Early years '' (1929), first smash hit for RKO (then releasing films under the "Radio Pictures" banner) While the main FBO studio in Hollywood was refitted for sound, production of shorts began in New York at the RKO Gramercy studio Sarnoff had just opened. RCA's radio network,
NBC, began broadcasting a weekly
variety show,
The RKO Hour, that became a prime promotional vehicle for the studio's films. The first two features released by the new company were musicals: The melodramatic
Syncopation, which actually completed shooting before FBO was reincorporated as RKO, premiered on March 29, 1929. The comedic
Street Girl debuted July 30. This was billed as RKO's first "official" production and its first to be shot in Hollywood. As with many early RKO films, the producer was studio chief
William LeBaron, who had held the same position at FBO. A few nonsinging pictures followed, but RKO's first major hit was again a musical. The studio spent heavily on the lavish
Rio Rita, including a number of
Technicolor sequences. Opening in September to rave reviews, it was named one of the ten best pictures of the year by
Film Daily. Cinema historian Richard Barrios credits it with initiating the "first age of the filmed Broadway musical". By the end of the year, RKO was making use of an additional production facility—five hundred acres had been acquired near
Encino in the
San Fernando Valley as a
movie ranch for exteriors and large-scale standing sets. With RKO Productions' films handled by sibling subsidiary RKO Distributing Corp., the studio released a limited slate of twelve features in its first year; in 1930, the figure more than doubled to twenty-nine. That July, RKO Productions Inc. was renamed RKO Radio Pictures Inc. RKO Pictures Ltd. was set up to handle British distribution. Encouraged by
Rio Ritas success, RKO produced several costly musicals incorporating Technicolor sequences, among them
Dixiana and
Hit the Deck, both scripted and directed, like
Rio Rita, by
Luther Reed. Following the example of the other major studios, RKO had planned to create its own musical
revue,
Radio Revels. Promoted as the studio's most extravagant production to date, it was to be photographed entirely in Technicolor. The project was abandoned, as the public's taste for musicals temporarily subsided. From more than sixty Hollywood musicals in 1929 and over eighty the following year, the number dropped to eleven in 1931.
Rio Rita star
Bebe Daniels, who had joined the new studio as its top female name after the final months of her contract at Paramount were bought out, fell victim to the shifting market. Her big musical follow-up,
Dixiana, had been a big money loser, and in January 1931 her contract was sold to Warner Bros. RKO, meanwhile, was in a contractual bind that it could not get out of: it was committed to producing two more features with Technicolor's system, even as audiences had come to associate color with the momentarily out-of-favor musical genre. Fulfilling its obligations, RKO produced two all-Technicolor pictures,
The Runaround and
Fanny Foley Herself (both 1931), containing no musical sequences. Neither was a success. Despite these issues—and the foundering US economy—RKO had gone on a spending spree, buying up theater after theater to add to its exhibition chain. In October 1930, the company purchased a 50 percent stake in the New York
Van Beuren studio, which specialized in cartoons and live shorts. Looking to get out of the film business, Kennedy arranged for RKO to purchase Pathé, in a deal that protected his associates' bond investments while it crushed many small stockholders who had bought in at artificially high prices. (Indeed, Kennedy, who had previously sold all of his Pathé holdings, started buying back bonds, which he turned around for substantial gains.) The deal was secured on January 29, 1931, and the studio, with its contract players, well-regarded newsreel operation, and DeMille's old
Culver City studio and backlot, became the semiautonomous RKO Pathé Pictures Inc. The acquisition, though a defensible investment in the long term for Pathé's physical facilities, was yet another major expense borne by the fledgling RKO, particularly as the reliably avaricious Kennedy had masked Pathé's considerable financial woes, just as he had with FBO and KAO. There was an undeniable plus side to the merger: when Pathé's
Constance Bennett,
Ann Harding, and
Helen Twelvetrees joined the Radio family in early 1931, they were bigger box office draws than anyone on the RKO roster. The studio's production schedule surpassed forty features a year, released under the names "Radio Pictures" and, until late 1932, "RKO Pathé".
Cimarron (1931) became the only RKO production to win the
Academy Award for Best Picture; it cost a profligate $1.4 million, however, and lost nearly half that on its first release.
Cimmaron's female principal,
Irene Dunne, was the studio's one major homegrown star of this early
pre-Code era; having made her screen debut as the lead in the 1930 musical
Leathernecking, she would headline at the studio for the entire decade, under contracts that gave her an unusual amount of power. Other significant actors of the period included
Joel McCrea,
Ricardo Cortez,
Dolores del Río, and
Mary Astor.
Richard Dix,
Oscar-nominated for his performance in
Cimarron, would serve as RKO's standby
B-movie leading man until the early 1940s, while
Tom Keene was top-billed in twelve low-budget
Westerns between 1931 and 1933. The comedy team of
Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey, often wrangling over ingenue
Dorothy Lee, was a bankable constant for almost a decade.
Success under Selznick '' (1933), one of Hollywood's great spectacles Exceptions like
Cimarron and
Rio Rita aside, RKO's product was largely regarded as mediocre, so in October 1931 Sarnoff hired twenty-nine-year-old
David O. Selznick to replace LeBaron as production chief. In addition to implementing rigorous cost-control measures, Selznick championed the unit production system, which gave the
producers of individual movies much greater independence than they had under the prevailing central producer system. "Under the factory system of production you rob the director of his individualism", said Selznick, "and this being a creative industry that is harmful to the quality of the product made." Instituting unit production, he predicted, would also result in cost savings of 30–40 percent. Selznick discovered and signed a young actress who would quickly become one of the studio's big stars,
Katharine Hepburn.
John Barrymore was also enlisted for a few memorable performances. In November 1931, just as Selznick was assuming his new post, the separate Pathé distribution network was folded into RKO's. After less than a year of largely independent operation out of Culver City, the Pathé feature film division soon followed (due to exhibition contracts, features from the division continued to come out under the combined brand until the following November). RKO Pathé was now effectively the studio's newsreel-and-shorts subsidiary. In January 1932,
Variety named Constance Bennett as one of the industry's top six female "money stars". From September, the start of the industry's exhibition season, print advertising for the company's features displayed the revised name "RKO Radio Pictures". The New York City–based corporate headquarters moved into the new
RKO Building, an
Art Deco skyscraper that was one of the first
Rockefeller Center structures to open.
Hollywood on the Air, an RKO-produced program for NBC radio that promoted films from multiple studios, sparked independent exhibitors' ire at the free access to cinema stars it gave listeners—especially in the middle of prime moviegoing Friday night. Toward the end of 1932, all of the Hollywood studios except for RKO seemingly bowed to the theater owners and prohibited radio appearances by their contract actors. The ban soon crumbled. Selznick spent a mere fifteen months as RKO production chief, resigning over a dispute with new corporate president Merlin Aylesworth concerning creative control. One of his last acts at RKO was to approve a
screen test for a thirty-three-year-old, balding
Broadway song-and-dance man named
Fred Astaire. In a memo, Selznick wrote, "I feel, in spite of his enormous ears and bad chin line, that his charm is... tremendous". Selznick's tenure was widely considered masterful: In 1931, before he arrived, the studio had produced forty-two features for $16 million in total budgets. In 1932, under Selznick, forty-one features were made for $10.2 million, with clear improvement in quality and popularity. He backed several major successes, including
A Bill of Divorcement (1932), with Cukor directing Hepburn's debut, and the monumental
King Kong (1933)—largely Merian Cooper's brainchild, brought to life by the astonishing
special effects work of
Willis O'Brien. Still, the shaky finances and excesses that marked the company's pre-Selznick days had not left RKO in shape to withstand the
Depression. Most of the other major studios were in similar straits. In January 1933, both RKO and Paramount were forced into
receivership, from which the latter would emerge in mid-1935; RKO would not until 1940.
Cooper at the helm and
Ginger Rogers made the annual list of top ten box office stars from 1935 to 1937.
Top Hat (1935) was the third of the eight RKO films featuring the duo as co-leads. Cooper took over as production head after Selznick's departure and oversaw two hits starring Hepburn:
Morning Glory (1933), for which she won her
first Oscar, and
Little Women (1933), director Cukor's second collaboration with the actress. Among the studio's in-house productions, the latter was the biggest box-office success of the decade. Cooper sought to more tightly align costs and prospective grosses, impacting the budgets for "
programmers" such as the Wheeler and Woolsey comedies: under Selznick, ''
Hold 'Em Jail and Girl Crazy (both 1932) had cost an average of $470,000; under Cooper, Diplomaniacs (1933) was shot for just $242,000. Ginger Rogers had already made several minor films for RKO when Cooper signed her to a seven-year contract and cast her in the big-budget musical Flying Down to Rio'' (1933). Rogers was paired with
Fred Astaire, making his second film. Billed fourth and fifth respectively, the picture turned them into stars.
Hermes Pan, assistant to the film's dance director, became one of Hollywood's leading choreographers through his subsequent work with Astaire. Along with
Columbia Pictures, RKO became one of the primary homes of the
screwball comedy. As film historian James Harvey describes, compared to their richer competition, the two studios were "more receptive to experiment, more tolerant of chaos on the set. It was at these two lesser 'majors'... that nearly all the preeminent screwball directors did their important films—Howard Hawks|[Howard] Hawks and Gregory La Cava|[Gregory] La Cava and Leo McCarey|[Leo] McCarey and George Stevens|[George] Stevens." The relatively unheralded
William A. Seiter directed the studio's first significant contribution to the genre,
The Richest Girl in the World (1934). The drama
Of Human Bondage (1934), directed by
John Cromwell, was
Bette Davis's first great success. Stevens's
Alice Adams and director
John Ford's
The Informer were each nominated for the 1935 Best Picture Oscar—the
Best Director statuette won by Ford was the only one ever given for an RKO production.
The Informer's star,
Victor McLaglen, also took home an Academy Award; he would appear in a dozen movies for the studio over two decades. From soon after its debut in early 1935 until July 1942,
Louis de Rochemont's innovative documentary series
The March of Time was distributed by RKO; at its peak in the late 1930s and early 1940s, over twenty million filmgoers saw its two-reelers each month in eleven thousand US and foreign theaters. Lacking the financial resources of industry leaders
MGM,
Paramount, and
Fox, RKO turned out many pictures during the era that belied their economies with high style in an Art Deco mode, exemplified by such Astaire–Rogers musicals as
The Gay Divorcee (1934), their first pairing as leads, and
Top Hat (1935). One of the figures most responsible for that style was another Selznick recruit:
Van Nest Polglase, supervisor of RKO's highly regarded
design department for almost a decade. Film historian
James Naremore has described RKO as "chiefly a designer's studio. It never had a stable of important actors, writers, or directors, but... it was rich in artists and special-effects technicians. As a result, its most distinctive pictures contained a strong element of fantasy—not so much the fantasy of horror, which during the thirties was the province of
Universal, but the fantasy of the marvelous and adventurous." As a group, the studio's craft divisions were among the strongest in the industry.
Costumer Walter Plunkett, who worked with the company from the close of the FBO era through the end of 1939, was known as the top
period wardrobist in the business. Sidney Saunders, innovative head of the studio's paint department, was responsible for significant progress in
rear projection quality. On June 13, 1935, RKO premiered the first feature film shot entirely in advanced
three-strip Technicolor,
Becky Sharp. The movie was coproduced with Pioneer Pictures, founded by Cooper—who departed RKO after two years helming production—and
John Hay "Jock" Whitney, who brought in his cousin
Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney; Cooper had successfully encouraged the Whitneys to purchase a major share of the Technicolor business as well. Although judged by critics a failure as drama,
Becky Sharp was widely lauded for its visual brilliance and technical expertise. RKO also employed some of the industry's leading artists and craftsmen whose work was never seen. From the studio's earliest days through late 1935,
Max Steiner, regarded by many historians as the most influential composer of the early years of sound cinema, made music for over 100 RKO films. His score for
The Informer brought Steiner his third Oscar nomination and first win.
Murray Spivack, head of the studio's audio special effects department, made important advances in the use of rerecording technology first heard in
King Kong.
Briskin and Berman In October 1935, the ownership team expanded, with financier
Floyd Odlum leading a syndicate that bought 50 percent of RCA's stake in the company; the
Rockefeller brothers, also major stockholders, increasingly became involved in the business. While RKO kept missing the mark in building Hepburn's career, other actors became regular headliners for the studio.
Ann Sothern played the lead in seven RKO films between 1935 and 1937, paired five times with
Gene Raymond. Stars
Barbara Stanwyck and
Cary Grant each signed on for several pictures. Both were sound-era trendsetters, working as freelancers under nonexclusive studio deals. Stanwyck had appeared in major studio films since 1929 without a binding long-term contract, as subsequently would several other top-billed women, including Dunne, Bennett, and Harding. When Grant went freelance after wrapping up his Paramount contract in late 1936, it was still rare for a leading man to do so while his star was on the rise. He ultimately appeared in fourteen RKO releases between 1937 and 1948. 's last film for RKO,
Bringing Up Baby (1938), was a bomb. Today it is regarded as one of Hollywood's finest
screwball comedies. Soon after the appointment of a new production chief, Samuel Briskin, in late 1936, RKO entered into an important distribution deal with animator
Walt Disney (Van Beuren consequently folded its cartoon operations). For nearly two decades, the studio released his company's features and shorts;
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) was the highest-grossing movie in the period between
The Birth of a Nation (1915) and
Gone with the Wind (1939). The theater operation excepted, on December 31, 1936, most of the domestic RKO subsidiaries, including RKO Distributing Corp. and its exchanges, were folded into RKO Radio Pictures Inc. Following the shift in print advertising a few years earlier, the screen brand on RKO's output, aside from the RKO Pathé line of newsreels and shorts, was likewise changed from "Radio Pictures" to "RKO Radio Pictures". In February 1937, Selznick, now a leading independent producer, took over RKO's Culver City studio and
Forty Acres, as the backlot was known, under a long-term lease.
Gone with the Wind, his coproduction with
MGM, was largely shot there. In addition to its central Hollywood studio, RKO production now revolved around its
Encino ranch. While the Disney association was beneficial, RKO's own product was widely seen as declining in quality and Briskin was gone by the end of the year. Pandro Berman—who had filled in on three previous occasions—accepted the position of production chief on a noninterim basis. He left the job before the decade's turn, but his brief tenure resulted in some of the most notable films in studio history, including
Gunga Din, with Grant and McLaglen;
Love Affair, starring Dunne and
Charles Boyer; and
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (all 1939).
Charles Laughton, who gave a now fabled performance as
Quasimodo in the latter, returned periodically to the studio, headlining six more RKO features. For
Maureen O'Hara, who made her American screen debut in the film, it was the first of ten pictures she made for RKO through 1952.
Carole Lombard signed freelance deals for headlining roles in four films between 1939 and 1941—the last of her pictures to come out before her death in a plane crash. After costarring with Ginger Rogers for the eighth time in
The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939), Fred Astaire departed the studio. The studio's B Western star of the period was
George O'Brien, who made eighteen RKO pictures, sixteen between 1938 and 1940.
The Saint in New York (1938) successfully launched a B detective series featuring the character
Simon Templar that ran through 1943. The Wheeler and Woolsey comedy series ended in 1937 when Woolsey became ill (he died the following year). RKO filled the void by releasing independently produced features such as the
Dr. Christian series and the
Laurel and Hardy comedy
The Flying Deuces (1939). The studio soon had its own new B comedy stars in
Lupe Vélez and
Leon Errol:
The Girl from Mexico (1939) was followed by seven frantic installments of the
Mexican Spitfire series between 1940 and 1943.
Kane and Schaefer's troubles in the title role of
Citizen Kane (1941), often cited as the greatest film of all time. Pan Berman had received his first screen credit in 1925 as a nineteen-year-old
assistant director on FBO's
Midnight Molly. He departed RKO in December 1939 after policy clashes with studio president
George J. Schaefer, handpicked the previous year by the Rockefellers and backed by Sarnoff. With Berman gone, Schaefer became in effect production chief, though other men—including the former head of the
industry censorship board, Joseph I. Breen—nominally filled the role. Schaefer, announcing his philosophy with a new studio slogan, "Quality Pictures at a Premium Price", was keen on signing up independent producers whose films RKO would distribute. In 1941, the studio landed one of the most prestigious independents in Hollywood when it arranged to handle
Samuel Goldwyn's productions. The first two Goldwyn pictures released by the studio did excellent box office:
The Little Foxes, directed by
William Wyler and starring Bette Davis, and the Howard Hawks–directed
Ball of Fire also garnered four Oscar nominations apiece; the latter was Barbara Stanwyck's biggest hit under the RKO banner. However, Schaefer agreed to terms so favorable to Goldwyn that it was next to impossible for the studio to make money with his films. David O. Selznick loaned out his leading contracted director for two RKO pictures in 1941: Alfred Hitchcock's
Mr. and Mrs. Smith, the final release of Carole Lombard's lifetime, was a modest success and
Suspicion a substantial one, with an Oscar-winning turn by
Joan Fontaine. That May, having granted twenty-five-year-old star and director
Orson Welles virtually complete creative control over the film, RKO released
Citizen Kane. While it opened to strong reviews and went on to be hailed as one of the greatest films ever made, it lost money at the time and brought down the wrath of the
Hearst newspaper chain on RKO. The next year saw the commercial failure of Welles's
The Magnificent Ambersons—like
Kane, critically lauded and overbudget—and the expensive embarrassment of his aborted documentary ''
It's All True''. The three Welles productions combined to drain $2 million from the RKO coffers, major money for a corporation that had reported an overall deficit of $1 million in 1940 and a nominal profit of a bit more than $500,000 in 1941. Many of RKO's other artistically ambitious pictures were also dying at the box office and it was losing its last exclusive deal with a major star as well. Rogers, after winning an Oscar in 1941 for her performance in the previous year's
Kitty Foyle, held out for a freelance contract like Lombard's or Grant's. No star appeared in more RKO films than Rogers: thirty between 1931 and 1943, then one-offs in 1946 and 1956. On June 17, 1942, Schaefer tendered his resignation. He departed a weakened and troubled studio, but RKO was about to turn the corner. Propelled by the box-office boom of World War II and guided by new management, RKO made a strong comeback over the next half-decade.
Rebound under Koerner By the end of June 1942, Floyd Odlum had taken over a controlling interest in the company via his
Atlas Corporation, edging aside the Rockefellers and Sarnoff.
Charles Koerner, former head of the RKO theater chain and allied with Odlum, had assumed the title of production chief some time prior to Schaefer's departure. With Schaefer gone, Koerner could actually do the job. Announcing a new corporate motto, "Showmanship in Place of Genius: A New Deal at RKO", a snipe at Schaefer's artistic ambitions in general and his sponsorship of Welles in particular, Koerner brought the studio much-needed stability until his death in February 1946. The change in RKO's fortunes was virtually immediate: corporate profits rose from $736,241 in 1942 (the theatrical division compensating for the studio's $2.34 million deficit) to $6.96 million the following year. The Rockefellers sold off their stock and, early in 1943, RCA dispensed with the last of its holdings in the company as well, cutting David Sarnoff's ties to the studio that was largely his conception. A new RKO Pathé "news magazine" series,
This Is America, had been launched the previous October to take the place of
The March of Time after
Time Inc. switched its distribution to Twentieth Century-Fox. In June 1944, a subsidiary, RKO Television Corporation, was established to produce content for the fledgling medium.
Talk Fast, Mister, an hour-long drama shot at the RKO Pathé studio in Manhattan and broadcast by the
DuMont Laboratories–owned New York station
WABD on December 18, 1944, was the first
made-for-TV movie. In collaboration with Mexican businessman
Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta, RKO established
Estudios Churubusco in
Mexico City in 1945. and
Ingrid Bergman in
Notorious (1946). RKO made over $1 million profit on the coproduction with
David O. Selznick's
Vanguard Films. With RKO on increasingly secure ground, Koerner sought to increase its output of handsomely budgeted, star-driven features. However, the studio's only remaining major stars with anything like extended deals were Grant, whose services were shared with Columbia Pictures, and O'Hara, shared with Fox. Lacking in-house stars, Koerner and his successors under Odlum arranged with the other studios to loan out their biggest names or signed one of the growing number of freelance performers to short-term, "
pay or play" deals. Thus RKO pictures of the mid- and late forties offered
Bing Crosby,
Henry Fonda, and others who were out of the studio's price range for extended contracts.
John Wayne appeared in 1943's
A Lady Takes a Chance while on loan from
Republic Pictures; he was soon working regularly with RKO, making nine more movies for the studio.
Gary Cooper appeared in RKO releases produced by Goldwyn and, later, the startup International Pictures, and
Claudette Colbert starred in a number of RKO coproductions.
Ingrid Bergman, on loan out from Selznick, starred opposite
Bing Crosby in ''
The Bells of St. Mary's'' (1945), a coproduction with director
Leo McCarey. The top box-office film of the year, it turned a $3.7 million profit for RKO, the most in the company's history. Bergman returned in the coproductions
Notorious (1946) and
Stromboli (1950), and in the independently produced
Joan of Arc (1948). Freelancing
Randolph Scott appeared in one major RKO release annually from 1943 through 1948. In similar fashion, many leading directors made one or more films for RKO during this era, including Alfred Hitchcock once more, with
Notorious, and
Jean Renoir, with
This Land Is Mine (1943), reuniting Laughton and O'Hara, and
The Woman on the Beach (1947). RKO and Orson Welles had an arm's-length reunion via
The Stranger (1946), an independent production he starred in as well as directed. Welles later called it his worst film, but it was the only one he ever made that turned a profit in its first run. In December 1946, the studio released
Frank Capra's ''
It's a Wonderful Life''; while it would eventually be recognized as one of the greatest films of Hollywood's Golden Age, at the time it lost more than half a million dollars for RKO. John Ford's
The Fugitive (1947) and
Fort Apache (1948), which appeared right before studio ownership changed hands again, were followed by
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) and
Wagon Master (1950); all four were coproductions between RKO and Argosy, the company run by Ford and RKO alumnus Merian C. Cooper. Of the directors under long-term contract to RKO in the 1940s, the best known was
Edward Dmytryk, who first came to notice with the remarkably profitable ''
Hitler's Children (1943). Shot on a $205,000 budget, placing it in the bottom quartile of Big Five studio productions, it was one of the ten biggest Hollywood hits of the year. Another low-cost war-themed film directed by Dmytryk, Behind the Rising Sun'', released a few months later, was similarly profitable.
Focus on B movies '' (1943), produced by
Val Lewton and directed by
Jacques Tourneur. Much more than the other Big Five studios, RKO relied on
B pictures to fill up its schedule. Of the thirty-one features released by RKO in 1944, for instance, ten were budgeted below $200,000, twelve were in the $200,000 to $500,000 range, and only nine cost more. In contrast, a clear majority of the features put out by the other top four studios were budgeted at over half a million dollars. A focus on B pictures limited the studio's financial risk; while it also limited the potential for reward (Dmytryk's extraordinary coups aside), RKO had a history of making better profits with its run-of-the-mill and low-cost product than with its A movies. Film editors Robson and Wise received their first directing assignments with producer
Val Lewton, whose specialized B horror unit also included the more experienced director
Jacques Tourneur. The Lewton unit's moody, atmospheric work—represented by films such as
Cat People (1942),
I Walked with a Zombie (1943), and
The Body Snatcher (1945)—is now highly regarded. Richard Dix concluded his lengthy RKO career with the 1943 Lewton production
The Ghost Ship.
Tim Holt, who succeeded George O'Brien as RKO's cowboy star, appeared in forty-six B Westerns and more than fifty movies altogether for the studio, beginning in 1940. That same year,
Chester Lauck and
Norris Goff brought their famous comic characters
Lum and Abner from radio to the screen for the first of six independently produced RKO releases. Between 1943 and 1946, the studio teamed contract actors
Wally Brown and
Alan Carney for comedies that openly mimicked the work of the wildly popular
Abbott and Costello;
Brown and Carney's eight pairings did not approach their prototypes' success. The
Falcon detective series began in 1941; the Saint and the Falcon were so similar that Saint creator
Leslie Charteris sued RKO. The Falcon was first played by
George Sanders, who had appeared five times as the Saint. He bowed out after four Falcon films and was replaced by his brother,
Tom Conway. Conway had a nine-film run in the part before the series ended in 1946.
Johnny Weissmuller starred in six RKO
Tarzan pictures for producer
Sol Lesser between 1943 and 1948 before being replaced by
Lex Barker for five more.
Film noir, to which lower budgets lent themselves, became something of a house style at the studio; indeed, the RKO B
Stranger on the Third Floor (1940) is widely seen as initiating noir's classic period. Its
cinematographer,
Nicholas Musuraca, who began at FBO in the 1920s and stayed with RKO through 1954, is a central figure in creating the look of classic noir. Design chief
Albert D'Agostino—another long-termer, who succeeded Van Nest Polglase in 1941—and
art director Walter Keller, along with others in the department, such as art directors
Carroll Clark and
Jack Okey and
set decorator Darrell Silvera, are similarly credited. The studio's 1940s list of contract players was filled with noir regulars:
Robert Mitchum (who graduated to major star status) and
Robert Ryan each made no fewer than ten film noirs for RKO.
Gloria Grahame,
Jane Greer, and
Lawrence Tierney were also notable studio players in the field. Freelancer
George Raft starred in two noir hits:
Johnny Angel (1945) and
Nocturne (1946). Tourneur, Musuraca, Mitchum, and Greer, along with D'Agostino's design group, joined to make the A-budgeted
Out of the Past (1947), now considered one of the greatest of all film noirs.
Nicholas Ray began his directing career with the noir
They Live by Night (1948), the first of a number of well-received films he made for RKO.
HUAC and Howard Hughes '' (1947) was a hit, but no American studio would hire
blacklisted director
Edward Dmytryk again until he named names to
HUAC in 1951. Producer
Adrian Scott did not get another screen credit for two decades. He died before he could see it. RKO, and the movie industry as a whole, had its most profitable year ever in 1946. A Goldwyn production released by RKO,
The Best Years of Our Lives, was the most successful Hollywood film of the decade and won the Academy Award for Best Picture. But the legal status of the industry's reigning business model was increasingly being called into doubt: the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled in
Bigelow v. RKO that the company was liable for damages under
antitrust statutes for having denied an independent movie house access to
first-run films—a common practice among all of the Big Five. With profits at a high point, Floyd Odlum cashed in by selling off about 40 percent of his shares in the company to a group of investment firms. After Koerner's death, Radio-Keith-Orpheum president N. Peter Rathvon and RKO Radio Pictures president Ned E. Depinet had exchanged positions, with Depinet moving to the corporate offices in New York and Rathvon relocating to Hollywood and doubling as production chief while a permanent replacement was sought for Koerner. On the first day of 1947, producer and Oscar-winning screenwriter
Dore Schary, who had been working at the studio on loan from Selznick, took over the role. RKO appeared in good shape to build on its recent successes, but the year brought a number of unpleasant harbingers for all of Hollywood. The British government imposed a 75 percent tax on films produced abroad; along with similarly confiscatory taxes and quota laws enacted by other countries, this led to a sharp decline in foreign revenues. The postwar attendance boom peaked sooner than expected and television emerged as a competitor for audience interest. Across the board, profits fell—a 27 percent drop for the Hollywood studios from 1946 to 1947. In July, RKO Pathé's signature newsreel was sold to Warner Bros. for a reported $4 million. The phenomenon later called
McCarthyism was building strength, and in October, the
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) began hearings into Communism in the motion picture industry. Two of RKO's top talents, Dmytryk and producer
Adrian Scott, refused to cooperate. As a consequence, they were fired by RKO per the terms of the
Waldorf Statement, the major studios' pledge to "eliminate any subversives". Scott, Dmytryk, and eight others who also defied HUAC—dubbed the
Hollywood Ten—were
blacklisted across the industry. Ironically, the studio's major success of the year was
Crossfire, a Scott–Dmytryk film. Odlum concluded it was time to exit the film business, and he put Atlas's remaining RKO shares—approximately 25 percent of the outstanding stock—on the market. For her performance in ''
The Farmer's Daughter'' (1947), a coproduction with Selznick's Vanguard Films,
Loretta Young won the
Best Actress Oscar the following March. It was the last major Academy Award for an RKO picture. , as depicted by
Ernest Hamlin Baker for the cover of the July 19, 1948, issue of
Time. In May 1948, eccentric aviation tycoon and occasional movie producer
Howard Hughes spent $8.8 million to gain control of the company, beating out British film magnate
J. Arthur Rank for Odlum's stake. During Hughes's tenure, RKO suffered its worst years since the early 1930s, as his capricious management style took a heavy toll. Production chief Schary quit almost immediately due to his new boss's interference and Rathvon soon followed. Within weeks of taking over, Hughes had dismissed three-fourths of the work force; production was virtually shut down for six months as the conservative Hughes shelved or canceled several of the "
message pictures" that Schary had backed. All of the Big Five saw their profits dwindle in 1948—from Fox, down 11 percent, to Loew's/MGM, down 62 percent—but at RKO they virtually vanished: from $5.1 million in 1947 to $0.5 million, a drop of 90 percent. The production-distribution end of the RKO business, now deep in the red, would never make a profit again. Offscreen, Robert Mitchum's arrest and conviction for marijuana possession—he served two months in jail—was widely assumed to mean career death for RKO's most promising young star, but Hughes surprised the industry by announcing that his contract was not endangered. Of much broader significance, Hughes decided to get the jump on his Big Five competitors by being the first to settle the federal government's antitrust suit against the major studios, which had won a crucial Supreme Court ruling in
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. Under the
consent decree he signed, Hughes agreed to dissolve the old parent company, Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp., and split RKO's production-distribution business and its exhibition chain into two entirely separate corporations—RKO Pictures Corp. and RKO Theatres Corp.—with the obligation to promptly sell off one or the other. While Hughes delayed the divorcement procedure until December 1950 and did not actually sell his stock in the theater company for another three years, his decision to acquiesce was one of the crucial steps in the collapse of classical Hollywood's
studio system.
Turmoil under Hughes Shooting at RKO picked up again in early 1949, but from an average of around thirty films annually before Hughes's takeover, production fell to just twelve that year. Sporting the new title of managing director of production, Hughes quickly became notorious for meddling in minute filmmaking matters and promoting actresses he favored—including two under personal contract to him,
Jane Russell and
Faith Domergue. While his time at RKO was marked by both diminished production and a slew of expensive flops, the studio continued to turn out some well-received films under production chiefs
Sid Rogell and
Sam Bischoff, though both became fed up with Hughes's interloping and each in turn quit after less than two years. Bischoff was the last man to hold the job under Hughes. There were B noirs such as
The Window (1949), which turned into a hit, and
The Set-Up (1949), directed by
Robert Wise and starring
Robert Ryan, which won the Critic's Prize at the
Cannes Film Festival.
The Thing from Another World (1951), a science-fiction drama coproduced with Howard Hawks's Winchester Pictures, is seen as a classic of the genre. In 1952, RKO put out two films directed by
Fritz Lang,
Rancho Notorious and
Clash by Night. The latter was a project of the renowned
Jerry Wald–
Norman Krasna production team, lured by Hughes from Warner Bros. with great fanfare in August 1950. , RKO's most prolific lead of the late 1940s and early 1950s, costarred in
Macao (1952) with
Jane Russell, who was personally contracted to Howard Hughes. Director
Josef von Sternberg's work was combined with scenes shot by
Nicholas Ray and
Mel Ferrer. The company also began a close working relationship with
Ida Lupino. She starred in two suspense films with Robert Ryan—Nicholas Ray's
On Dangerous Ground (1952, though shooting had been completed two years earlier) and
Beware, My Lovely (1952), a coproduction between RKO and Lupino's company, The Filmakers. Of more historic note, Lupino was Hollywood's only female director during the period; of the five pictures The Filmakers made with RKO, Lupino directed three, including her now celebrated
The Hitch-Hiker (1953). Exposing many moviegoers to Asian cinema for the first time, RKO distributed
Akira Kurosawa's epochal
Rashomon in the United States, sixteen months after its original 1950 Japanese release. The only smash hits released by RKO in the 1950s came out during this period, but neither was an in-house production: Goldwyn's
Hans Christian Andersen (1952) was followed by Disney's
Peter Pan (1953). The first two shorts directed by a twenty-two-year-old photographer from
the Bronx were both released in 1951 by RKO Pathé—
Stanley Kubrick's
Day of the Fight and
Flying Padre. In early 1952, Hughes fought off a lawsuit by screenwriter
Paul Jarrico, who had been caught up in the latest round of HUAC hearings; Hughes had fired him and removed his name from the credits of a recent release,
The Las Vegas Story, a money-losing melodrama starring Jane Russell. The studio owner subsequently ordered 100 RKO employees on "leave of absence" while he established a "security office" to oversee an ideological vetting system. "We are going to screen everyone in a creative or executive capacity", he declared. "The work of Communist sympathizers will not be used." As more credits were expunged, some in the industry began to question whether Hughes's hunt for subversives served primarily as a convenient rationale for further curtailing production and trimming expenses. In September, Hughes and his corporate president, Ned Depinet, sold their RKO studio stock to a Chicago-based syndicate with no experience in the movie business; the syndicate's chaotic reign lasted until February 1953, when the stock and control were reacquired by Hughes. The studio's net loss in 1952 was over $10 million, and shooting had taken place for just a single in-house production over the last five months of the year. During the turmoil, Samuel Goldwyn ended his eleven-year-long distribution deal with RKO. Wald and Krasna escaped their contracts and the studio as well. The deal that brought the team to RKO had called for them to produce sixty features over five years; in just shy of half that time, they succeeded in making four. The Encino ranch shut down permanently in 1953 and the property was sold off. In November, Hughes finally fulfilled his obligations under the 1948 consent decree, divesting RKO Theatres; Albert A. List purchased the controlling interest in the business and renamed it List Industries. Hughes soon found himself the target of no fewer than five separate lawsuits filed by minority shareholders in RKO, accusing him of malfeasance in his dealings with the Chicago group and a wide array of acts of mismanagement. "RKO's contract list is down to three actors and 127 lawyers", quipped
Dick Powell. Leery of the studio's mounting problems and sparring with it over the release of the forthcoming nature documentary
The Living Desert, the Disney company exited its long-standing arrangement with RKO and set up its own distribution firm,
Buena Vista. Contractual obligations meant that one last Disney feature would be released by RKO in 1954, and it continued to handle new Disney shorts into 1956. Looking to forestall the impending legal imbroglio, by early 1954 Hughes was offering to buy out all of RKO's other stockholders. Before the end of the year, at a cost of $23.5 million, Hughes had gained near-total control of RKO Pictures Corp., becoming the first virtual sole owner of a studio since Hollywood's pioneer days—virtual, but not quite actual. Floyd Odlum reemerged to block Hughes's acquisition of the 95 percent ownership of RKO stock he needed to write off the company's losses against his earnings elsewhere. Hughes had reneged on his promise to give Odlum first option on buying the RKO theater chain when he divested it, and was now paying the price. With negotiations between the two at a stalemate, in July 1955, Hughes turned around and sold RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. to the
General Tire and Rubber Company for $25 million, leaving himself and Odlum the shell of RKO Pictures Corp. and what were now, according to
Fortune, its "sole assets... $18 million in cash." For Hughes, this was the effective end of a quarter-century's involvement in the movie business. Historian Betty Lasky describes Hughes's relationship with RKO as a "systematic seven-year rape."
General Tire and demise In taking control of the studio, General Tire restored RKO's close ties to broadcasting. General Tire had bought the
Yankee Network, a New England regional radio network, in 1943. In 1950, it purchased the West Coast regional
Don Lee Broadcasting System, and two years later, the
Bamberger Broadcasting Service, owner of the
WOR radio and
television stations in New York City. The latter acquisition gave General Tire majority control of the
Mutual Broadcasting System, one of America's leading radio networks. General Tire then merged its broadcasting interests into a new subsidiary, General Teleradio.
Thomas F. O'Neil, son of General Tire's founder William O'Neil and chairman of the broadcasting group, saw that the company's new television stations, indeed all TV outlets, were in need of programming. In September 1954, WOR-TV had launched the
Million Dollar Movie program, running a single film for a week, twice every night plus Saturday and Sunday matinees; the format proved hugely successful and non-
network-affiliated stations around the country were eager to emulate it. With the purchase of RKO, the studio's library was under O'Neil's control and he quickly put the rights to the 742 films to which RKO retained clear title up for sale. C&C Television Corp., a subsidiary of beverage maker
Cantrell & Cochrane, won the bidding in December 1955 and was soon offering the films to independent stations in a package called "MovieTime USA". RKO Teleradio Pictures—the newly renamed General Teleradio, under which RKO Radio Pictures now operated as a business division—retained the broadcast rights for the cities where it owned TV stations. By 1956, RKO's classic movies were playing widely on television, often in the
Million Dollar Movie format, allowing many to see such films as
Citizen Kane and
King Kong for the first time. The $15.2 million RKO made on the deal convinced the other major studios that their libraries held profit potential—a turning point in the way Hollywood did business. '', a Hughes pet production launched in 1949. Shooting wrapped in May 1951, but it was not released until 1957 due to his interminable tinkering. RKO was by then out of the distribution business. The movie was released by
Universal-International. The new owners of RKO made an initial effort to revive the studio, hiring veteran producer
William Dozier to head production. In the first half of 1956, the production facilities were as busy as they had been in a half-decade, with a planned slate of seventeen features. RKO released Fritz Lang's final two American films,
While the City Sleeps and
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (both 1956), but years of mismanagement had driven away many directors, producers, and stars. The studio was also saddled with the last of the inflated B movies such as
Pearl of the South Pacific (1955) and
The Conqueror (1956) that enchanted Hughes. While the latter, starring John Wayne, was the biggest hit produced at the studio during the decade, that bar was low—it placed only eleventh among the year's top earners. A major money loser in standard terms, its $4.5 million in North American rentals not coming close to covering its $6 million production cost, Hughes had paid RKO Teleradio millions to buy back the rights. On January 22, 1957, after a year and a half without a notable success, RKO announced that it was closing its domestic distribution offices—
Universal would take over most future releases—and that a reduced production wing would move to the Culver City lot. In fact, General Tire shut down RKO production for good. RKO's distribution deal with Disney was also fully revoked, allowing Buena Vista to handle distribution of all Disney short films. The Hollywood and Culver City facilities were sold in late 1957 for $6.15 million to
Desilu Productions, owned by
Desi Arnaz and
Lucille Ball, who had been an RKO contract player from 1935 to 1942. Desilu was acquired by
Gulf and Western Industries in 1967 and merged into G+W's other production company, neighboring
Paramount Pictures; the former RKO Hollywood studio, FBO's old home, is now part of the Paramount lot. The renovated Culver City studio, where DeMille once reigned, is now owned and operated as an independent production facility. Forty Acres, the Culver City backlot, was razed in the mid-1970s. List Industries, the former RKO Theatres Corp., was bought by Glen Alden Corp. in 1959. Glen Alden acquired
Stanley Warner Theatres in 1967, creating RKO–Stanley Warner Theatres.
Cinerama purchased the exhibition circuit from Glen Alden in 1971. Now little more than a name and beneficiary of General Tire's doubtful largesse, RKO announced in early 1958 that it would continue as a financial backer, coproducing independently made pictures. Fewer than half a dozen resulted. The final RKO film,
Verboten!, a coproduction with director
Samuel Fuller's Globe Enterprises, was released, fitfully, beginning in March 1959, first by
Rank and then
Columbia. That same year, "Pictures" was stripped from the corporate identity; the holding company for General Tire's broadcasting operation and the few remaining motion picture assets was renamed
RKO General. In the words of scholar Richard B. Jewell, "The supreme irony of RKO's existence is that the studio earned a position of lasting importance in cinema history largely
because of its extraordinarily unstable history. Since it was the weakling of Hollywood's 'majors,' RKO welcomed a diverse group of individualistic creators and provided them... with an extraordinary degree of freedom to express their artistic idiosyncrasies.... [I]t never became predictable and it never became a factory."
Later incarnations In 1978, RKO General launched a new subsidiary,
RKO Pictures Inc. Following this, RKO became involved in the coproduction of a number of feature films and TV projects, beginning with 1981's
Carbon Copy. In collaboration with Universal Studios, RKO put out five films over the next three years. Although the studio frequently worked with major names—including
Burt Reynolds and
Dolly Parton in
The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,
Jack Nicholson in
The Border, and
Nastassja Kinski in
Cat People (all 1982)—it met with little success. Corporate restructuring brought RKO General under the aegis of the new holding company
GenCorp, and starting with the
Meryl Streep vehicle
Plenty (1985), RKO Pictures took on more projects as sole studio backer. In January 1986, Paramount signed a two-year distribution agreement with the company. Films such as the erotic thriller
Half Moon Street (1986) and the Vietnam War drama
Hamburger Hill (1987) followed, but production ended as GenCorp underwent a massive reorganization following an attempted hostile takeover. The sale was completed in late 1987, and Wesray linked RKO with its
Six Flags amusement parks to form RKO/Six Flags Entertainment Inc. In 1989, RKO Pictures, which had produced no films while under Wesray control, was sold off yet again. Actress and
Post Cereals heiress
Dina Merrill and her husband, producer
Ted Hartley, acquired a majority interest and merged the company with their own Pavilion Communications. After a brief period as RKO/Pavilion, the business was reorganized as
RKO Pictures LLC. With the inaugural RKO production under Hartley and Merrill's ownership,
False Identity (1990), the company also stepped into the distribution business. In 1992, it handled the well-regarded independent production
Laws of Gravity, directed by
Nick Gomez. RKO's next significant film came in 1998 with
Mighty Joe Young, a remake of a
1949 RKO movie that was itself a
King Kong knockoff; the Disney coproduction was distributed by Buena Vista. In the early 2000s, the company was involved as a coproducer of TV movies and modestly budgeted features, about one a year. In 2003, it coproduced a Broadway stage version of the 1936 Astaire–Rogers vehicle
Swing Time, under the title
Never Gonna Dance. That same year, RKO Pictures entered into a legal battle with Wall Street Financial Associates (WSFA). Hartley and Merrill claimed that the owners of WSFA fraudulently induced them into signing an acquisition agreement by concealing their "cynical and rapacious" plans to purchase RKO, with the intention only of dismantling it. WSFA sought a preliminary injunction prohibiting RKO's majority owners from selling their interests in the company to any third parties. The WSFA motion was denied in July 2003, freeing RKO to deal with another potential purchaser, InternetStudios.com. In 2004, that planned sale fell through when InternetStudios.com apparently folded. The company's minimal involvement in new film production continued to focus on its remake rights:
Are We Done Yet?, based on
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948), was released in April 2007 to dismal reviews. In 2009,
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt, a remake of a
1956 RKO film directed by Fritz Lang, fared even worse critically, receiving a 7% rating on
Rotten Tomatoes. A stage version of
Top Hat toured Great Britain in the second half of 2011. The most recent RKO film coproductions are the well-received
A Late Quartet (2012) and the 2015 flop
Barely Lethal. Two months after Dina Merrill's May 22, 2017 death, independent producer Keith Patterson sued RKO, Hartley, and his second-in-command, Mary Beth O'Connor, over the collapse of plans to create multiple TV series based on RKO properties, starting with
Citizen Kane. According to Patterson's suit, O'Connor controls access to Hartley and holds both his
healthcare proxy and an option to acquire RKO and its intellectual property at a deep markdown after his death. As of November 2022, Hartley, then 98 years old, was still making public appearances connected with his avocation as a painter. RKO Pictures was sold off to
Concord's film and TV division in 2025 alongside the derivative rights to more than 5,000 titles. It will continue to operate as its own imprint under Concord Originals. ==Library==