Originally also known as Reeves Sound Laboratory, following the war, in 1946, Reeves founded the Reeves Soundcraft Corporation (later known as Reeves Sound Services) and directed the operation of a number of companies manufacturing a variety of products including recording tape and film, record discs, wire cable, television tubes and cameras and precision recording equipment. Reeves introduced magnetic recording to the film industry in 1948. Utilizing
separate magnetic film, Reeves created a seven-channel sound system for Cinerama, the company of which he was president by 1952. That same year, Cinerama released its first picture,
This is Cinerama. Reeves' sound system was the first discrete stereophonic sound system used in post-war commercial application. (Walt Disney had originally released
Fantasia (1940) in three-track optical sound, but the Disney "Fantasound" system was not used for any other film afterwards.) Reeves Soundcraft Corporation won an Academy Award in 1953 for their development of a process of applying stripes of magnetic oxide to motion picture film for sound recording and reproduction. Reeves died at age 80 of a heart attack in
Tuxedo Park, New York. One year after he died,
Unitel Video bought the assets of his firm. Reeves was married to Adeline Johnstone Fowles. Their granddaughter is actress
Perrey Reeves. ==See also==