The
Big 5
Warner Bros
Warner Bros. Pictures, incorporated in 1923 by Polish brothers (Jack, Harry,
Albert, and Sam) in 1925, Warner Brothers merged with First National, forming
Warner Bros.- First National Pictures, the studio's first principal asset was
Rin Tin Tin, became prominent by 1927 due to its introduction of talkies (The
Jazz Singer (1927) and early 30s gangster films, it was known as the "Depression
studio"; in the 40s, it specialized in Bugs Bunny animations and other cartoons.
Paramount
Adolph Zukor's Famous Players (1912) and Jesse Lasky's Feature Play - merged in
1916 to form Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, it spent $1 million on United
Studios' property (on Marathon Street) in 1926, the Famous Players-Lasky
Corporation became Paramount studios in 1927, and was officially named Paramount
Pictures in 1935, its greatest silent era stars were Mary Pickford and Douglas
Fairbanks, Golden Age stars included Mae West, W.C. Fields, Bing Crosby, Bob
Hope, and director Cecil B. DeMille.
RKO
RKO (Radio-Keith-Orpheum) Pictures, evolved from the Mutual Film Corporation
(1912), was established in 1928 as a subsidiary of RCA, it was formed by RCA,
Keith-Orpheum Theaters, and the FBO Company (Film Booker's Organization) - which
was owned by Joseph P. Kennedy (who had already purchased what remained of
Mutual), this was the smallest studio of the majors, kept financially afloat
with top-grossing Astaire-Rogers musicals in the 30s, King Kong (1933), and
Citizen Kane (1941), at one time, RKO was acquired by eccentric millionaire
Howard Hughes.
MGM
Marcus Loew of Loew's, Inc., was the parent firm of what eventually became
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Metro Pictures Corporation was a production company founded
in 1916 by Richard A. Rowland and Louis B. Mayer. In 1918, Mayer left this
partnership to start up his own production company in 1918, called Louis B.
Mayer Pictures. In 1920, Metro Pictures Corporation (with its already-acquired
Goldwyn Pictures Corporation) was purchased by early theater exhibitor Marcus
Loew of Loew's Inc. In another acquisition, Loew merged his 'Metro-Goldwyn
production company with Louis B. Mayer Pictures.
So, in summary, MGM, first named Metro-Goldwyn Pictures, was ultimately formed
in 1924 from the merger of three US film production companies: Metro Pictures
Corporation (1916), Goldwyn Pictures Corporation (1917), and the Louis B. Mayer
Pictures Company (1918).
20th Century Fox
Fox Film Corporation/Foundation, founded in 1912 by NY nickelodeon owner William
Fox (originally a garment industry worker), was first known for Fox Movietone
news and then B-westerns, its first film was Life's Shop Window (1914), it later
became 20th-Century Fox, formed through the 1935 merger of20th Century Pictures
Company.
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