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His MGM was a film factory, with stars
as assembly-line workers and a hit formula
chaste romance, apple pie and Andy Hardy.
Dan Quayle would have loved Louis B. Mayer,
a man for whom the words family values had real meaning. Motherhood, the
Stars and Stripes and God were equal parts of a lifelong strategy that
would establish Metro Goldwyn Mayer as the industry's dominant film factory,
from the silent era through the talkies revolution. While the other early
moguls were simply trying to make the best movies they could, young Mayer
was an ideologue intent on using the power of the new medium to exert
what he considered the proper moral influence on the American public.
Mayer went West in 1918, just after the
first wave of Hollywood pioneers. He had been on the move since his threadbare
family left its Cossack-ridden Ukrainian village in the late 1880s and
a few years later settled in St. John, New Brunswick. There his father
Jacob Mayer struggled as a junkman. Little Louie, half starved, battled
anti-Semitic bullies and helped his father--whom he despised as much as
he adored his mother. Escaping St. John in his late teens, he moved on
to Boston, where he discovered the Nickelodeon, the embryo of the moving-picture
business.
Quick to seize his opportunities in the young
business of film distribution, Mayer earned a breakthrough $500,000 by
putting up $50,000 for a lopsided 90% of the New England ticket sales
on the first movie blockbuster, The Birth of a Nation. Now
ready to produce his own pictures, he inveigled a popular actress, Anita
Stewart, into breaking her contract with Vitagraph, and in 1918-19 starred
her in a series of teary films at the modest studio leased from the Selig
Zoo in downtown Los Angeles, where my father B.P. Schulberg joined him
in the now vanished Mayer-Schulberg Studio in 1920. A major step up for
Mayer was entertainment tycoon Marcus Loew's reaching out to him as commanding
officer of a new company merging Metro and Goldwyn, with Mayer soon adding
his big M to the mix.
He raised the contract system to a state
of the art, using it to rule over a stable of stars who were legally bound
to the company for years. In L.B.'s studio, with frail, dedicated lieutenant
Irving Thalberg at his side, L.B. worked hard to project himself as a
father figure to his extended family of stars, directors and producers.
He was the master manipulator, and it was generally acknowledged that
of all the great actors on the lot--the Barrymores, Spencer Tracy, Lon
Chaney, Garbo L.B. was No. 1. When Robert Taylor tried to hit him up
for a raise, L.B. advised the young man to work hard, respect his elders,
and in due time he'd get everything he deserved. L.B. hugged him, cried
a little and walked him to the door. Asked, "Did you get your raise?"
the now tearful Taylor is said to have answered, "No, but I found a father."
- BORN July 4, 1885, in Minsk, Russia (now Belarus)
- 1907 Buys and rebuilds a movie theater near Boston
- 1917-18 Starts Louis B. Mayer Pictures; first release:
Virtuous Wives
- 1924 With Marcus Loew, forms Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Goldwyn
backs out
- 1925 Signs Greta Garbo
- 1932 Rift with production chief Irving Thalberg divides
studio
- 1948 Relinquishes control of MGM.
- Retires in 1951
- 1957 Dies Oct. 29 in Los Angeles
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