'', according to theater owners, ranked 64th nationally in 1925, 1st in 1926, 34th in 1927, and 71st in 1928. A large majority of FBO/Robertson-Cole pictures, produced during the silent era and the transitional period of the conversion to sound cinema, are considered to be
lost films, with no copies known to exist. Much of FBO's cinematic legacy thus endures only in still images, other publicity materials, and written accounts. All told, just 30 percent of American silent feature films have been preserved (25 percent more or less complete, plus another 5 percent in incomplete versions). The overall survival rate of features produced by R-C/FBO is similar: of 449 movies identified by the
National Film Preservation Board as R-C/FBO productions, 125 are known to survive in some form—28 percent, though with only two (0.4 percent) in a legacy studio archive. The losses, moreover, were not equally distributed, and one of FBO's most successful franchises has disappeared entirely: not even a fragmentary print of any of the six Gene Stratton-Porter films put out by the studio has been found. Due to its zeal for cost cutting, FBO was reputed to be especially meticulous in the execution of a practice then common among distributors: rounding up its release prints at the end of a picture's run and melting them down to recover the
silver in the
film emulsion. As for FBO's biggest star, among America's biggest at the time, of the twenty films Fred Thomson made for the studio, for years just a single one was known to remain intact in a US archive:
Thundering Hoofs. About three reels' worth of the five-reel
Galloping Gallagher (1924) were also known to survive. In 1982, film scholar Bruce Firestone wrote that "the disappearance, through loss or destruction, of virtually all of his films [has] turned Thomson into one of the least-known cowboys in the history of American movies." In the most sweeping act of destruction, Kennedy associates scrapped more than one hundred cans of the actor's movies—over a ton's worth of film—during the RKO transition. According to the Library of Congress's American Silent Feature Film Database, to the tiny remaining corpus of Thomson's work for FBO may now be added complete prints of
The Dangerous Coward (1924) and
A Regular Scout (1926) at the
George Eastman House. Seven more Thomson features are held by archives abroad.
Headliners and celebrity casting , star of fourteen FBO releases between 1924 and 1926
Sessue Hayakawa, the first star of any magnitude associated with the Robertson-Cole brand, made a total of twenty films released by the studio, from
A Heart in Pawn in March 1919 to
The Vermilion Pencil in March 1922. Hayakawa was regarded as one of the finest screen performers of his time, but as anti-Japanese sentiment grew on the West Coast, R-C terminated its relationship with the
Chiba-born actor. Two months after
The Vermilion Pencil opened, he sued the studio for breach of contract.
Pauline Frederick, celebrated for her performance in the September 1920
Goldwyn Pictures tear-jerker
Madame X, immediately cashed in with a top-tier contract from Robertson-Cole, for whom she starred in more than half a dozen melodramas, beginning with
A Slave of Vanity just two months later. She was said to have been paid an extravagant $7,000 or $7,500 a week under her R-C deal. Early in her career,
ZaSu Pitts acted in six R-C releases—
Better Times (1919) gave Pitts her first ever top billing—from the
Brentwood Film Corporation, founded by a group of doctors. In the years after the studio's rebranding,
Evelyn Brent and
Richard Talmadge were FBO's most prominent non-Western headliners. Brent made a specialty of melodramatic pictures with a crime angle, often billed as "crook melodramas"—in
Midnight Molly (1925), she played an ambitious politician's faithless wife and her look-alike, a high-end cat burglar. Talmadge, a stunt designer and double for major stars including
Douglas Fairbanks and
Harold Lloyd, took the lead in action pictures for FBO—"stunt dramas" such as
Stepping Lively (1924) and
Tearing Through (1925). He appeared in eighteen FBO releases, more than half of them produced by his own company. Talmadge's last film for the studio was released in June 1926. By August, Brent was on her way to starring roles at Paramount. In October, Talmadge was judged to have been FBO's biggest non-Western draw of the year; in the first annual
Exhibitors Herald theater owners' poll of top box office names, he placed thirtieth out of sixty. Beginning in late 1924,
Maurice "Lefty" Flynn starred in over a dozen action-filled "comedy dramas" released by FBO, all produced and directed by
Harry Garson. Signing a new contract in 1925, the former
Yale halfback demonstrated his range by playing a "fast riding motorcycle copper" in a May release, a "battling policeman" in September, and Breckenrdige Gamble, a bored millionaire turned international secret agent, in October.
Ralph Lewis, a prolific
character actor who had appeared in several
D. W. Griffith films, including
The Birth of a Nation and
Intolerance, was top billed in at least eight FBO releases between 1922 and 1928.
George O'Hara headlined multiple features as well as short series.
Warner Baxter and
Joe E. Brown were among the other popular FBO players.
Anna Q. Nilsson starred in two of the studio's more notable productions, as did
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Pauline Frederick returned in 1926 for the title role in
Her Honor, the Governor. When Evelyn Brent departed, Kennedy signed
Viola Dana to a six-picture deal in hopes of filling the void. In FBO's waning months, former
Fox star
Olive Borden played the lead in three films.
Boris Karloff appeared in six FBO pictures between 1925 and 1927; in two of his earliest major roles, he performed opposite Brent in the action-oriented
Forbidden Cargo and
Lady Robinhood (both 1925). In its pre-Kennedy years, the studio did not hesitate to take advantage of scandal sheet–worthy events. After the death of celebrated actor
Wallace Reid, brought on by morphine addiction, his widow,
Dorothy Davenport, signed on as producer and star of a cinematic examination of the sins of substance abuse:
Human Wreckage, released by FBO in June 1923, five months after Reid's death, in which Davenport (billed as Mrs. Wallace Reid) plays the wife of a noble attorney turned dope fiend. A few months later, the studio featured a celebrity of a very different sort: magician
Harry Houdini, directing and starring in his last feature film,
Haldane of the Secret Service. In November 1924, FBO put out Davenport's next "social problem" picture,
Broken Laws. Here Davenport (again billed as Mrs. Wallace Reid) plays the overindulgent mother of an unruly boy destined, as a reckless teen, to commit a terrible misdeed. According to a trade journal—perhaps echoing publicity copy—the tale was "a reminder that the foundation of all law and order lies in that greatest of American institutions—the home." When the biggest movie star in the world,
Rudolph Valentino, split from his wife,
Natacha Rambova, she was swiftly enlisted by the studio to costar with Clive Brook in the sensitively titled
When Love Grows Cold (1926). Under Kennedy's control, the studio focused on marketing its roster of films as suitable for the "average American" and the entire family: "We can't make pictures and label them 'For Children,' or 'For Women' or 'For Stout People' or 'For Thin Ones.' We must make pictures that have appeal to all." Though Kennedy ended the scandal-sheet specials, FBO still found occasion for celebrity casting:
One Minute to Play (1926), directed by
Sam Wood, marked the film debut of football great
"Red" Grange. Tennis stars
Suzanne Lenglen and
Mary Browne were signed for a series of "Racquet Girls" pictures that never made it to screen.
Western and canine stars , the most prolific of FBO's many Western stars, headlined twenty-nine movies for the studio, from ''
Let's Go, Gallagher (1925) to The Pride of Pawnee'' (1929). Central to the FBO identity were Westerns and the studio's major cowboy star,
Fred Thomson. In both 1926 and 1927, he ranked number two among all male performers in the
Exhibitors Herald poll, right behind
Tom Mix. When one of Thomson's "oaters",
The Two-Gun Man (1926), made it to New York's
Warners' Theatre, the growing studio's
Times Square showcase, it demonstrated that a Western, even one without Mix, could draw audiences to a
first-run house in the most cosmopolitan of markets. Along with trusty Silver King, Thomson brought in millions to FBO, and Kennedy personally made almost half a million dollars from the "super western" loanout to Paramount. But when Kennedy learned early in 1928 that Mix, whose decade-old Fox contract was expiring, might become available, he used his control of Fred Thomson Productions, the supposed
tax shelter, to freeze Thomson out of motion pictures entirely. That December, Thomson died—the immediate cause of death was
tetanus; his widow, screenwriter
Frances Marion, said that he had lost his will to live. Among Western stars under long-term contract, FBO's next most important—though by a distance—was
Tom Tyler, who finished twenty-third among men in the 1927 exhibitors' poll. Born Vincent Markowski, he had been a weightlifter and
bit actor before his transformation into a cowboy headliner. According to a hyperbolic June 1927 report in
Moving Picture World: "With Tom Tyler rapidly taking the place recently vacated by Fred Thomson [for the Paramount sojourn from which he would never return], F.B.O.'s program of western pictures is taking a place second to none in the industry. Tyler has made rapid strides during his two years with F.B.O. and with his horse 'Flash' and dog, 'Beans,' has become one of the leading favorites on the screen." Tyler's appeal was also enhanced by his human costars—
Frankie Darro (tied for fifty-fourth in the poll) as his young sidekick on over two dozen occasions and starlets such as
Doris Hill,
Nora Lane,
Sharon Lynn, and in
Born to Battle (1926), a twenty-five-year-old
Jean Arthur. promote the signing of Mix's multipicture contract with FBO. The actor's plans to film in the
Argentine Pampas were ultimately scrapped. As 1928 began, Tyler was the most popular actor actually working at FBO, but Kennedy wanted the big gun. He bided his time as Tom Mix toured the Orpheum vaudeville theaters with a live show—boosting Kennedy's new exhibition interests—and legal machinations ensured Thomson's exile. Finally, Mix was signed to a six-film deal and began shooting in July. He ultimately made five pictures for the studio (two released after it had ceased to exist), and stayed near the top of the exhibitors' poll, his 112 votes good enough for second among the men, if well behind the 171 of
MGM's
Lon Chaney (no other FBO regular made it into even double digits). But the spread of the talkies was swiftly making the silent sagebrush superstar less of a sure thing.
Variety derided Mix's last FBO film,
The Big Diamond Robbery, released in May 1929, as "cowboy burlesque". His brief tenure at the studio was marked by salary grievances—he was now making only $10,000 a week—and dismay at FBO's inferior production values, from its worndown sets to the cut-rate film stock it used. Subsequently asked about his experience working with Kennedy, Mix described him as a "tight-assed, money-crazy son-of-a-bitch." In addition to these major draws, there was also
Harry Carey; a top star for Universal in the second half of the 1910s, he was still a bankable name when he made several FBO Westerns in 1922–23. The other cowboy stars of FBO included
Bob Custer (tied for thirty-seventh in the 1927 poll),
Bob Steele (tied for sixty-sixth with, among others, Silver King), and teenager
Buzz Barton. One of the studio's most reliable Western headliners was a dog: Ranger (all alone at sixty-fifth among male performers). Beans had featured roles in a number of Tom Tyler/Frankie Darro Westerns. The fabled
Strongheart starred in FBO's
Jack London adaptation
White Fang (1925). For a small role in the melodrama
My Dad (1922), a three-year-old
Alsatian who would become one of the greatest canine stars of all time was singled out by the
New York Daily News: "
Rin-Tin-Tin...runs off with most of the histrionic honors. The dog stages one of the most realistic and blood curdling fights we have seen recently."
Notable films and filmmakers in FBO's
Tarzan and the Golden Lion (1927), which brought the famous character back to the big screen for the first time in over five years.
Tarzan would remain a Hollywood fixture for the next four decades. Kennedy had no illusions about his studio's place in the realm of cinematic art. A journalist once complimented him on FBO's recent output: "You have had some good pictures this year." Kennedy jocularly inquired, "What the hell
were they?" From the pre-Kennedy era, RKO historian Betty Lasky identifies the Dorothy Davenport "problem" picture
Broken Laws (1924), directed by
Roy William Neill, as a rare "unforgettable picture of the higher caliber" put out by FBO. Reviews at the time called it "absorbing" and "vastly entertaining". Among the studio's action movies, one standout production was a 1927
Tarzan picture. Author
Edgar Rice Burroughs declared, "If you want to see the personification of Tarzan of the Apes as I visualize him, see the film
Tarzan and the Golden Lion with Mr.
James Pierce." The
Film Daily reviewer wrote that the movie "has a rather new order of thrills and atmosphere that might prove distinctly attractive." In Hollywood, he would make such hits as
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) and
Casablanca (1942) under the name
Michael Curtiz.
Una Nueva y gloriosa nación (1928), the most successful film in the history of Argentine silent cinema, was shot in Hollywood and distributed in the United States by FBO as
The Charge of the Gauchos. One of its two
cinematographers was
Nicholas Musuraca, who established his career at Film Booking Offices. With RKO, Musuraca would become one of Hollywood's most respected cinematographers. 's fourth film for FBO,
American Manners (1924), was directed by
James W. Horne, who would go on to work with
Buster Keaton and
Laurel and Hardy. At the age of twenty-five,
King Vidor insisted on casting then little-known ZaSu Pitts as the lead in
Better Times; he directed two more of her R-C/Brentwood films, both starring his wife,
Florence Vidor.
Louis J. Gasnier, responsible for the blockbuster 1914 serial
The Perils of Pauline, directed several films for the company—from
Good Women (1921) to
The Call of Home (1922)—during its Robertson-Cole days. The best-known director to work regularly under the FBO brand was
Ralph Ince, younger brother of celebrated filmmaker
Thomas H. Ince. Pulling double duty on occasion, Ralph Ince starred in five of the sixteen films he made for the studio between 1925 and 1928. One production in which he served in both capacities was particularly well received:
Chicago After Midnight (1928) was described by the
New York Times as an "unusually well-acted and adroitly directed underworld story". After
The Mistress of Shenstone, Henry King directed two more R-C films with Pauline Frederick, also in 1921:
Salvage and
The Sting of the Lash.
Tod Browning directed two Gothic Pictures specials in 1924 starring Evelyn Brent:
The Dangerous Flirt and
Silk Stocking Sal. In 1921 and 1922 alone,
William Seiter directed eight R-C/FBO releases, some produced directly for the studio, others independently; in 1924 he made two additional FBO releases for Palmer Photoplay, both featuring
Madge Bellamy. Between 1922 and 1926,
Emory Johnson produced and directed eight films for FBO. Historian
William K. Everson has pointed to Seiter and Johnson as two of the overlooked directorial talents of the silent era. Author and naturalist
Gene Stratton-Porter set up her own production company to film screen adaptations of her work, a perhaps unprecedented venture for a writer. FBO handled four releases from Gene Stratton-Porter Productions—
A Girl of the Limberlost (1924),
The Keeper of the Bees (1925),
Laddie (1926), and
The Magic Garden (1927)—and was itself producer of record for
The Harvester (1927) and
Freckles (1928). All six were directed by Stratton-Porter's son-in-law,
James Leo Meehan. All six were hits. All are considered lost. In-house, Frances Marion, who would win two writing
Oscars in the 1930s, created the stories for seven of the FBO pictures starring her husband, Fred Thomson—for these brawny cowboy tales, such as ''
Ridin' the Wind (1925) and The Tough Guy'' (1926), she used the pseudonym Frank M. Clifton (the "patronymic" was Thomson's middle name).
Editor Pandro S. Berman, son of a major FBO stockholder, cut his first film for the studio at the age of twenty-one; in the 1930s, he would earn renown as an RKO producer and production chief. Famed RKO
costume designer Walter Plunkett was also an FBO graduate.
Short subjects and animation Both
George O'Hara's and
Alberta Vaughn's initial short series for FBO—each directed by
Malcolm St. Clair—were hits, so in the second half of 1924 the studio made a bid at teaming them in the twelve-part
The Go-Getters, spoofing popular films and classic stories with chapters such
A Kick for Cinderella. It was so successful that they were reunited the next year for a similar twelve-parter,
The Pacemakers, with episodes such as
Merton of the Goofies (
Merton of the Movies) and
Madam Sans Gin (
Madame Sans-Gêne). Vaughn had solo top billing in the comedic series
The Adventures of Mazie (1925–26) and the baseball-themed serial
Fighting Hearts (1926). In May 1928, with the Keith-Albee-Orpheum theater chain under his control, Joseph Kennedy announced a forthcoming slate with not only more than the usual number of (relatively) high-budget films but a "Mammoth Program of Short Features". No less than four different series came from independent producer
Larry Darmour, including the second twelve chapters of
Mickey McGuire, starring seven-year-old
Mickey Rooney.
Amedee Van Beuren provided
Walter Futter's
Curiosities, a ''
Ripley's''-inspired "Movie Side Show" of "freaks and queer odds and ends from all corners of the world". Of particular historical interest are two independently produced series of
slapstick comedies released by the studio: Between 1924 and 1927,
Joe Rock provided FBO with a substantial annual slate of
two-reelers (twenty-six per year as of their last contract); twelve of those from 1924–25 starred
Stan Laurel, before his famous partnership with
Oliver Hardy.
West of Hot Dog (1924), according to historian Simon Louvish, contains "one of [Laurel]'s finest gags," involving a level of cinematic technique that bears comparison to
Buster Keaton's classic
Sherlock Jr. In 1926–27, the company released more than a dozen shorts by innovative comedian/animator
Charles Bowers, whose work imaginatively mixed live action and three-dimensional model animation. FBO also distributed the output of significant creators of purely animated films. Between 1924 and 1926, FBO released the work of
John Randolph Bray's cartoon studio, including the
Dinky Doodle series created by
Walter Lantz. In 1925–26, the studio put out twenty-six cartoons by animator
William Nolan based on
George Herriman's now famed
Krazy Kat newspaper comic strip, licensed by the wife-husband distribution team of
Margaret J. Winkler and
Charles Mintz. While the Winkler–Mintz operation took
Krazy Kat away from FBO the following season for a Paramount contract, they struck a deal with the studio for another series, one that, like Bowers's shorts, involved both animation and a live performer: the
Alice Comedies, of which FBO would release over two dozen, were created by two young animators,
Ub Iwerks and
Walt Disney. ==Notes==