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Monogram Pictures

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Monogram Pictures



 
 
Monogram Pictures Corporation was a Hollywood studio that produced and released films, most on low budgets, between 1931 and 1953, when the firm completed a transition to the name Allied Artists
Allied Artists Pictures Corporation

Allied Artists Pictures Corporation started life as a subsidiary of Monogram Pictures in 1946 as an outlet for films with bigger names and higher budgets than Monogram could boast....
. Monogram is considered a leader among the smaller studios sometimes referred to collectively as Poverty Row
Poverty Row

Poverty Row is a slang term used in Hollywood from the late silent period through the mid-fifties to refer to a variety of small and mostly short-lived B movie Movie studio....
. The idea behind the studio was that when the Monogram logo appeared on the screen, everyone knew they were in for action and adventure.

gram was created in the early 1930s from two earlier companies, W.






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Monogram Pictures Corporation was a Hollywood studio that produced and released films, most on low budgets, between 1931 and 1953, when the firm completed a transition to the name Allied Artists
Allied Artists Pictures Corporation

Allied Artists Pictures Corporation started life as a subsidiary of Monogram Pictures in 1946 as an outlet for films with bigger names and higher budgets than Monogram could boast....
. Monogram is considered a leader among the smaller studios sometimes referred to collectively as Poverty Row
Poverty Row

Poverty Row is a slang term used in Hollywood from the late silent period through the mid-fifties to refer to a variety of small and mostly short-lived B movie Movie studio....
. The idea behind the studio was that when the Monogram logo appeared on the screen, everyone knew they were in for action and adventure.

History

Monogram was created in the early 1930s from two earlier companies, W. Ray Johnston's Rayart Productions (renamed "Raytone" when sound pictures came in) and Trem Carr's Sono-Art Pictures. Both specialized in low budget features and, as Monogram Pictures, continued that policy until 1935 with Carr in charge of production. Another independent, Paul Malvern, released his Lone Star western productions (starring John Wayne
John Wayne

John Wayne was an Academy Award- and Golden Globe Award-winning United States film actor. He epitomized rugged masculinity and has become an enduring American icon....
) through Monogram.

The backbone of the studio in those early days was a father-and-son combination: Robert N. Bradbury, writer and director, and Bob Steele
Bob Steele (actor)

Bob Steele was an United States actor. He was born Robert Adrian Bradbury in Portland, Oregon, into a vaudeville family. After years of touring, the family settled down in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California in the late 1910s, where his father, Robert N....
, cowboy actor, were on their roster. Bradbury wrote almost all of the early Monogram and Lone Star westerns. While budgets and production values were lean, Monogram offered a balanced program, including action melodramas, classics, and mysteries.

In 1935, Johnston and Carr were wooed by Herbert Yates of Consolidated Film Industries; Yates planned to merge Monogram with several other smaller independent companies to form Republic Pictures
Republic Pictures

Republic Pictures is an in-name only independent film, television, and video distribution company that was originally a movie production-distribution corporation with studio facilities, best known for its specialization in quality B-film pictures, Western and movie Serial s....
. But after a short time in this new venture, Johnston and Carr left, Carr to produce at Universal and Johnston to restart Monogram in 1937.

Monogram's stars

In its early years, Monogram could seldom afford big-name movie stars and would employ either former silent-film actors who were idle (Herbert Rawlinson, William Collier, Sr.) or young featured players (Ray Walker, Wallace Ford).

In 1938 Monogram began a long and profitable policy of making series and hiring familiar players to star in them. Frankie Darro
Frankie Darro

Frankie Darro was an United States voice-over artist, character actor and, initially, a well-known child actor....
, Hollywood's foremost tough-kid actor of the 1930s, joined Monogram and stayed with the company until 1950. Comedian Mantan Moreland
Mantan Moreland

Mantan Moreland was an African-American comic and actor most popular in the 1930s and 1940s. Some of his roles are now considered to be controversial, as he often played a superstitious, easily frightened manservant, ready to flee at the first sign of danger, somewhat similar to roles played by Stepin Fetchit....
 co-starred in many of the Darros and continued to be a valuable asset to Monogram through 1949.

Juvenile actors Marcia Mae Jones and Jackie Moran carried a series of homespun romances. Crime themes dominated the roster at Monogram in the late thirties and early forties. For example, the very forgettable though endearing Riot Squad (1941) cast Richard Cromwell
Richard Cromwell (actor)

Richard Cromwell, born LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh , was an United States actor. His family and friends called him Roy, though he was also professionally known and signed autographs as Dick Cromwell....
 as a doctor working covertly for the police department to catch the mobsters before his girlfriend Rita Quigley breaks their engagement.

Boris Karloff
Boris Karloff

Boris Karloff was an Cinema of the United Kingdom who emigrated to Canada in the 1910s. He is best remembered for his roles in horror films and his portrayal of Frankenstein's monster in the 1931 film Frankenstein , 1935 film Bride of Frankenstein and 1939 film Son of Frankenstein....
 brought a touch of class to the Monogram release schedule with his "Mr. Wong" mysteries. This prompted producer Sam Katzman
Sam Katzman

Sam Katzman was an United States film producer and Film director. Born into a poor Jewish family, Katzman went to work as a stage laborer at the age of 13 in the fledgling East Coast of the United States film industry....
 to engage Bela Lugosi
Béla Lugosi

B?la Lugosi was a Hungarians-born United States actor of theatre and film, well known for playing Count Dracula in the Dracula and subsequent Dracula ....
 for a follow-up series of Monogram thrillers. Katzman hit the bull's-eye with his street-gang series The East Side Kids, which ran from 1940 to 1945. East Side star Leo Gorcey
Leo Gorcey

Leo Bernard Gorcey was an United States stage and movie actor who became famous for portraying on film the leader of the group of young hooligans known variously as the Dead End Kids, East Side Kids and The Bowery Boys....
 then took the reins himself and transformed the series into The Bowery Boys
The Bowery Boys

The Bowery Boys was a group of actors who made a series of films released by Monogram Pictures from 1946 through 1958. The group was a revamping of "East Side Kids," who had been making films together since 1940....
, which became the longest-running feature-film series in movie history (48 titles). During this run, Gorcey became the highest paid actor in Hollywood on an annual basis.

Monogram always catered to western fans. The studio released sagebrush sagas with Bill Cody, Bob Steele
Bob Steele (actor)

Bob Steele was an United States actor. He was born Robert Adrian Bradbury in Portland, Oregon, into a vaudeville family. After years of touring, the family settled down in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California in the late 1910s, where his father, Robert N....
, John Wayne
John Wayne

John Wayne was an Academy Award- and Golden Globe Award-winning United States film actor. He epitomized rugged masculinity and has become an enduring American icon....
, Tom Keene
Tom Keene

Tom Keene was an United States actor born in Rochester, New York known mostly for his roles in B Westerns.Little is known of his earlier life but he arrived in Hollywood in the late 20s after college studies at Columbia and Carnegie Tech and immediately made some impact co-starring in The Godless Girl directed by Cecil B....
, Tim McCoy
Tim McCoy

Timothy John Fitzgerald "Tim" McCoy was an United States actor....
, Tex Ritter
Tex Ritter

Tex Ritter was an United States of America Country music singer and actor and the father of actor John Ritter....
, and Jack Randall
Jack Randall

Jack Randall may refer to:*Jack Randall , British*Jack Randall , American actor Addison Randall*Jack Randall ...
 before hitting on the "trio" format teaming veteran saddle pals. Buck Jones
Buck Jones

Buck Jones was an United States motion picture star of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, best known for his work starring in many popular Western . In his early film appearances, he was billed as Charles Jones....
, Tim McCoy
Tim McCoy

Timothy John Fitzgerald "Tim" McCoy was an United States actor....
, and Raymond Hatton
Raymond Hatton

Raymond William Hatton was an American movie actor who appeared in almost five hundred movies, including a stint of being paired in 1920s comedies with Wallace Beery....
 became The Rough Riders; Ray (Crash) Corrigan, John King, and Max Terhune were The Range Busters, and Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson
Hoot Gibson

Hoot Gibson was a rodeo champion and a pioneer cowboy film actor, film director and Film producer....
, and Bob Steele
Bob Steele (actor)

Bob Steele was an United States actor. He was born Robert Adrian Bradbury in Portland, Oregon, into a vaudeville family. After years of touring, the family settled down in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California in the late 1910s, where his father, Robert N....
 teamed as The Trail Blazers. When Universal Pictures
Universal Pictures

This is a partial listing of films produced and/or distributed by Universal Pictures, the main film production company/distribution company arm of Universal Studios, a subsidiary of NBC Universal.List of films...
 allowed Johnny Mack Brown
Johnny Mack Brown

This article is for the college football player, for the head coach see Mack Brown.Johnny Mack Brown was an All-American college football player and film actor....
's contract to lapse, Monogram grabbed him and kept him busy through 1952.

The studio was a launching pad for stars of the future (Preston Foster
Preston Foster

Preston Foster was an American stage and film actor. Foster entered films in 1929 after appearing as a Broadway stage actor. Foster was considered ruggedly handsome and a talented singer....
 in Sensation Hunters, Randolph Scott
Randolph Scott

Randolph Scott was an United States film actor whose career spanned from 1928 to 1962....
 in Broken Dreams, Lionel Atwill
Lionel Atwill

Lionel Atwill was an England stage and film actor born in Croydon, London, England.He began his stage career in 1905 in England, and had become a star in Broadway theatre by 1918, but was most famous for his horror films roles in the 1930s....
 in The Sphinx, Alan Ladd
Alan Ladd

Alan Walbridge Ladd was an United States film actor....
 opposite Edith Fellows in Her First Romance, Robert Mitchum
Robert Mitchum

Robert Charles Durman Mitchum was an Academy Award-nominated United States film actor, author, composer and singer. Mitchum is largely remembered for his starring roles in several major works of the film noir style, and is considered a forerunner of the anti-heroes prevalent in film during the 1950s and 1960s....
 in When Strangers Marry. The studio was also a haven for established stars whose careers had stalled: Edmund Lowe
Edmund Lowe

Edmund Dantes Lowe was an American actor. His formative experience began in vaudeville and silent film. He was born in San Jose, California....
 in Klondike Fury, John Boles
John Boles

John Boles may refer to:*John Boles Jr., American baseball executive*John Boles , American actor*John Boles *John P. Boles, auxiliary bishop of Boston in the 1990s ...
 in Road to Happiness, Ricardo Cortez
Ricardo Cortez

Ricardo Cortez was a film actor who began his career during the silent film era.Born Jacob Krantz in New York City into a Jewish family, he worked on Wall Street before his looks got him into the film business....
 in I Killed That Man, Kay Francis
Kay Francis

Kay Francis was an Cinema of the United States stage and film actress. After a brief period on Broadway theatre in the late 1920s, she moved to film and achieved her greatest success between 1930 and 1936, when she was the number one female star at the Warner Bros....
 and Bruce Cabot
Bruce Cabot

Bruce Cabot was an United States film actor. He is best known as Jack Driscoll in King Kong . He was married twice, to the actresses Adrienne Ames and Francesca De Scaffa....
 in Divorce.

Monogram did create and nurture its own stars. Gale Storm
Gale Storm

Josephine Owaissa Cottle , better known as Gale Storm, is an American actress and singer, who starred in two popular television programs of the 1950s, My Little Margie and The Gale Storm Show....
 began her career at RKO Radio Pictures in 1940 but found a home at Monogram. Storm had been promoted from Monogram's Frankie Darro series and was showcased in crime dramas (like Cosmo Jones, Crime Smasher (1943) opposite Richard Cromwell
Richard Cromwell (actor)

Richard Cromwell, born LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh , was an United States actor. His family and friends called him Roy, though he was also professionally known and signed autographs as Dick Cromwell....
 and radio's Frank Graham
Frank Graham

Francis or Frank Graham may refer to:*Frank D. Graham , writer of Audel guides*Frank Porter Graham , Democratic Senator from North Carolina, 1949?1950...
 in the title role) and a string of musicals to capitalize on her singing talents (like Campus Rhythm and Nearly Eighteen, both 1943). Another of Monogram's finds during this time was British skating star Belita
Belita

Maria Belita Gladys Olivie Lynn Jepson-Turner , known professionally as Belita, was an Olympic Games Figure skating, dancer and early film actress....
, who conversely starred in musical revues first and then graduated to dramatic roles, including Suspense
Suspense (1946 film)

Suspense is a 1946 in film film noir directed by Frank Tuttle. The ice-skating-themed movie starred Barry Sullivan and former Olympic skater Belita , who would team up again in 1947 for the film, The Gangster....
 (1946), the only A-budget picture to be produced under the Monogram name.

Series films and success

Monogram continued to experiment with series; some hit and some missed. Definite hits were Charlie Chan
Charlie Chan

File:Charliechanfeb0539.jpgCharlie Chan is a fictional character Chinese American detective created by Earl Derr Biggers, who acknowledged that he was inspired by the career of Honolulu policeman Chang Apana....
, The Cisco Kid
The Cisco Kid

The Cisco Kid is a film, radio, television and comic book series based on the fictional Western character created by O. Henry in his short story "The Caballero's Way", published in 1907 in the collection Heart of the West....
, and Joe Palooka
Joe Palooka

File:Joe3palooka42.jpgJoe Palooka was an United States comic strip about a heavyweight boxing champion, created by cartoonist Ham Fisher. With various assistants and successors, the strip lasted for over half a century with spin-offs to radio, movies, television and merchandising....
, all proven movie properties abandoned by other studios and revived by Monogram. Less successful were the comic-strip exploits of Snuffy Smith
Snuffy Smith

Snuffy Smith has been for many years the predominant character in the syndicated newspaper comic strip Barney Google and Snuffy Smith, created by Billy DeBeck and later drawn by Fred Lasswell from 1942 until 2001 ....
, the mysterious adventures of The Shadow
The Shadow

The Shadow is a collection of serialized dramas, originally on 1930s radio and then in a wide variety of media, that follow the exploits of Character vigilante The Shadow....
, and Sam Katzman's comedy series co-starring Billy Gilbert
Billy Gilbert

Billy Gilbert was an United States comedian and actor most known for his comic sneeze routines....
, Shemp Howard, and Maxie Rosenbloom
Maxie Rosenbloom

Max Everitt Rosenbloom, known as Slapsie Maxie , was a boxing champion, film actor, and television personality.Growing up in a tough New York neighborhood, Rosenbloom learned to defend himself....
.

Later Monogram very nearly hit the big time with King Brothers Productions
King Brothers Productions

King Brothers Productions was a film production company active from 1941 to the late 1960s. It was formed by brothers Frank, Maurice and Herman King....
' Dillinger
Dillinger (1945 film)

Dillinger is a 1945 in film gangster film telling the story of John Dillinger. The film was directed by Max Nosseck. Dillinger was the first major film to star Lawrence Tierney....
, a sensationalized crime drama that was a runaway success in 1945, and received Monogram's only major Academy Award nomination, for Best Original Screenplay
Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay

The Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay is the Academy Awards for the best screenplay not based upon previously published material. Before 1940, there was an Academy Award for Best Story for writing....
. Monogram tried to follow it up immediately (with several "exploitation" melodramas cashing in on topical themes), and did achieve some success, but Monogram never became a respectable "major" studio like former poverty-row denizen Columbia Pictures
Columbia Pictures

Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. is an United States film production company and distribution company. It was one of the so-called studio system among the eight major film studios of Hollywood Cinema of the United States#Golden Age of Hollywood....
.

Allied Artists

Producer Walter Mirisch
Walter Mirisch

Walter Mortimer Mirisch is an American film producer. In his long and successful motion picture career, Walter Mirisch has produced some of the industry?s finest and most memorable films....
 began at Monogram after World War II as assistant to studio head Samuel "Steve" Broidy. He convinced Broidy that the days of low-budget films were ending, and in 1946, Monogram created a new unit, Allied Artists Productions
Allied Artists Pictures Corporation

Allied Artists Pictures Corporation started life as a subsidiary of Monogram Pictures in 1946 as an outlet for films with bigger names and higher budgets than Monogram could boast....
, to make costlier films.

At a time when the average Hollywood picture cost about $800,000 (and the average Monogram picture cost about $90,000), Allied Artists' first release, It Happened on Fifth Avenue (1947), cost more than $1,200,000. Subsequent Allied Artists releases were more economical but did have enhanced production values; many of them were filmed in color.

The studio's new policy permitted what Mirisch called "B-plus" pictures, which were released along with Monogram's established line of B fare. Mirisch's prediction about the end of the low-budget film had come true thanks to television, and in September 1952, Monogram announced that henceforth it would only produce films bearing the Allied Artists name. The Monogram brand name was finally retired in 1953. The company was now known as Allied Artists Pictures Corporation
Allied Artists Pictures Corporation

Allied Artists Pictures Corporation started life as a subsidiary of Monogram Pictures in 1946 as an outlet for films with bigger names and higher budgets than Monogram could boast....
.

Allied Artists did retain a few vestiges of its Monogram identity, continuing its popular Stanley Clements
Stanley Clements

Stanley Clements was an United States actor and comedian.Stanley Clements was born in Long Island, New York. Young Stan realized that he wanted a show-business career while he was in grammar school, and when he graduated from college he toured in vaudeville for two years....
 action series (through 1953), its B-Westerns (through 1954), its Bomba, the Jungle Boy
Bomba, the Jungle Boy

Bomba, the Jungle Boy was a series of American boy's adventure books produced by the Stratemeyer Syndicate under the pseudonym Roy Rockwood and published by Cupples and Leon in the first half of the 20th century in imitation of the successful Tarzan series....
 adventures (through 1955), and especially its breadwinning comedy series with The Bowery Boys
The Bowery Boys

The Bowery Boys was a group of actors who made a series of films released by Monogram Pictures from 1946 through 1958. The group was a revamping of "East Side Kids," who had been making films together since 1940....
 (through 1957). For the most part, however, Allied Artists was heading in new, ambitious directions under Mirisch.

For a time in the mid-1950s the Mirisch family had great influence at Allied Artists, with Walter as executive producer, his brother Marvin as head of sales, and brother Harold as corporate treasurer. They pushed the studio into big-budget filmmaking, signing contracts with William Wyler
William Wyler

William Wyler was a three-time Academy Award-winning film film director....
, John Huston
John Huston

John Marcellus Huston was an United States film director and actor. He was known for directing the films, The Maltese Falcon , The Asphalt Jungle , The Treasure of the Sierra Madre , Key Largo , The African Queen , The Misfits , and The Man Who Would Be King ....
, Billy Wilder
Billy Wilder

Billy Wilder was an Austrian-United States journalist, filmmaker, screenwriter, and film producer, whose career spanned more than 50 years and 60 films....
 and Gary Cooper
Gary Cooper

Frank James ?Gary? Cooper was an Cinema of the United States film actor and iconic star. He was renowned for his quiet, understated acting style and his stoic, individualistic, emotionally restrained, but at times intense screen persona, which was particularly well suited to the many Western movie he made....
. But when their first big-name productions, Wyler's Friendly Persuasion
Friendly Persuasion (film)

Friendly Persuasion is a 1956 Palme d'Or-winning American Civil War film starring Gary Cooper, Dorothy McGuire, Anthony Perkins, Richard Eyer, Robert Middleton and Phyllis Love....
 and Wilder's Love in the Afternoon
Love in the Afternoon

Love in the Afternoon may refer to:* Love in the Afternoon , a slogan and campaign used by ABC from 1975 to 1985 to market its daytime lineup...
 were box-office flops in 1956–57, studio-head Broidy retreated into the kind of pictures Monogram had always favored: low-budget action and thrillers.

Monogram/Allied Artists survived by finding a niche and serving it well. The company lasted until 1979, when runaway inflation and high production costs pushed it into bankruptcy. The Monogram/Allied Artists library was bought by television producer Lorimar; today a majority of this library belongs to Time Warner
Time Warner

Time Warner Inc. is the world's third largest media and entertainment Conglomerate by market capitalization , headquartered in the Time Warner Center in New York City....
.

Probably the best-known tribute paid to Monogram came from French New Wave
French New Wave

The New Wave was a blanket term coined by critics for a group of Cinema of France of the late 1950s and 1960s, influenced by Italian Neorealism and classical Hollywood cinema....
 pioneer Jean-Luc Godard
Jean-Luc Godard

Jean-Luc Godard is a French and Swiss filmmaker and one of the founding members of the Nouvelle Vague, or "French New Wave".Godard was born to French people-Swiss parents in Paris....
, who dedicated his 1959 film A Bout de Souffle (Breathless) to Monogram, citing the studio's films as a major influence.

Further reading

  • Ted Okuda, The Monogram Checklist: The Films of Monogram Pictures Corporation, 1931–1952, McFarland & Company, 1999. ISBN 0786407506.