Formation of Bryna Productions and early projects (1949–1954) Kirk Douglas formed an independent film production company at the suggestion of his friend and
I Walk Alone co-star,
Burt Lancaster, who was already having success with his own film production company,
Norma Productions. Lancaster and his agent,
Harold Hecht, formed Norma Productions in 1947, at a time when many actors, directors and producers were forming their independent units, which quickly became the largest and most successful independent film production unit in Hollywood during the 1950s. Douglas registered his new company, Bryna Productions, Incorporated, on September 28, 1949, and immediately began optioning properties and securing writers and directors, though it would take more than five years for a project to make it before the cameras. Douglas' mother, Bryna Demsky, after whom the company was named, was a stockholder in the firm. The first property acquired by Bryna Productions was
Ben Hecht's short story
The Shadow, about a magician who seeks vengeance against his twin brother for the alienation of his blind wife. Douglas made a deal with lawyer-turned-agent-turned-producer
Charles K. Feldman (who, ironically, had tried to sue Lancaster and Norma Productions in 1948) to head Bryna Productions and produce
The Shadow at
Republic Pictures. Feldman hired screenwriter
Charles O'Neal to write the screenplay (O'Neal retitled the film
Mr. Shadow), which was to star Douglas in dual roles of the twin brothers. By early 1952, Bryna Productions was attempting to film
The Shadow in England. In September 1950, Bryna Productions procured
Ivan Thors' screenplay
Nowhere to Go, a story about a displaced person fighting for a new home in the United States. Bryna Productions also owned the filming rights to
Darwin Teihet's novel
The Fear Makers, which Douglas hoped to direct himself. In March 1952, Douglas revealed plans for Bryna Productions to make three films a year, with him to star in only one of the three yearly films. Producer William Schorr, who had previously been attached to
Billy Wilder and produced the Douglas-starring film
Ace in the Hole, became an executive partner at Bryna Productions. Schorr was to oversee the production of films, as associate producer, while Douglas would star in the pictures; Schorr would remain instrumental to Bryna Productions for the next four years.
Strange Harvest was written by
Sy Bartlett and Harold Conrad; Bartlett co-wrote the screenplay with Schorr, and the film was to be directed by
David Miller on location in Italy. In 1953, he and Schorr attempted to secure a two-picture deal with Italian producers
Carlo Ponti and
Dino De Laurentiis. The plan was for Douglas to star in the Italian producers' film
Ulysses, in exchange for a co-production deal to film
The Shadow, which Douglas hoped to finally get underway with
Anatole Litvak secured as director.
Ulysses came through but
The Shadow was never made. In June 1953, Bryna Productions discussed a co-production deal with
Sidney Sheldon to film
Alice in Arms in Italy, adapted from a play in which Douglas had appeared on Broadway in 1945. Later in 1954, Bryna Productions acquired
Robert Carson's story
The Quality of Mercy, though its filming rights were up to challenge. Bryna Productions had been given permission by the author via a verbal agreement, whereas
John Wayne and his business partner
Robert Fellows had received a written agreement from Carson's agent, through their film production company
Batjac Productions. Batjac Productions' existing
Warner Brothers Pictures financing and distribution deal would back the picture, though it was ultimately never made. In September 1954, Bryna Productions showed interest in filming
Robert Wright Campbell's already-written film script
The Dangerous Game.
Six-picture deal with United Artists (1955) In early January 1955, Douglas formally activated Bryna Productions by signing a six-picture, three-year financing and distribution deal with
United Artists. After signing the deal, Douglas and his second wife,
Anne Douglas, were invited out to celebrate with cocktails at
21 Club in New York City by United Artists executives, president
Arthur B. Krim and board chairman
Robert S. Benjamin. and the company's first two motion pictures were announced:
The Viking Raiders, a
swashbuckler about Vikings pillaging the coast of Brittany, adapted by
Edison Marshall's novel and to be directed by
Richard Fleischer; and
Van Gogh, a biopic of
Vincent Van Gogh, to be directed by
Jean Negulesco. Douglas was to star in both. That same month, Norman A. Cook was appointed General Manager of Bryna Productions. The Van Gogh biopic property was subject to some debate as
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer also owned the filming rights to a similar story,
Lust for Life, based on
Irving Stone's novel, with
John Houseman secured as producer and
Vincente Minelli inked as director. In March 1955, Bryna Productions moved into its first official headquarter office at 9235 West Third Street,
Beverly Hills, California. That same month, it was announced that the company hoped to film Jacquin Sanders' novel
Freak Show, a provocative love story about a wrestler and a freak girl at a carnival. and was originally scheduled to begin filming in early April 1955, but due to Douglas' personal publicity tour promoting
Man Without a Star for
Universal-International Pictures, the shooting only began on May 23, 1955. The film was shot entirely on location, using
CinemaScope cameras and
Technicolor film, during five weeks in and around
Bend, Oregon, without any studio retakes, for a cost of over $1,000,000. Bryna Productions also brought over Italian actress
Elsa Martinelli for the femme lead and featured actors like
Walter Matthau,
Lon Chaney, Jr.,
Alan Hale, Jr., and Douglas' former wife
Diana Douglas. After the filming was completed, Bryna Productions hired folk singer
Terry Gilkyson to sing a couple of songs written by
Irving Gordon and
Franz Waxman to compose the score. Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to
Robert Wright Campbell's original screenplay
The Allison Brothers for $25,000, a story written especially for the author's brother,
William Campbell. Immediately after completing
The Indian Fighter, Douglas began filming Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's
Lust for Life in France, Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands, following which he planned to produce and star in
The Viking Raiders; the Norse film would, however, be pushed back by three years. While in Europe, Bryna Productions optioned German author Klaus Schuitz's story
The Runaway Heart, which deals with an Italian girl who falls in love with an SS Nazi officer during World War II. The male lead was to be played by Douglas, while the Italian role was offered to
Sophia Loren.'''' The company then announced plans to film
Robert Alan Aurthur's original story ''Shadow of the Champ. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was rarely dealing with independent film production companies at that time so the one-picture deal was somewhat of an achievement in the film industry. Even more so surprising was that Bryna Productions was negotiating a second one-picture pact with the same studio. By the end of 1955, Bryna Productions' plans were to produce two films in 1956 (
Shadow of the Champ for United Artists and
King Kelly for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), and to be able to produce three to four pictures a year by 1957. In January 1956, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to Samuel Grafton's novel
A Most Contagious Game, the story of a magazine reporter who goes undercover as a gangster to research the underworld but ends up becoming a mob leader himself; the filming rights to the story had previously been owned by
Victor Saville's Parklane Pictures, which produced a television movie for
Studio One. Bresler was to produce the film while Grafton was hired to write the screenplay. Douglas immediately offered the lead role to Lancaster, but plans were ultimately made for Douglas to star in
A Most Contagious Game, financed by United Artists, with filming to begin in March 1956 on location in New York City. It was also announced that, in addition to
Shadow of the Champ, Aurthur would be adapting two more of his stories for Bryna Productions:
A Very Special Baby and
Spring Reunion. Bryna Productions was also to finance the Broadway play version.
Spring Reunion, a drama story about a high school reunion, quickly took center stage as the next film to go before cameras, with a scheduled starting date of May 15, 1956, That same month, Bryna Productions also signed Italian actress Elsa Martinelli to a four-picture, two-year contract (two pictures a year for two years). In late February 1956, Barney Briskin was appointed Production Manager of Bryna Productions. and later that month appointed Charles Levy as Eastern Publicity Representative of the company. Douglas was hoping to play the lead and the movie was to begin filming in the late autumn of 1956. In late May 1956, Bryna Productions' plans changed again when another new property was acquired. A third one-picture deal was set with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for the financing and distribution of a film based on
Shirley Jackson's novel ''
The Bird's Nest'', which Bryna Productions purchased from theater producer
Ray Stark. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's contracted-actress
Eleanor Parker was immediately signed for the lead role in the film which was to be titled
Lizzie, with plans to start filming on August 1, 1956, at Kling Studios, though it was delayed to September 10, 1956, with director-actor
Hugo Haas.
Bette Davis was originally cast in the role of Aunt Morgan, but it was ultimately played by
Joan Blondell. Meanwhile,
Spring Reunion was also pushed back to start filming on June 4, 1956, at Republic Studios, while
King Kelly was scheduled to film on location in
East Flat Rock, North Carolina starting July 23, 1956 with Douglas, Elsa Martinelli and
Lance Fuller as co-stars.
Mala Powers was eventually announced as Martinelli's replacement in
King Kelly. Although Douglas was free to start filming, his next picture,
Top Secret Affair, only starting to shoot on December 4, 1956, the production team was unhappy with the script of
King Kelly and put off the shoot. Screenwriter
Edna Anhalt was brought in to work on
King Kelly's script.
Formation of Michael Productions and Joel Productions (1956–1957) Bryna Productions announced in May 1956 that it had loaned-out
Leslie Nielsen from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to star in
A Most Contagious Game, replacing Douglas who had originally planned to take the lead. In June 1956, Douglas and Bryna Productions began what would be a ten-year partnership with writer-producer
Edward Lewis. That month, Bryna Productions acquired Lewis' original story and screenplay,
Mavourneen, a comedy about three girls in an Irish town who conspire to trick the town's most eligible bachelor into marrying one of them. The company initially attempted to loan-out
Dennis Hopper for the male lead, but
Warner Brothers Pictures' price was too high. By October 1956,
The Viking had again become Douglas' top starring-producing project at Bryna Productions, with a re-written script by
Noel Langley; the latter had been hired for the job in June 1956. Its budget had been reduced to $3,000,000 (though it would go over-budget during filming) and it was revealed that it would be filmed authentically in Scandinavian locations during three-and-a-half months in the spring of 1957. Also in November 1956, Bryna Productions announced that its new trademark logo had been designed and would first appear in the opening screen credit of
Lizzie, due out in early 1957. In December 1956,
The Careless Years' lead actors,
Dean Stockwell and
Natalie Trundy, were both simultaneously signed for the film and to five-year contracts with Bryna Productions. Bryna Productions' second film,
Spring Reunion, premiered at the
Astoria Theatre in London, England in late December 1956. The company also announced a three-picture co-production deal with Harris-Kubrick Pictures. Writer-director
Stanley Kubrick and his film producer partner
James B. Harris had been developing, through their own film production company, a script for
Paths of Glory, a World War I drama authored by
Humphrey Cobb. Douglas made an exceptional deal with Harris-Kubrick Pictures in which, although he was co-executive producer, he would only be paid a straight salary of $350,000 as an actor and not take in any share of the film's profits (as his deal with United Artists permitted). The addition of
Paths of Glory to Bryna Productions' schedule forced
The Viking, and also
King Kelly which had been re-scripted by Allan Scott, to be pushed back by several months.
Ride Out for Revenge had already been adapted and scripted by Norman Retchin, who was signed by Bryna Productions as producer for the film in mid-January 1957; Retchin quickly secured
Rory Calhoun to play the lead, with co-stars
Lloyd Bridges and
Gloria Grahame. Myer P. Beck was appointed Sales, Advertisement and Publicity Representative for Bryna Productions in February 1957, just in time for
Lizzie's publicity campaign, which rolled out to limited theater screenings that month. After the completion of
Spring Reunion, Betty Hutton hoped to star in
Three Rings for Julie, a comedy about a switchboard operator who overhears a plot for murder, as her second-contracted picture for Bryna Productions. But after
Spring Reunion proved unpopular, Hutton opted not to resume her film-career.
Formation of Brynaprod and Peter Vincent Music (1957–1958) Paths of Glory started filming on March 18, 1957, at
Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany, while
Ride Out for Revenge began shooting on March 28, 1957, with director
Bernard Girard on location in
Sonora, California. Leigh was also signed to an additional picture deal with Bryna Productions.
The Vikings began shooting using
Technirama cameras and Technicolor film on June 20, 1957, on location near the Finnafjorden fjords in Norway, then in Copenhagen, Denmark, followed by Brittany, France, and finally interior scenes at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany. While in Europe, Bryna Productions looked into the possibility of filming
The Shadow in Madrid, Spain, The idea of a European-based company was another influence from Hecht and Lancaster, who had formed the Liechtenstein-based Norma Productions subsidiary Joanna Productions A.G. in 1955 to produce
Trapeze in France. Lewis, running Bryna Productions operations in Hollywood while Douglas was in Europe, negotiated the development of a television series based on
The Vikings. In May 1957, a deal was made with Morris Helprin and Alfred W. Crown's film production company, Barbizon Productions, to co-produce a pilot film for a television series to be titled
King of the Vikings for
Columbia Broadcasting System. Robert Alan Aurthur was contracted to write the teleplay for the pilot, in addition to additional episodes in case the series was picked up. Bryna Productions then planned to make the television program through a financing and distribution deal with
United Artists Television and attempted to sign
Sterling Hayden for the lead role. Lewis was later appointed head of Bryna Productions' television department in November 1957. In September 1957, Bryna Productions moved into a luxurious new building at 250 North Canon Drive in Beverly Hills, California, on the same block as Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions' office, which was located at 202 North Canon Drive. The three-story building was designed by architect Herman Charles Light and was shared with producer
Martin Melcher and singer-actress Doris Day's film production company
Arwin Productions, public relations agency
Rogers & Cowan (who would later represent Douglas and Bryna Productions), and law firm Rosenthal & Norton. In October 1957, after
Paths of Glory had been privately screened for select members of the press, Bryna Productions optioned American-Canadian church minister-turned-master-safecracker Herbert Emerson Wilsons's autobiography,
I Stole $16,000,000, especially for Stanley Kubrick and James B. Harris The picture was to be the second in the co-production deal between Bryna Productions and Harris-Kubrick Pictures, which Kubrick was to write and direct, Harris to co-produce and Douglas to co-produce and star.
Ride Out for Revenge was released to theaters in October 1957.
Paths of Glory had its world premiere on October 25, 1957, in Munich, Germany, followed by its American premiere two months later, on December 20, 1957, at the Fine Arts Theater in Beverly Hills, California. It was Bryna Productions biggest success yet and the film went on to win and have nominations for several awards, including the
Grand Prix de l'UCC, the Cantaclaro Award for Best American Motion Picture, the
Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon for Best Foreign Director, and the
Jussi Award for Best Foreign Director. It was also nominated for a
BAFTA Award for Best Film from any Source,
Adolphe Menjou was nominated for a
Golden Laurel Award for Top Male Supporting Performance and the
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Drama. In 1992, the United States
National Film Preservation Board deemed
Paths of Glory "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the
Library of Congress'
National Film Registry. In January 1958, Douglas signed on to star and co-produce the film ''Last Train from Harper's Station'' with
Hal B. Wallis' Wallis-Hazen Productions, through Wallis' existing
Paramount Pictures financing and distribution deal. ''Last Train from Harper's Station
was quickly renamed Showdown at Gun Hill
when the script was completed. Meanwhile, script meetings were scheduled in Tijuana, Mexico with Herbert Emerson Wilsons, as he had been expelled from the United States and deported to Canada, for the development of his novel I Stole $16,000,000.
Stewart Granger was then announced to play the lead in the film, set to start shooting later in 1958. Kubrick eventually finished a script titled God Fearing Man'', but the picture was never filmed. In January 1958, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to
Edward Abbey's novel
The Brave Cowboy. In February 1958, Douglas became attached to ''
The Devil's Disciple'', a
George Bernard Shaw play which had been optioned by Harold Hecht and Burt Lancaster in August 1955, with plans to film it through their production company Hecht-Lancaster Productions. The picture went through considerable delays and changes, but was originally announced to star
Laurence Olivier, Burt Lancaster,
Montgomery Clift and
Elizabeth Taylor in the leads, with Olivier directing; the picture was to be filmed at a proposed ranch-studio that Hecht-Lancaster Productions was to build in the woodlands of Santa Cruz, California. Douglas came in to replace Clift as one of the leads and agreed to co-star in the film if he could also co-produce it through Bryna Productions. To please Olivier, the film was instead shot in England, and therefore, Brynaprod co-produced the film. Hecht-Lancaster Productions had by this time been renamed Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions, and the company also formed a British subsidiary to co-produce the film: Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Films. On February 28, 1958, Douglas registered another subsidiary, Bryna Corporation, though its use has not been established. In late March 1958, Lewis was appointed Vice-President of Bryna Productions, Margulies was appointed Vice-President of Public Relations Consultants, and the company welcomed three new executives: Seymour Poe as World-Wide Sales Representative, Joseph A. Barry as Eastern Story Editor and Allan Balter as Unit Publicist. German-American film director
Robert Siodmak, who had returned to Germany, was appointed European Representative of Bryna Productions, charged as adviser and consultant on the production, distribution and exhibition of all of the company's films in the European market. The addition of the new personnel coincided with Bryna Productions' expansion program and the new representation of the company by talent agency
Music Corporation of America. Douglas additionally formed the Bryna Productions subsidiary Peter Vincent Music Corporation, a
music publishing company named after his third son,
Peter Vincent Douglas. The purpose of Peter Vincent Music was to publish and copyright the music (theme songs, soundtracks, scores and cues) from Bryna Productions' films and administer royalties to the songwriters and composers; this too was influenced by Hecht and Lancaster's own successful music publishing venture,
Hecht-Lancaster & Buzzell Music. Peter Vincent Music's first published and copyrighted music were three songs composed by
Mario Nascimbene for
The Vikings, which were co-published with United Artist's music publishing imprint, Unart Music. The songs were "March of the Vikings", "Love Has Gone to Wander" and "Commento Musicale Per I Vichinghi", which featured lyrics by Joseph Lubin and arrangements by Jerome Howard.'' Verne properties had become viable material in the mid-1950s, Douglas having already co-starred in
Walt Disney Productions'
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,
Michael Todd having recently released
Around the World in 80 Days,
Benedict Bogeaus filming
From the Earth to the Moon and
Charles Brackett preparing
Journey to the Center of the Earth. Michael Strogoff, which takes place in Russia, was to be the subject of the first American-Soviet film co-production, setup jointly through the two nations' cultural exchange program. Douglas was to star in the film, along with as many American actors as the Russians would allow, with the rest of the stars, including the female lead, and cast to be played by Russian actors. As Douglas was by then busy filming
Showdown at Gun Hill, Lewis and Margulies traveled to New York City on behalf of Bryna Productions and met with
Eric Johnston, president of the
Motion Picture Association of America, Kenneth Clark, vice-president of the Motion Picture Association of America, Turner Blair Shelton, film division chief of the
United States Information Agency, Aleksandr A. Slavnov, head of the Soviet delegation, Aleksandr N. Davydov, head of Sovexportfilm, and Tamara Mamedov, cultural attaché for the Soviet Embassy in Washington D.C.
Showdown at Gun Hill started filming on March 31, 1958, using
VistaVision cameras and
Technicolor film, on location in Arizona with director
John Sturges and co-starring Douglas and
Anthony Quinn.
Regal Films filed an objection with Motion Pictures Association of America's Title Registration Bureau, claiming that
Showdown at Gun Hill's title was too similar to their own film
Showdown at Boot Hill, which was being released just as the Bryna Productions picture was being filmed. The picture was to be co-produced by the two companies with Douglas to play the lead. In mid-April 1958, Melcher secured the releasing and distribution of Peter Vincent Music's
The Vikings soundtrack through
Dot Records, but less than a month later, it was announced that it would instead be released through
United Artists Records.
Two-picture deal with Universal-International Pictures (1958–1959) The forthcoming release of
The Vikings was to conclude Bryna Productions' six-picture agreement with United Artists; ''The Devil's Disciple'' acting as a supplementary picture, already packed under Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions' existing United Artists contract. In early May 1958, Bryna Productions signed a one-picture deal with
Universal-International Pictures for the financing and distribution of the adventure film
Viva, Gringo!. Although the original Universal-International Pictures deal only called for a single film, Bryna Productions was already negotiating with the company's president,
Milton Rackmil, for the financing and distribution of additional films, as it had done with Loew at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The second Bryna Productions film to be financed and distributed by Universal-International Pictures was to be
Spartacus, a historical epic about the
Thracian gladiator adapted from
Howard Fast's 1951 novel. Because of the remarkable star-power, Bryna Productions was able to secure a $4,000,000 budget for the production of
Spartacus, which was scheduled to start filming in October 1958, also using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film, immediately following the completion of ''The Devil's Disciple
in the fall of 1958. In late May 1958, Bryna Productions announced that Tony Curtis had been cast for A Most Contagious Game'', and that the film would be co-produced by the actor's film production company,
Curtleigh Productions for Universal-International Pictures.
A Most Contagious Game was to be filmed in late 1958. To promote the event, Bryna Productions commissioned the largest and costliest theater marquee-billboard advertisement ever manufactured at the time; a 261-foot long (22,825 square feet), three-dimensional, electrically articulated spectacular that extended across the entire block, hanging across the façade of both theaters. The billboard, which included 6,000 light bulbs, a 52-foot sail and eleven moving oars, alone cost $105,000 to make, which was included in United Artists' $2,000,000 advertising and publicity campaign budget allocated for the picture during the summer of 1958. The film premiered in London on July 8, 1958, at the
Leicester Square Theatre and was attended by
Prince Philip,
The Vikings became one of the most successful films of 1958; it was one of the biggest money-makers of the year and was bestowed several awards. Douglas and Margulies, through their press relations firm Public Relations Consultants, had told the press that
The Vikings had gone overbudget by more than a million dollars, bringing the total cost of production, publicity and releasing the film to over $6,000,000; Krim corrected the figure to a final cost of $3,400,000, based on an agreed budget of $3,250,000. Douglas remained in England after the London opening of
The Vikings to work on ''The Devil's Disciple
, which began filming on July 28, 1958, with director Alexander Mackendrick at Associated British Elstree Studios and on location at Dyrham Park, Hertfordshire in England. The half-hour episode program was to center around science fiction stories developed by Bradbury, adapted mainly from stories published in his two novels, The Illustrated Man and The Martian Chronicles''. Bradbury was appointed Story Editor of the series and was to write teleplays for a quarter of each season's episodes, with
John Fulton producing the show. MCA tried to sell the show but there were no takers. Veteran film director-producer
Cecil B. DeMille objected to Bryna Productions making a picture on the subject, claiming it had "reserved" the rights to a similar story back in 1938, though DeMille had no current plans to develop the story. Cahan, in turn, hired
Talbot Jennings,
Robert Blees,
George W. George,
Lorraine Williams,
Bob Mitchell,
Fred Freiberger,
DeWitt Bodeen,
William Edmund Barrett and Sidney Morse to write the teleplays. In early November 1958, Bryna Productions announced its forthcoming production plans, which included eleven films and three television series to be made for a total budget of $30,000,000 over the next three-to-four years. In addition to the previously-announced
Spartacus,
Viva, Gringo!,
The Adventures of Simon Bolivar,
Michael Strogoff,
The Brave Cowboy,
The Silent Gun,
A Most Contagious Game and
The Shadow, Bryna Productions added
And the Rock Cried Out,
The Indian Wars and
The Sun at Midnight to its film production schedule, together budgeted at $25,000,000. Reed and Bradbury developed a screenplay together, which was ultimately acquired by Bryna Productions in 1958 with plans to film on location in Mexico.
The Sun at Midnight, an original story and screenplay developed by Lewis, was set in the far north amongst the Eskimos, while
The Indian Wars was a western. In January 1959, Bryna Productions' three-year option on
A Most Contagious Game expired and the filming rights were scooped up by
Dick Clark. Curtis would later option the property for development through his own film production company,
Curtis Enterprises; that version of the film would also never be made.
Spartacus began filming on January 5, 1959, using CinemaScope cameras and Technicolor film, in California with director
Anthony Mann, while Bryna Productions' inaugural television show,
Tales of the Vikings, setup production in black and white at Bavaria Filmkunst in Geiselgasteig, Germany with
Jerome Courtland in the lead; both productions would film for fourteen months. On February 16, 1959, after a full month of location shooting in
Death Valley, California, followed by four days at
Universal Studios, Mann quit the production due to artistic differences; Douglas quickly called Kubrick (who had just been fired as director of
One-Eyed Jacks) to step in as
Spartacus' new director. a figure that doubled to $2,000,000 by mid-April 1957. The amount overspent had increased to $4,000,000 by mid-July, and in August, Douglas and Margulies, through Public Relations Consultants, reported that the company had spent twice its intended budget, bringing the picture up to a cost of $10,000,000 and naming it the most expensive picture ever filmed in Hollywood. The press was however skeptical of these financial claims, since Bryna Productions had already been exposed for exaggerating its production costs as a publicity stunt for
The Vikings the year prior.
Last Train from Gun Hill premiered in early July 1959 at the
Capitol Theatre in New York City. Later that month, Margulies was named executive producer of
Tales of the Vikings and traveled to Germany to oversee the production with directors Cahan, Williams,
Steve Previn and Michael Braun. ''
The Devil's Disciple premiered on August 20, 1959, at dual theaters (like The Vikings'') the Normandie Theatre and the Astor Theatre in New York City, by which time the film's co-production company, Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions had called it quits. By December 1959,
Viva, Gringo! had been abandoned in favor of
Day of the Gun, and Rock Hudson was assigned to the new picture, with
Robert Aldrich tied as director, and
Eugene Frenke and Lewis co-producing.
Negotiations with Columbia Pictures and additional deals with Universal-International Pictures (1959–1961) Bryna Productions had earlier in 1958 negotiated with
Columbia Pictures for a financing and distribution deal of a film titled
Two-Headed Spy, based on a development of an earlier project titled
The Syndicate. In September 1959, Douglas signed on to star and co-produce in
Richard Quine's drama
Strangers When We Meet, financed and to be distributed by Columbia Pictures.
Strangers When We Meet began filming in October 1959, using CinemaScope cameras and
Eastman Color film, in various locations of California. In December 1959, Bryna Productions registered the titles
War Between the Gods,
War of the Gods and
War of Two Gods for upcoming projects. In mid-February 1960, Bryna Productions announced that it would make the film
Montezuma as part of a new Universal-International Pictures one-picture financing and distribution deal.'''' The plot was to be a semi-fictional story, based partly on
Bernal Díaz del Castillo's memoire
The True History of the Conquest of New Spain, revolving around Spanish conquistador
Hernán Cortés taking Aztec Emperor
Moctezuma II prisoner and using the latter to conquest Mexico.
Following Spartacus
, Viva, Gringo!
and The Hot Eye of Heaven
, Montezuma'' was the company's fourth film to secure a deal with Universal-International Pictures. In early March 1960, John Huston was approached to direct Trumbo's
Montezuma script, and the film was to be co-produced by Lewis and Frenke. Douglas was to co-star as Cortés with Rock Hudson playing the role of Moctezuma II, following the pair's chemistry during the filming of
The Hot Eye of Heaven.
Montezuma was planned to be filmed through Brynaprod, The film was already being advertised to the press as a
superpic, targeted for roadshow screenings. In early April 1960, Linn Unkefer was appointed Publicity Director of Public Relations Consultants by Margulies, set to begin the promotion of the forthcoming film
Day of the Gun, while Margulies was tied-up promoting
Spartacus.
Day of the Gun started three months of filming, using Eastman Color film, on location in Mexico on May 11, 1960. As the film was being produced outside the United States, Bryna Productions produced the movie through its Swiss subsidiary, Brynaprod.
Strangers When We Meet premiered on June 29, 1960, at dual theater houses: the
Criterion Theatre in New York City and the Trans-Lux Theatre in Washington D.C. At screenings, the movie was preceded by a half-hour promotional film of the actual building of the house featured prominently in the picture. The film premiere was advertised by a 90-foot high, 88-foot wide billboard-marquee erected above the DeMille Theatre, which utilized over 10,000 light bulbs. By this time, Public Relations Consultants were reporting the film as having cost $12,000,000. The roadshow print then had local premiere screenings in Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, with an additional fifteen premieres in foreign countries. In November 1960, Bryna Production announced it would next be filming Edward Abbey's novel
The Brave Cowboy in mid-1961, under the title
The Last Hero, for a modest budget of under $1,000,000. The picture was to star Douglas and be produced and directed by Lewis; at the time, no financing or distribution deal had been set but Bryna Productions hoped to secure a deal with Universal-International Pictures. Later that month, it was reported that Douglas and Lewis were in negotiations with
20th Century-Fox Film, but the pair instead secured a six-picture financing and distribution deal between Universal-International Pictures and the newly activated Bryna Productions subsidiary Joel Productions, which had been registered in August 1956 and was named after Douglas' second son
Joel Douglas. The six-picture deal retroactively included
Montezuma and
The Last Hero, which had both been discussed with the major studio in 1960. In February 1961, Bryna Productions announced that it would be filming
Montezuma in Hollywood instead of Mexico. While early announcements had given talk to opposition from the Mexican government and competition from Mexican film producers, the reason for switching to an American-made film was motivated by
President John F. Kennedy's speech to buy American to combat the country's gold deficit. The company also announced that month that it had acquired
Philip MacDonald's mystery novel
The List of Adrian Messenger, planned for an early 1962 shooting with
Alec Coppel writing the screenplay. Douglas' eldest, sixteen year old Michael, who aspired to be an actor, spent the summer working on the film doing various jobs to learn the business.
The Hot Eye of Heaven was again retitled, this time to
The Last Sunset, and premiered on June 8, 1961, at dual theaters in New York City: the Palace Theatre and the Trans-Lux 85th Street Theatre. Although it received mixed reviews, the film did well at the box office and Douglas was nominated for a
Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance. After the completion of
The Last Hero, which was retitled
Lonely Are the Brave, Miller directed a new trailer for
Spartacus, the purpose of which was to promote a relaunch of the film, a year after its inaugural release, to smaller film houses. In mid-August 1961, Lewis traveled to Mexico for two weeks of location scouting for
Montezuma, which had been retitled
Savages. Upon his return, Brynaprod announced that
Savages would be filmed entirely in Mexico, on location in
Cuernavaca and at
Churubusco Studios, starting October 1961. Mexican producer
Olallo Rubio was to be tied to the production and help in securing the crew necessary on the forthcoming multi-million dollar epic picture. A month later, in early February 1962, it was announced that Joel Productions had purchased the stage and filming rights to
Ken Kesey's novel ''
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'', less than a week after it had been published. The property was one of Douglas' most treasured acquisition and, on par with
The Shadow, would be the project which he attempted to bring to the screen for the longest period of time. Douglas immediately planned to star in both the stage and screen versions of the novel and first hired
William Peter Blatty, then
Dale Wasserman, to adapt the stage play and screenplay. Also in February 1962, Bryna Productions and
Rod Serling's film production company,
Cayuga Productions, began looking into co-producing a film together. The addition of ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' to the company's schedule brought the total number of active productions to six, which were planned to be filmed between 1962 and 1963.
Lonely Are the Brave premiered at the Majestic Theatre in Huston, Texas on May 24, 1962. The film was a success and the
Motion Picture Sound Editors awarded it a
Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing - Feature Film. Douglas was also nominated for a
BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor and a
Golden Laurel Award for Top Action Performance. In early August 1962, Brynaprod announced that
Nick Adams had been cast as Douglas' co-star in
Montezuma.
The List of Adrian Messenger began shooting with director John Huston at Elstree Studios in England, in early September 1962, followed by select location filming in Europe. It was also announced in September 1962 that Douglas, Lewis, writer
Rod Serling and director
John Frankenheimer had formed a new partnership, under Joel Productions' flagship, and together purchased the filming rights to
Fletcher Knebel and
Charles W. Bailey II's novel
Seven Days in May, days before it was published.
Seven Days in May, to be co-produced through Joel Productions, Cayuga Productions and the newly-formed
John Frankenheimer Productions, marked the first of eight pictures directed by Frankenheimer and produced by Lewis. On December 24, 1962, Peter Vincent Music was dissolved and merged into Bryna Productions. A month later, however, the company revealed that
Fredric March had replaced Tracy, who exited the project after arguments over receiving sole top-billing.
Four-picture and one-play deal with Seven Arts Productions and formation of Eric Productions (1963) In mid-April 1963, it was announced that Joel Productions had secured a four motion picture and one theatrical play financing deal with
Seven Arts Productions, the latter of which would also be responsible for securing the distribution of the films. While Seven Arts Productions had originally started as an independent film production company in the 1950s, it had grown considerably and was then a non-distributing financing unit, funding outside pictures. The pact started with
Seven Days in May, which was to be co-produced by Joel Productions and Frankenheimer's new film production company,
John Frankenheimer Productions, and be distributed by
Paramount Pictures. In early May 1963, Brynaprod announced that
Montezuma would begin filming on location in Mexico, with a budget of $11,000,000, in January 1964. Set to co-star in the film were Douglas as Hernán Cortés,
Yul Brynner (who was to co-produce the picture) as Moctezuma II and
Sophia Loren as
La Malinche; the role of
Cuauhtémoc was to be given to a noted Mexican actor.
The List of Adrian Messenger premiered on May 29, 1963, at dual theaters in New York City: the
Warner Theatre and the Trans-Lux 52nd Street Theatre, followed by a Memorial Day weekend nationwide opening. The film was highly publicized and did well at the box office; it was also nominated for an
Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture. The production team immediately hired
Lewis John Carlino to write the screenplay, with Douglas set to play the lead, and planned for a March 1964 shooting. Although the stage version of ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' was originally to be produced directly through Joel Productions, Douglas and Lewis formed a new Bryna Productions subsidiary, Eric Productions, Incorporated, named after Douglas' fourth and youngest son,
Eric Douglas. The play was co-produced by Seven Arts Productions, which put up the $175,000 bankroll, and Broadway theatrical producer
David Merrick, and was directed by
Alex Segal. ''
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' opened off-Broadway at the
Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut on October 24, 1963, running for three performances until October 26, 1963. It then opened at the
Shubert Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts on October 28, 1963, running for thirteen performances until November 9, 1963. The troupe was originally planning to perform for a week at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, but the engagement was cancelled. The play finally opened on Broadway at the
Cort Theatre on November 13, 1963, where it ran for 82 performances until January 25, 1964. Douglas had anticipated the play to do well and rented a luxurious apartment in Manhattan for his family during its run, but the reviewers were divided; Douglas universally received favorable praise for his performance, but the play itself was generally disliked, which in turn soured the major studios from wanting to invest in a film version. The remaining three pictures as part of the Seven Arts Productions deal would never be made.
Three-picture deal with Paramount Pictures and formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions (1963–1965) In December 1963, Douglas' company was restructured, which resulted with the formation of Douglas and Lewis Productions. Lewis was welcomed as a full partner in the corporation as part of a seven-year agreement with Douglas. The new film production unit was filed as a subsidiary of the newly established umbrella corporation Kirk Douglas Enterprises, which oversaw the former assets of Bryna Productions, Brynaprod, Michael Productions, Joel Productions, Eric Productions, Peter Vincent Music and Public Relations Consultants. Milton Shapiro, formerly an executive for Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Secretary of Bryna Productions, was appointed Treasurer of Kirk Douglas Enterprises. The new company announced a $15,000,000 1964–1965 program for the production of motion pictures, stage plays, television series and other commercial interests, all to be made directly through Douglas and Lewis Productions. Ken Kesey was additionally commissioned to write an original story for screen adaptation.
Seven Days in May was the company's biggest success since
Spartacus four years prior, and the picture went on to win several accolades. It was nominated for two Academy Awards: one for
Edmond O'Brien for
Best Actor in a Supporting Role, another for
Cary Odell and
Edward G. Boyle for
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black and White. Edmond O'Brien won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, while Fredric March was nominated for
Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama, Frankenheimer was nominated for
Best Director and
Jerry Goldsmith was nominated for
Best Original Score. The Writers Guild of America nominated Serling for
Best Written American Drama, while the Golden Laurel Awards nominated Lancaster for
Top Male Dramatic Performance and the film itself for
Top Drama. Frankenheimer received a
Boxoffice Blue Ribbon Award for Best Picture of the Month and a
Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film, and March won a
David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor. In late February 1964, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that a three-picture financing and distribution deal had been signed with Paramount Pictures. Douglas was to star in two of the three properties, the first of which was to be
Seconds, set to go into pre-production in March 1964, once Douglas returned from a European trip promoting
Seven Days in May. While the two other properties as part of the Paramount Pictures deal were not immediately set,
Montezuma was quickly added as the sophomore project, while the third picture was to be determined at a later time. Plans to film
Seconds were first delayed when Douglas accepted to appear in ''
In Harm's Way for director-producer Otto Preminger, and again when he began filming The Heroes of Telemark'' for director Anthony Mann on location in
Rjukan, Norway. Meanwhile, Lewis continued to develop film properties with Frankenheimer. In November 1964, after months of development, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it would be co-producing
Grand Prix with John Frankenheimer Productions.
Grand Prix, a drama about the turbulent lives of racecar drivers, was to be directed by Frankenheimer, using the new
Cinerama single-lens process, and based on an original screenplay by Carlino. while
Grand Prix was to star Douglas, Lancaster and
Shirley MacLaine as a co-production between Douglas and Lewis Productions, John Frankenheimer Productions and Lancaster's
Norlan Productions. In March 1965, Lewis and Frankenheimer began the negotiation for a one-picture financing and distribution deal for
Grand Prix with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It would take until September 1965 for the contracts to be signed. It was also announced in March 1965 that Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions had together purchased the filming rights to
Robert Daley's photo-documentary book
The Cruel Sport. The property was planned to be made into a television pictures series to parallel
Grand Prix; both were to be filmed at the same time, in the same manner as
The Vikings and
Tales of the Vikings had been produced. The deal gave Douglas and Lewis Productions and John Frankenheimer Productions the exclusive filming rights of the races and the use of the tracks during the off-season. By September 1965, when the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract for
Grand Prix was finally concluded, Robert Alan Aurthur had replaced Carlino as screenwriter and Hudson was approached to play one of the leads in the $9,000,000-budgeted film. Douglas had pulled out from co-starring in
Grand Prix in favor of appearing in
The Way West for Harold Hecht, a western project which Hecht-Lancaster Productions had been developing since late 1953, and
The War Wagon for John Wayne's Batjac Productions. In October 1965, Douglas and Lewis Productions announced that it had secured a one-picture financing and distribution deal with
Warner Brothers Pictures for
The Hoods. The Hoods (later released as
The Brotherhood), was an original screenplay by Carlino about the mafia and was to star Douglas. Lewis was to produce the film while
Martin Ritt would direct and co-produce through his film production company, Martin Ritt Productions. The film later opened to American theaters in September 1966 and was well received by the press and public. Hudson was nominated for a
Bambi Award for Best Actor - International while
James Wong Howe was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black and White. In 2015, the United States
National Film Preservation Board deemed
Seconds "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the
Library of Congress'
National Film Registry. In February 1966,
James Garner was signed as the American lead in
Grand Prix, through a deal where his independent film production company,
Cherokee Productions, would co-produce the film. The rest of the cast boasted international stars, including
Toshiro Mifune,
Yves Montand,
Eva Marie Saint and
Brian Bedford. In April 1966, Douglas and Lewis Productions acquired
James William Drought's novel
The Gypsy Moths and hired David Heilweil to write the screenplay, planning for Douglas to star in the picture.
Grand Prix began filming on May 22, 1966, using Cinerama single-lens process cameras and
Metrocolor film, entirely on location in Europe. Meanwhile, in the United States, Douglas arranged a co-production deal between Joel Productions and Malcolm Stuart's film production company, Coldwater Productions, to film
Scalawag on location in Texas during the autumn of 1966 after wrapping up
The Way West. Stuart also planned to move Coldwater Productions' offices to Paramount Studios' lot in order to facilitate work on the picture and be near Douglas and Lewis Productions. The film would still be released with the pair's former company credited and, as planned, Joel Productions filed the copyrights for the picture. Douglas continued to produce through Bryna Productions and Joel Productions while Lewis formed his own independent film production company,
Edward Lewis Productions. Both teams retained offices in Paramount Studios' lot. In mid-December 1966, Douglas restructured the company and announced Lewis' successor; he appointed Eleanor Wolquitt as Administrative Head and Story Editor of Bryna Productions. Wolquitt, who had previously worked for Four Star International, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and 20th Century-Fox Film, was charged with finding and acquiring new story properties for development and assumed her new position on January 15, 1967. Lewis and Frankenheimer went on to co-produce five films together, including
The Fixer,
The Extraordinary Seaman and
The Gypsy Moths, as part of their Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer pact, followed by
I Walk the Line and
The Horsemen, as part of a subsequent pact with Columbia Pictures. Douglas held a press conference at his Beverly Hills home announcing that Bryna Productions' immediate development schedule included three films: the outdoor adventure-swashbuckler
Bar Silver, to be filmed on location in Texas and Mexico, the mafia story
The Hoods, to be filmed on location in New York and Sicily, and the long-anticipated adventure-spectacle
Montezuma, to be filmed partly on location in Mexico and partly in studio in Hollywood. By this time, Warner Brothers Pictures' option on
The Hoods had expired and
Montezuma was no longer backed by Universal Pictures; Bryna Productions still owed Paramount Pictures three films and Douglas hinted that at least one of the three films may go towards it. The picture started filming immediately following Douglas' commitment with ''
A Lovely Way to Die, Typical of Ritt-produced films, the producer formed a single-purpose film production subsidiary named after the film, The Brotherhood Company, to act as copyright holder. In the summer of 1967, Universal Pictures re-released
Spartacus, accompanied by a massive promotional campaign. At the same time, Bryna Productions became affiliated with
The Bronc Rider, which screenwriters
Ronald M. Cohen and
Dennis R. Shryack had adapted from William Crawford's novel of the same name, and were producing through their own film production company, Ronden Productions. Douglas agreed to star in and co-produce the film, which then secured financing and distribution through Paramount Pictures. The hour-long film was to be a co-production with animation studio
Filmation and Douglas would narrate the picture. Later that month, Bryna Productions secured a financing and distribution deal for
Summertree with Columbia Pictures, and scheduled to film the story in early 1969. In mid-December 1968, Douglas signed a starring and co-production, financing and distribution deal for ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' between Bryna Productions and film producer
Joseph E. Levine's Avco-Embassy Pictures, also set to shoot in 1969.
The Brotherhood opened in December 1968 and was generally well-received during previews. Carlino was nominated for a
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Original Screenplay. Douglas delayed the filming of Bryna Productions projects due to the immediate filming schedule on his next two starring pictures:
Elia Kazan's
The Arrangement and
Joseph L. Mankiewicz's
There Was a Crooked Man..., which were filmed between October 1968 and July 1969. In May 1969, Bryna Productions acquired the filming rights to
Pierre Boulle's novel
The Photographer, a thriller about a photographer that becomes involved with a plot to assassinate the president, which had been translated by
Xan Fielding the year prior and published for the English market. That year, Bryna Productions also acquired the filming rights to Jules Verne's novel
The Lighthouse at the End of the World, a survivalist adventure story that takes place on an isolated island. In 1969, Douglas began donating Bryna Productions' archival paperwork, as well as his personal film-related memorabilia, to the
Wisconsin Historical Society's
Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, located on the campus of the
University of Wisconsin–Madison in
Madison, Wisconsin. The donations continued yearly, until 1981, and included such material as working and final scripts, casting notes, actor, crew and studio contracts, salaries, correspondence, advertisements and financial records. Douglas opted to update the company's name when he envisioned welcoming his family into the corporate structure and made his wife Anne Douglas Vice-President and Treasurer of The Bryna Company and Joan Eisleben Secretary of The Bryna Company. By this time, 26 year old
Michael Douglas had worked on Joel Productions'
Lonely Are the Brave, appeared in some uncredited walk-on parts in Eric Productions' stage play ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
, and worked behind the scenes on non-produced Kirk Douglas starrers like Cast a Giant Shadow and The Heroes of Telemark. Michael, who was set to star in Summertree,'' and had already formed his own independent film production company on November 24, 1969,
Bigstick Productions, Limited. 23 year old
Joel Douglas had not participated in his father's film career, but would later take part in several projects as production manager and producer. 15 year old
Peter Douglas had already made cameo appearances in Brynaprod's
The Vikings and Bryna Productions'
Strangers When We Meet, and would go on to head The Bryna Company in the 1980s. 12 year old
Eric Douglas had also made a cameo appearance in
Strangers When We Meet, and would appear in Bryna Productions' upcoming film
A Gunfight, but ultimately took little interest in the family's film production company. Buydens had done several jobs for the company, including heading the casting department, publicity and editing. Though the name The Bryna Company was used for many months prior, it was only officially registered on October 29, 1970, while Kirk Douglas was in Spain filming
The Light at the Edge of the World. The new company was formed by merging Bryna Productions and Joel Productions together into a single entity, by way of renaming Joel Productions to The Bryna Company, and then merging Bryna Productions into The Bryna Company.
Summertree was set to start filming on March 16, 1970, on location in California, co-starring Michael Douglas,
Brenda Vaccaro and
Jack Warden, and with
Anthony Newly directing;
The Light at the Edge of the World was set to start filming on location in Spain in March 1970, co-starring Kirk Douglas,
James Mason,
Virna Lisi and
Alan Bates, and with director
Kevin Billington; while
A Gunfight, a western in which Kirk Douglas agreed to co-produce and co-star with country singer
Johnny Cash for producers
Harold Jack Bloom and Ronald Lubin, would be filmed with director
Lamont Johnson on location in Spain in June 1970, immediately following the wrap-up of
The Light at the Edge of the World.
A Gunfight was to be a co-production of Bryna Productions (which Douglas ultimately filed through Joel Productions), Blooms'
Thoroughbred Productions and Lubin's Harvest Productions.
Summertree began filming as scheduled, using new Synctrol wireless cameras, on location in
Pasadena, California. When the film wrapped up ahead of schedule, Newly was asked to direct three more films for Bryna Productions.
The Light at the Edge of the World and
A Gunfight were, however, both delayed due to financing and the filming order was switched; neither film had yet secured a distribution deal.
A Gunfight was originally to be filmed entirely in Spain, but when the New Mexico-based
Jicarilla Apache Indian tribe put up $2,000,000 to finance the picture, superseding the $175,000 investment the film had garnered from European investors, and outbidding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, United Artists and
Harry Saltzman's Lowndes Productions, the location was moved to Mexico. The Mexican Film Bureau quickly objected to shooting in their country due to the film's duel scene, which, they felt, presented a false image of Mexico in the 1800s, a time when duels were outlawed. The local was then changed from Mexico to a Texas border town. The picture was still filming when Paramount Pictures secured the film's distribution for the United States and Canada in mid-July 1970. The $4,000,000
The Light at the Edge of the World went through several investors and co-producing companies before securing a Spanish financier and the picture finally made it into production. Bryna Productions and Joel Productions were each listed by the press during the making of the film, although Brynaprod, which had been formed to produce films outside the United States, was never attached. In early February 1970,
Alexander Salkind signed on as co-producer through his Swiss independent film production company, Vulcano Film Handels. Salkind and his son
Ilya Salkind would ultimately co-produce
The Light at the Edge of the World through two of their many imprints and subsidiaries; first through Spanish company Barcarola, then through Leicthenstein company Triumfilm Anstalt. Salkind also recycled several of the originally-cast actors for his other film productions, like James Mason in
Kill! and Virna Lisi in
Bluebeard, when
Yul Brynner and
Samantha Eggar were re-cast as co-stars
. In late May 1970,
Angelo Rizzoli's Italian independent film production company, Rizzoli Films, became attached to the project and in September 1970, Bryna Productions was negotiating a European distribution deal with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. In late October 1970, Bryna Productions secured an American distribution deal for
The Light at the Edge of the World with
National General Pictures and filming began, using Panavision cameras and Eastmancolor film, on location in Spain. The locals extended through
Colmenar Viejo in Madrid,
Cap de Creus in
Cadaqués,
Girona, Catalonia,
La Manga del Mar Menor in Murcia,
Jávea in
Alicante,
Valencia and at the
Club Meditérranée. In mid-December 1970, Joel Productions bought out Wasserman's remaining interests in his screenplay of ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'', hoping to film it in the coming year with further development; Wasserman retained the rights to the play and any potential television version. By February 1971, Bryna Productions had negotiated a co-producing and co-starring deal for Douglas to appear in a Euro-spy comedy film adaptation of George Marton and
Tibor Meray's novel
Catch Me a Spy. The screenplay was written by
Ian La Frenais and
Dick Clement and featured French actress
Marlene Jobert and British actors
Trevor Howard and
Tom Courtenay. and was co-produced by Nat Wachsberger's two film production companies, England-based Ludgate Films and France-based Capitole Films, as well as
Pierre Braunberger's French film production company Les Films de la Pléiade.
To Cath a Spy began filming, using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film, on March 22, 1971, on location in London, England and
Oban, Scotland with director
Dick Clement. In May 1971,
Rank Film Distributors picked up the option to distribute
To Catch a Spy in the United Kingdom, while
Films Around the World would do the same for the American market. Once filming was completed on
To Catch a Spy, Douglas and Wachsberger made plans to co-produce at least two more films together, through The Bryna Company, Ludgate Films and Capitole Films; both were to be made in Europe. Bryna Productions had planned to produce ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' after Douglas returned to the United States in May 1971, which was to be shot entirely in Hollywood before the end of the year. Douglas was debating the idea of starring in the film and strongly considered directing it instead, looking to cast
Lee Grant or
Colleen Dewhurst in the role of
Nurse Mildred Ratched. The film was delayed yet again and by October 1971, Kirk had passed the project on to his son Michael, who, in turn, dedicated several more years developing the film through The Bryna Company. Bryna Productions had a record-setting four pictures released within a six-month period in mid-1971, and with the added re-release promotion of Walt Disney Productions'
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, brought Douglas' name up to five films on the screen. had its world premiere on May 27, 1971, at Leows Theater in Albuquerque, New Mexico, while
Summertree opened later that month.
The Light at the Edge of the World held its world premiere on June 16, 1971, at six different theaters in the Washington D.C.-Baltimore, Maryland area. The film earned
Fernando Rey a
Fotogramas de Plata nomination for
Best Spanish Movie Performer.
To Catch a Spy opened in London in October 1971.
Two-picture deal with Paramount Pictures (1972–1975) By 1972, The Bryna Company had set up its office at 141 El Camino Drive in Beverly Hills, California; formerly the headquarters of
Four Star Productions and the
Producers Guild of America. Douglas had anticipated filming four The Bryna Company projects in the United States between mid-1971 and through 1972, but was unable to secure American financing for the projects. In March 1972, The Bryna Company announced that Douglas would make his directorial debut with the $1,250,000 adventure film
Scalawag, due to be filmed on location in Yugoslavia during the summer of 1972. Douglas planned to make the film as a family unit, securing his wife Anne Douglas as producer, his son Peter Douglas as still photographer, his son Eric Douglas as producer's assistant and their
Labrador Retriever, Shaft Douglas, cast as Beau in the picture; Kirk Douglas himself acted, directed, co-produced and co-wrote the picture. Michael Douglas, who was working on ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'', had hoped to join the family on location but remained in California after being cast as co-star of
American Broadcasting Company's new crime television series
The Streets of San Francisco, which began shooting in late March 1972 and went on through most of the year. Filming on
Scalawag started on June 19, 1972 in
Starigrad-Paklenica, Yugoslavia (modern-day Croatia), a small town located between the Adriatic coast and the Velebit mountains. Within weeks of when The Bryna Company cast and crew arrived, the area was inundated by tourists who wanted to be near Hollywood stars. The film starred Kirk Douglas,
Mark Lester,
Lesley-Anne Down,
Neville Brand and
Danny DeVito, one of Michael Douglas' old friends. The film also featured noted comic actor
Mel Blanc, who voiced the drunken parrot. Blanc would shortly after hire
Joel Douglas as an executive for his media company, Blanc Communications Corporation, developing and producing commercials. Joel Douglas would later head The Douglas Company, another Kirk Douglas subsidiary Immediately after filming wrapped on
Scalawag, the Douglas family travelled to London, England for The Bryna Company's co-production of
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The musical adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel had been announced in late April 1972, when producers Douglas, Burt Rosen and
David Winters hired
Lionel Bart to compose new numbers for the production. Kirk Douglas was to act as executive producer, while Michael Douglas and Fantasy Films'
Saul Zaentz would act as producers. Kirk Douglas was hoping to play one of the featured roles in the film, while Michael Douglas scoured to find a lead.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde premiered on
National Broadcasting Company on March 7, 1973, sponsored by
Timex, and was scheduled to be released theatrically in Europe and the United Kingdom afterwards. In May 1973, Kirk Douglas and
Frank Yablans inked a two-picture contract between The Bryna Company and Paramount Pictures. The deal called for the worldwide distribution of
Scalawag as well as a promissory financing of $2,000,000 and the worldwide distribution of The Bryna Company's next motion picture,
Posse. The financing of the secondary film by Paramount Pictures was conditional to The Bryna Company raising half of the budget on their own; Paramount Pictures was only guaranteeing their $1,000,000 investment if The Bryna Company could also put up $1,000,000. The screenplay was written by
Christopher Knopf and
William Roberts from
Larry Cohen's short story
The Train. When announced, the film was to start shooting in January 1974 in the United States with Kirk Douglas and
Bruce Dern co-starring. Ken Kesey was hired to re-write the screenplay from his own novel, while
Hal Ashby was secured to direct the film; By September 1973, screenplay disputes and the author's refusal to submit his final script and sign the contract forced the filming to be pushed back to January 1974; screenwriter
Lawrence Hauben was hired to rewrite the script and
Miloš Forman came on as director.
Scalawag premiered on October 16, 1973, in six key cities: Chicago, Illinois; Louisville, Kentucky; Albany, New York; Worcester, Massachusetts; Waterloo, Iowa; and Miami, Florida. In March 1974, Peter Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna International, a photographic service company.'''''' The Bryna Company's two 1974 productions, ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
and Posse'', were both pushed back from their planned early 1974 filming dates. Michael Douglas' production of ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
was first pushed back to mid-March 1974, then to May 1974, and then again to September 1974. The reason was stated to be due to scheduling conflicts. By September 1974, the film had again been pushed back to January 1975. In July 1974, Phil Feldman was appointed executive producer of Posse
and Howie Pine was hired as production manager for the shooting. Posse'' was filmed between September 23 and November 9, 1974, using Panavision cameras with Technicolor film, on location at
Old Tucson Studios, as well as in
Florence and
Sabino Canyon, Arizona. The film also featured
Bo Hopkins,
James Stacy and
Luke Askew. ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
was finally filmed from January to March 1975 at Oregon State Hospital, with Joel Douglas serving as unit production manager. While the film was still shooting, Michael Douglas secured a one-picture distribution deal with United Artists. Posse'' opened to theaters in mid-May 1975, accompanied by Kirk Douglas doing a promotional tour to publicize the film. The picture's opening credit sequence announced that the film was a The Bryna Company production, but its copyrights were filled through Zeeuwse Maatschappij Naamloze Vennootschap, one of Paramount Pictures' many Curaçao-based subsidiaries under executive production manager Lindsley Parsons Jr. Kirk Douglas was nominated for a Golden Berlin Bear award at
Berlin International Film Festival for his performance in
Posse. In mid-September 1975, Paramount Pictures re-released
Scalawag under the title ''Jamie's Treasure Hunt.'' The film was screened in theaters as part of weekend matinee events for families and children, and the studio's new promotional campaign shifted the focus of the picture from Douglas's Peg Leg character to Mark Lester's Jamie character. In mid-October 1975, The Bryna Company announced that it would make a two-hour television special depicting the life and career of actor
John Barrymore.
Barrymore was to be financed and presented by National Broadcasting Company and
Sidney Michaels was hired to write the teleplay. Once released, neither the film's credits nor its publicity featured any mention of The Bryna Company, nor of Bigstick Productions, though the film had been developed and co-produced by both entities (in partnership with Fantasy Films). Michael Douglas had been striving to detach himself from the "Kirk Douglas' son" tag which had been affixed to him in the 1960s, and wanted to establish his own identity. and wanting to establish himself as a producer outside of his father's company, the film's copyrights were instead filed through Curaçao-based imprint Naamloze Vennootschap Zwaluw, a corporation registered by Michael Douglas on December 6, 1974. ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' was a huge critical and box office success, earning a slew of awards and nominations across the globe. The film won an
Academy Award for Best Picture, Jack Nicholson won an
Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role,
Louise Fletcher won an
Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, Milos Forman won an
Academy Award for Best Director, Lawrence Hauben and
Bo Goldman won
Academy Awards for Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material,
Brad Dourif was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role,
Haskell Wexler and
Bill Butler were nominated for
Academy Awards for Best Cinematography,
Richard Chew,
Lynzee Klingman and
Sheldon Kahn were nominated for
Academy Awards for Best Editing, and
Jack Nitzsche was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Music, Original Dramatic Score. The film won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama, Jack Nicholson won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama, Louise Fletcher won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama, Brad Dourif won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture - Male, Milos Forman won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture and Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won
Golden Globe Awards for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture. The film won a
BAFTA Award for Best Film, Jack Nicholson won a
BAFTA Award for Best Actor, Louise Fletcher won a
BAFTA Award for Best Actress, Brad Dourif won a
BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor, Milos Forman won a
BAFTA Award for Best Direction, Richard Chew, Lynzee Klingman and Sheldon Kahn won
BAFTA Awards for Best Film Editing, Haskell Wexler, Bill Butler and William A. Fraker were nominated for
BAFTA Awards for Best Cinematography, Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman were nominated for
BAFTA Awards for Best Screenplay, Mary McGlone,
Robert R. Rutledge, Veronica Selver,
Larry Jost and
Mark Berger were nominated for
BAFTA Awards for Best Sound Track and Jack Nitzsche was nominated for
BAFTA's Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music. Jack Nitzsche was nominated for a
Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special. Milos Forman won a
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures, while assistant directors Irby Smith and William Saint John and unit production manager Joel Douglas were given plaques by the same organization. Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman won
Writers Guild of America Awards for Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium. The film won a
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Picture, a
People's Choice Award for Favorite Motion Picture, and a
National Board of Review: Top Ten Films. Jack Nicholson won a
National Board of Review Award for Best Actor, a
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor and a
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor, while Louise Fletcher was nominated for a
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress; Milos Forman won a Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director; Richard Chew, Sheldon Kahn and Lynzee Klingman were nominated for
Eddie Awards for Best Edited Feature Film. The film won a
Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film and a
Golden Screen Award, and was nominated for a
César Award for Best Foreign Film and a
Turkish Film Critics Association Award for Best Foreign Film. Milos Forman won a
Reader's Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film Director, a
David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Director, and a Silver Ribbon Award for Best Foreign Director. Jack Nicholson won a
Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actor and
David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actor. In 1993, the United States
National Film Preservation Board deemed ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the
Library of Congress'
National Film Registry.
Michael and Peter Douglas take over (1976–1982) On January 9, 1976, Brynaprod was surrendered and on June 24, 1976, Michael Productions was surrendered; their remaining interests were merged into The Bryna Company. In late July 1976, The Bryna Company announced that it would make
Ray Bradbury's
Something Wicked This Way Comes, a fantasy story about two boys in a small town who encounter strange happenings at a travelling carnival. The project was headed by Peter Douglas, who hired Bradbury to adapt his novel into a screenplay and secured a $6,000,000 financing and distribution deal with Paramount Pictures.
Something Wicked This Way Comes was to be co-produced by
Hank Moonjean and filming was to start on October 1, 1976, on location in Northern California and the Midwest under the direction of
Jack Clayton. Kirk Douglas was hoping to play the role of Charles Halloway, the father in the story. The project, like ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'', would stall for several years before being filmed. Filming was pushed back to January 1, 1977, then to March 1, 1977. In mid-September 1976, Kirk Douglas revealed plans to return to the stage and star in
Howard Fast's
Thomas Paine biographical one-man show
Citizen Tom Paine. The play was to be a co-production between The Bryna Company and producers
Don Gregory and Mike Merrick's Dome Productions.
Charles Nelson Reilly was originally hired to direct the show but he was replaced by
Arvin Brown. In early November 1976, The Bryna Company announced that Peter Douglas would produce
The Yellow Jersey, a film about the French
Tour de France bicycle race. Peter Douglas offered the lead parts to Bruce Dern and
Charlotte Rampling. A month later, Kirk Douglas held a press conference to announce that he would retire from producing and directing in order to focus solely on acting. Kirk Douglas was to remain President of The Bryna Company, but all of the day-to-day activities, including the development and production of new pictures, was passed on to his sons Michael and Peter, who would co-head the company. In June 1977, The Bryna Company announced that
Something Wicked This Way Comes would be filmed at
Bavaria Studios in Munich, Germany, as a co-production between Geria Film Productions and
Bavaria Film. The $4,000,000-budgeted film was to start shooting in the fall of 1977 and distribution had already been secured with
20th Century-Fox Film for the United States and Canada and CS Filmverleih in Germany. Michael opted to leave his father's company in order to further his independence and individual identity; The Stone Group (1984–1986), Douglas/Reuther Productions (1994–1997), and
Further Films (1997–present); as well as the magazine
L.A. Style, the music publishing company, Third Stone Music (1989–1994), and the record label Third Stone Records (1990–1994). On December 14, 1978, Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Cameron Productions, Incorporated, named after his first grandson,
Cameron Douglas; the company was registered the day after his birth.
The Final Countdown went through a team of writers, including
Thomas Hunter, Peter Powell,
David Ambrose and
Gerry Davis and was turned down by every major Hollywood film studio. In early May 1979, The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a $7,000,000 financing deal for
The Final Countdown with
Arthur Guinness Son and Company Limited's film-financing subsidiary, Film Finance Group. The picture was to be co-produced by Film Finance Group's president, Richard Rogers St. Johns, through its film production division, Aspen Productions. Filming began, using Panavision cameras and Technicolor film with Dolby Stereophonic sound, on May 23, 1979, on location aboard the
U.S.S. Nimitz in Norfolk, Virginia, followed by Miami, Florida and Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The film co-starred Kirk Douglas,
Martin Sheen,
James Farentino and
Katharine Ross and was directed by
Don Taylor. The film won a
Golden Screen Award and was nominated for a
Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film; Kirk Douglas was also nominated for a
Saturn Award for Best Actor. On December 13, 1980, Kirk Douglas formed The Bryna Company subsidiary Bryna Industries, Incorporated, a holding corporation based in Texas, naming Anne Douglas as Secretary. In July 1981, The Bryna Company announced that it had secured a $13,500,000 financing, co-producing and distribution deal for
Something Wicked This Way Comes with
Walt Disney Productions and
Buena Vista. The Disney company had originally approach Peter Douglas with offers to buy out the property but The Bryna Company was so interested in producing the picture that it held out until a co-production deal could be set. The film starred
Jason Robards,
Diane Ladd and
Jonathan Pryce and was directed by Jack Clayton. Part of the lengthy development of the Vincent Pictures-Universal Pictures deal included securing the principal cast and crew to produce any potential sequels, which later developed as
Fletch Lives. Buydens revealed that The Bryna Company would increase its film production schedule and had acquired the filming rights to two new novels: Frank Rooney's
Shadow of God, a religious thriller about a nun being stalked by a fanatic priest; and
Mary Higgins Clark's
A Cry in the Night, a suspense mystery about a single mother who falls in love and marries an unstable man. 20 years later, Michael Douglas wound up producing
It Runs in the Family through his company Further Films; the movie co-starred Kirk, Michael, Cameron (Michael's son) and Diana Douglas (Kirk's first wife and Michael's mother), and was co-produced by Michael and Joel.
Something Wicked This Way Comes opened on April 29, 1983. While it was generally well received by critics, the film failed to recoup its increased $20,000,000 budget at the box office; it has since become a cult film. At the
Banff Television Festival, held at the
Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity on August 15, 1983, Canadian producer
Harold Greenberg announced that he would be co-producing the $4,200,000 picture through his film production company
Astral Film Productions. The
Stanley Mann script had been in development for seven years and was co-financed by
HBO Premiere Films and the Alberta Motion Picture Development Corporation. Filming began on August 16, 1983, with six weeks on location at
Fort Edmonton, Alberta, followed by another week in
Drumheller, Alberta, with director
Steven Hilliard Stern. The producers originally announced
Draw! as a theatrical film, with plans for
Home Box Office to host the United States television premiere afterwards. The film earned several nominations at the Canadian Genie Awards ceremony in 1985:
Linda Sorensen won a
Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role,
Laszlo George was nominated for
Genie Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography, Bill Brodie was nominated for a
Genie Award for Best Achievement in Art Direction, Jim Hopkins was nominated for a
Genie Award for Best Achievement in Sound Editing, and Joe Grimaldi, Dino Pigat, Richard Lightstone and Austin Grimaldi were nominated for
Genie Awards for Best Achievement in Overall Sound. Ron Wisman was also nominated for a
CableACE Award for Film Editing. Following the success of Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas' action-adventure film production
Romancing the Stone in the spring of 1984, the Douglases attempted to find an action-packed violence film to co-star Kirk Douglas and Michael Douglas. The film was to be a co-production between Kirk Douglas, Michael Douglas and Joel Douglas, with plans for filming in 1985, but the right vehicle never came up. Kirk Douglas planned to play the lead in the film. The film co-starred Kirk Douglas,
Elizabeth Montgomery,
Dorothy McGuire,
Pat Morita and
Ray Walston and was co-produced by
Bill Finnegan and Sheldon Pinchuk.
Lawsuits and mergers (1985–1989) In mid-June 1985, The Bryna Company was involved in a lawsuit filed by the federal government and the
United States Navy, seeking $1,300,000 of unpaid military flying time during the filming of
The Final Countdown. The suit claimed that The Bryna Company and Aspen Productions had only been charged for 32.5 hours of aircraft flying time, while the Navy had in fact provided 167 hours of flying time.
Amos premiered on September 29, 1985, broadcast on Columbia Broadcasting System and was a success. The film was co-produced by
Joe Wizan, Richard Hashimoto and
Jana Sue Memel through The Bryna Company and
Touchstone Pictures. In addition to co-stars Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster, the film also featured
Adolph Cesar,
Charles Durning,
Alexis Smith,
Dana Carvey and
Darlanne Fluegel. On March 6, 1986, Cesar suffered a fatal heart attack on the set, before any of his scenes were shot; he was replaced by Eli Wallach.
Tough Guys had its premiere at ShowEast, a movie theater owners' convention held in Atlantic City, New Jersey, between September 9–11, 1986. It then had local premieres at the
Miami Film Festival on September 22, 1986, and the
Boston Film and Video Festival on September 24, 1986, before opening nationwide to theaters on October 3, 1986. Composer
Burt Bacharach, lyricist
Carole Bayer Sager and performer
Kenny Rogers were nominated for a
Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song - Motion Picture for the film's opening theme song "They Don't Make Them Like They Used to"; Rogers titled his
1986 album after the song. In late December 1986, Kirk Douglas announced that he wished to retire from producing films. On May 19, 1987, Columbia Broadcasting System executives announced that their 1987–88 season programming would include
Conquistador, an eight-hour mini-series about Hernán Cortés' 1519 conquest of Moctezuma II's Aztec Empire, currently in pre-production by Michael Douglas and
Michael Phillips' Mercury/Douglas Films. Neither the television series, nor the feature film, were ever produced. By 1987, Peter Douglas was exclusively working through his own company, Vincent Pictures, and hired Kirk Douglas to co-star with Jason Robards in a remake of
Inherit the Wind. In late August 1987, The Bryna Company filled a $17,800,000 breach of contract lawsuit against the
Unisys Corporation and the
Sperry Corporation, which had employed Kirk Douglas' services as corporate spokesman two years prior. The Sperry Corporation had secured the services of Kirk Douglas, through The Bryna Company, for a two-year exclusive contract, beginning on October 14, 1985; the contract had a renewable three-year extension option. The contract also stipulated that Kirk Douglas could only be let go of his position in the event of a merger in which the Sperry line of products would be discontinued. He also produced and appeared in the short film
Sperry Goes Hollywood, filmed during the making of
Tough Guys and co-produced by The Bryna Company. On September 16, 1986,
Burroughs Corporation acquired the Sperry Corporation and renamed the new entity the Unisys Corporation, but failed to discontinue the Sperry line of computer products. The premise would have Douglas in a similar role to his 1949 film
Champion, but in an older character who finds Danza as a new contender. On September 8, 1988, the Texas-based The Bryna Company was merged into the California-based TBC Merger; the California company was simultaneously renamed The Bryna Company, resuming the company's operations in California after three years. The event was attended by
Motion Picture Association of America President
Jack Valenti, director
John Frankenheimer, actor
Bo Hopkins, actress
Dorothy McGuire and Kirk Douglas himself, all of whom participated in question-and-answer sessions between screenings. == Contracted actors ==