Case 1938 1949 Society of Independent Motion Picture Producers Retrieved July 22 2006 Finler 2003 p 222 Lasky 1989 pp 205 219 Server 2002 pp 219 22 Jewell 1982 pp 143 234 249 50 Lasky 1989 pp 205 219 23 Dietrich and Thomas 1972 pp 188 234 37 Jewell 1982 pp 246 254 Jewell 1982 p 237 Ottoson 1981 p 155 See e g Finler 2003 p 216 Lasky 1989 pp 220 21 Jewell 1982 pp 262 266 Muller 1998 pp 176 77 Jewell 1982 pp 251 257 271 Jewell 1982 p 265 Finler 2003 pp 358 59 Ward 2016 p 150 Koszarski 2021 pp 49 318 21 Day of the Fight was released as an episode of This Is America in its final year Flying Padre as part of the RKO Pathe Screenliner series Jewell 1982 p 263 Quoted in Lasky 1989 p 224 Jewell 1982 p 243 Lasky 1989 pp 223 24 Jewell 1982 pp 243 44 262 270 Lasky 1989 pp 225 26 An Old Flame Returns Time February 23 1953 Retrieved November 26 2022 Jewell 1982 p 262 Jewell 1982 pp 246 262 Lasky 1989 pp 221 223 225 Crosby 2009 p 75 Conant 1981 p 567 Quoted in Lasky 1989 p 226 Gabler 2006 pp 518 20 Barrier 2008 pp 208 262 63 Smith 1996 pp 127 294 298 Smith 1996 p 407 Jewell 1982 pp 276 77 Jewell 1982 pp 244 276 Lasky 1989 pp 226 27 Jewell 1982 pp 244 45 Lasky 1989 pp 218 19 223 227 28 Jewell 1982 p 245 Lasky 1989 pp 228 29 Lasky 1989 p 229 Jewell 1982 p 290 Lasky 1989 pp 219 221 223 228 Rubber Yankee Time January 18 1943 Retrieved November 26 2022 Howard 1979 p 151 Don Lee Sale Approval Asked Los Angeles Times November 21 1950 Sale of Don Lee System Approved Cash Payment of 12 320 000 Involved in FCC Decision Los Angeles Times December 28 1950 Radio TV Merger Approved By F C C Deal Covers Macy s Transfer of WOR Interests to General Tire s Don Lee System New York Times January 18 1952 General Tire Gets Control of M B S Shareholders at Meeting Vote 2 for 1 Stock Split Company Buys More TV Stations New York Times April 2 1952 Howard 1979 pp 150 52 Earnings Fall 5 for Macy System Television s High Cost for Subsidiary General Teleradio Cuts Consolidated Net New York Times October 11 1950 a b c Segrave 1999 pp 40 41 O Neil Enters Bid for Part or All of Hughes 700 Pix Billboard November 27 1954 Segrave 1999 pp 40 48 Russell and Whalley 2018 pp 44 47 which mistakenly dates the format s launch to 1955 2 Sponsors Buy of Gen Tele Features May Draw More In Billboard August 28 1954 New Sponsors Put Station Near Sell Out on Million Dollar Show Billboard September 11 1954 RKO Pix vs Tonight CBS Says No But with Fingers Xed Billboard October 23 1954 WOR TV to Continue Million Dollar Movie Indefinitely Billboard November 6 1954 WTTG Turns to Film to Buck Competition Billboard December 4 1954 An Open Letter to TV Station Owners and Managers Billboard September 8 1956 Hilmes 1990 pp 160 61 Boddy 1990 p 138 Russell and Whalley 2018 pp 44 47 a b c Jewell 1982 p 245 Jewell 1982 p 280 Jewell 1982 p 284 Finler 2003 p 216 Jewell 1982 pp 282 286 Doors Closing East RKO Pathe Due to Wind Up Business Billboard March 3 1956 RKO Shift to U Set for Feb 1 Variety January 23 1957 p 3 Retrieved June 12 2019 Jewell 1982 p 298 Disney British Firm Co Own RKO Japan Ltd Motion Picture Daily Vol 86 no 3 July 6 1957 pp 1 6 Retrieved April 12 2018 RKO Radio Pictures Ltd Regarding Contracts for Films Shown Discovery National Archives Retrieved October 22 2022 Jewell 1982 p 245 Lasky 1989 p 3 Dick 2021 pp 97 104 118 19 Slide 1998 p 174 About Us Studio History The Culver Studios Archived from the original on October 31 2012 Retrieved February 28 2010 Initial Plans for Movie Studio Backlot Approved Los Angeles Times May 1 1975 Conant 1981 pp 567 68 Dombrowski 2008 p 116 Jewell 1982 pp 294 96 Dombrowski 2008 pp 116 120 Jewell 1982 p 296 O Neill 1966 p 180 Jewell 1982 p 15 Jewell 1982 p 245 Lambert Bruce August 12 1993 C R Manby 73 Ex Chairman and President of RKO Pictures The New York Times Retrieved May 19 2010 a b GenCorp Inc Company History Funding Universe Retrieved April 12 2010 Par Enters 2 Year Distribution Ancillary Rights Pact with RKO Variety January 15 1986 p 5 Exec Takeover of RKO Fall Through Prod Plans Halted 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Invisible Frontier Exploring the Tunnels Ruins and Rooftops of Hidden New York New York Random House ISBN 0 609 80931 8 Di Battista Maria 2001 Fast Talking Dames New Haven CT and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08815 9 Dick Bernard F 2021 Engulfed The Death of Paramount Pictures and the Birth of Corporate Hollywood Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 5135 9 Dickstein Morris 2002 Bringing Up Baby 1938 in The A List The National Society of Film Critics 100 Essential Films ed Jay Carr pp 48 50 Cambridge MA Da Capo ISBN 0 306 81096 4 Dietrich Noah and Bob Thomas 1972 Howard The Amazing Mr Hughes Greenwich CT Fawcett Publications ISBN 0 449 13652 3 Dixon Wheeler W 2005 Lost in the Fifties Recovering Phantom Hollywood Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 2653 1 Dombrowski Lisa 2008 The Films of Samuel Fuller If You Die I ll Kill You Middletown CT Wesleyan University Press ISBN 978 0 8195 6866 3 Erickson Hal 2012 Military Comedy Films A Critical Survey and Filmography of Hollywood since 1918 Jeferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 6290 2 Erickson Hal 2020 A Van Beuren Production A History of the 619 Cartoons 875 Live Action Shorts Four Feature Films and One Serial of Amedee Van Beuren Jeferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 8027 9 Eyman Scott 2010 Empire of Dreams The Epic Life of Cecil B DeMille New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8955 9 Fein Seth 2000 Transcultured Anticommunism Cold War Hollywood in Postwar Mexico in Visible Nations Latin American Cinema and Video ed Chon A Noriega pp 82 111 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 3347 9 Finler Joel W 2003 The Hollywood Story 3d ed London Wallflower ISBN 1 903364 66 3 Fong Torres Ben 2001 The Hits Just Keep on Coming The History of Top 40 Radio Milwaukee Hal Leonard ISBN 0 87930 664 5 Friedrich Otto 1997 1986 City of Nets A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940s Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20949 4 Gabler Neal 2006 Walt Disney The Triumph of the American Imagination New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 679 43822 X Glick Mark A Lara A Reymann and Richard Hoffman 2003 Intellectual Property Damages Guidelines and Analysis Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 23719 1 Gomery Douglas 1985 The Coming of Sound Technological Change in the American Film Industry in Technology and Culture The Film Reader ed Andrew Utterson pp 53 67 Oxford and New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis 2005 ISBN 0 415 31984 6 Gomery Douglas 2005 The Hollywood Studio System A History London BFI ISBN 978 1844570232 Goodwin Doris Kearns 1987 The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 312 06354 7 Harvey James 1998 Romantic Comedy in Hollywood from Lubitsch to Sturges New York Da Capo ISBN 0 306 80832 3 Haupert Michael John 2006 The Entertainment Industry Westport CT Greenwood ISBN 0 313 32173 6 Hilmes Michelle 1990 Hollywood and Broadcasting From Radio to Cable Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01709 9 Holt Jennifer 2011 Empires of Entertainment Media Industries and the Politics of Deregulation 1980 1996 New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 5052 7 Howard Herbert H 1979 Multiple Ownership in Television Broadcasting Historical Development and Selected Case Studies New York Arno ISBN 0 405 11759 0 Huettig Mae D 1944 Economic Control of the Motion Picture Industry excerpted in The American Film Industry ed Tino Balio pp 285 310 Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 09874 5 Jacobs Steven 2007 The Wrong House The Architecture of Alfred Hitchcock Rotterdam 010 Publishers ISBN 90 6450 637 X Jeff Leonard J and Jerold L Simmons 2001 The Dame in the Kimono Hollywood Censorship and the Production Code Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 9011 8 Jewell Richard B with Vernon Harbin 1982 The RKO Story New York Arlington House Crown ISBN 0 517 54656 6 Jewell Richard B 2012 RKO Radio Pictures A Titan Is Born Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 27178 4 Jewell Richard B 2016 Slow Fade to Black The Decline of RKO Radio Pictures Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 28966 6 Kear Lynn with James King 2009 Evelyn Brent The Life and Films of Hollywood s Lady Crook Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 4363 4 Keyes Cheryl L 2004 Rap Music and Street Consciousness Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 07201 4 King Emily 2003 Movie Poster London Octopus ISBN 1 84000 653 6 Korwar Arati R 2013 1998 Hollywood Radio Controversy of 1932 in History of the Mass Media in the United States An Encyclopedia ed Margaret A Blanchard pp 256 57 ISBN 1 57958 012 2 Koszarski Richard 2008 Hollywood on the Hudson Film and Television in New York from Griffith to Sarnoff New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 4293 6 Koszarski Richard 2021 Keep Em in the East Kazan Kubrick and the Postwar New York Film Renaissance New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231200981 Kroessler Jeffrey A 2002 New York Year by Year A Chronology of the Great Metropolis New York NYU Press ISBN 0 8147 4751 5 Langdon Teclaw Jennifer 2007 The Progressive Producer in the Studio System Adrian Scott at RKO 1943 1947 in Un American Hollywood Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era ed Frank Krutnik Steve Neale Brian Neve and Peter Stanfield pp 152 68 New Brunswick NJ and London Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 4198 0 Lasky Betty 1989 RKO The Biggest Little Major of Them All Santa Monica CA Roundtable ISBN 0 915677 41 5 Leff Leonard J 1999 1987 Hitchcock and Selznick The Rich and Strange Collaboration of Alfred Hitchcock and David O Selznick in Hollywood Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21781 0 McBride Joseph 2006 What Ever Happened to Orson Welles A Portrait of an Independent Career Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2410 7 McCann Graham 1998 Cary Grant A Class Apart New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 10885 0 Morton Ray 2005 King Kong The History of a Movie Icon from Fay Wray to Peter Jackson New York Applause ISBN 1 55783 669 8 Mueller John 1986 Astaire Dancing The Musical Films London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 0 241 11749 6 Muller Eddie 1998 Dark City The Lost World of Film Noir New York St Martin s ISBN 0 312 18076 4 Naremore James 1989 The Magic World of Orson Welles rev ed Dallas Southern Methodist University Press ISBN 0 87074 299 X Nasaw David 2012 The Patriarch The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P Kennedy New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 376 3 Nye David E 1992 Electrifying America Social Meanings of a New Technology 1880 1940 Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 0 262 64030 9 O Neill Dennis J 1966 A Whale of a Territory The Story of Bill O Neil New York McGraw Hill Pierson John 1997 Spike Mike Slackers amp Dykes A Guided Tour Across a Decade of American Independent Cinema New York Miramax Books Hyperion ISBN 0 7868 8222 0 Porst Jennifer 2015 The Preservation of Competition Hollyood and Antitrust Law in Hollywood and the Law ed Paul McDonald Emily Carman Eric Hoyt and Philip Drake pp 103 29 London BFI Palgrave ISBN 978 1 84457 477 3 Regev Ronny 2018 Working in Hollywood How the Studio System Turned Creativity into Labor Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9781469636504 Rode Alan K 2007 Charles McGraw Biography of a Film Noir Tough Guy Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 3167 9 Russell James and Jim Whalley 2018 Hollywood and the Baby Boom A Social History New York and London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 5013 3149 7 Schatz Thomas 1998 1989 The Genius of the System Hollywood Filmmaking in the Studio Era London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 19596 2 Schatz Thomas 1999 1997 Boom and Bust American Cinema in the 1940s Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22130 3 Schwartz Ronald 2005 Neo Noir The New Film Noir Style from Psycho to Collateral Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Scarecrow ISBN 0 8108 5676 X Segrave Kerry 1999 Movies at Home How Hollywood Came to Television Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 0654 2 Senn Bryan 1996 Golden Horrors An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema 1931 1939 Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 0175 3 Senn Bryan 2018 Drums o Terror Voodoo in the Cinema Albany GA BearManor Media ISBN 978 1 887664 18 9 Server Lee 2002 Robert Mitchum Baby I Don t Care New York St Martin s ISBN 0 312 26206 X Shull Michael S and David Edward Wilt 1996 Hollywood War Films 1937 1945 An Exhaustive Filmography of American Feature Length Motion Pictures Relating to World War II Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 2854 0 Sikov Ed 1996 Laughing Hysterically American Screen Comedy of the 1950s New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 07983 4 Slide Anthony 1998 The New Historical Dictionary of the American Film Industry Abingdon and New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 579 58056 8 Smith Dave 1996 Disney A to Z The Official Encyclopedia New York Hyperion ISBN 0 7868 6223 8 Spicer Andrew 2014 2002 Film Noir Abingdon and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 43712 1 Spoto Donald 1984 1983 The Dark Side of Genius The Life of Alfred Hitchcock New York Ballantine ISBN 0 345 31462 X Stephens Michael L 1995 Film Noir A Comprehensive Illustrated Reference to Movies Terms and Persons Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 89950 802 2 Terrace Vincent 1999 Radio Programs 1924 1984 A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 4513 4 Thomson David 1997 1996 Rosebud The Story of Orson Welles New York Vintage ISBN 0 679 77283 9 Uytdewilligen Ryan 2021 Killing John Wayne The Making of the Conqueror Lanham MD Globe Pequot Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4930 5847 1 Ward Richard Lewis 2016 When the Cock Crows A History of the Pathe Exchange Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 8093 3496 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to RKO General The Early Sound Films of Pathe list of RKO Pathe branded films of 1931 32 part of Vitaphone Video Early Talkies RKO Theater Chain list of classic movie houses belonging to RKO chain part of Cinema Treasures C amp C RKO 16mm Prints extensive discussion of RKO preservation and rights issues by David Chierichetti part of eFilmCenter RKO Radio Pictures Main Logos gallery and analysis part of the Audiovisual Identity Database RKO Radio Pictures Logo History video survey of the evolving Transmitter and more Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RKO Pictures amp oldid 1146288855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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